Natural History Quotes

Quotes tagged as "natural-history" Showing 1-30 of 77
Edward O. Wilson
“A lifetime can be spent in a Magellanic voyage around the trunk of a single tree.”
E. O. Wilson

Charles Darwin
“When we no longer look at an organic being as a savage looks at a ship, as at something wholly beyond his comprehension; when we regard every production of nature as one which has had a history; when we contemplate every complex structure and instinct as the summing up of many contrivances, each useful to the possessor, nearly in the same way as when we look at any great mechanical invention as the summing up of the labour, the experience, the reason, and even the blunders of numerous workmen; when we thus view each organic being, how far more interesting, I speak from experience, will the study of natural history become!”
Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species

“In terms of size, mammals are an anomaly, as the vast majority of the world's existing species are snail-sized or smaller. It's almost as if, regardless of your kingdom, the smaller your size & the earlier your place on the tree of life, the more critical is your niche on Earth: snails & worms create soil, & blue-green algae create oxygen; mammals seem comparatively dispensable, the result of the random path of evolution over a luxurious amount of time.”
Elisabeth Tova Bailey, The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating

Richard Fortey
“Museums have no political power, but they do have the possibility of influencing the political process. This is a complete change from their role in the early days of collecting and hoarding the world to one of using the collections as an archive for a changing world. This role is not merely scientifically important, but it is also a cultural necessity.”
Richard Fortey, Dry Store Room No. 1: The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum

“Must the interest of life wane for us all as the progress of knowledge curtails the playground of imagination? No doubt it must in some measure, but there is another cause.

I believe that in these days we have too many occupations, too many interests; we know too many things, and, if you will, have too many advantages and facilities. Our faculty of taking an interest is dissipated and frittered away.”
EHA Introduced By Ruskin Bond, A Naturalist On The Prowl

Jo Ann Butler
“Catch on fire with enthusiasm, and people will come for miles to watch you burn”
Jo Ann Butler

Richard Fortey
“I wonder if we are seeing a return to the object in the science-based museum. Since any visitor can go to a film like Jurassic Park and see dinosaurs reawakened more graphically than any museum could emulate, maybe a museum should be the place to have an encounter with the bony truth. Maybe some children have overdosed on simulations on their computers at home and just want to see something solid--a fact of life.”
Richard Fortey, Dry Store Room No. 1: The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum

Lawrence Millman
“Another day I walked out of town to do a bit of climbing in the mountains behind the airport. I scrambled up and down slopes that contained some of the oldest rocks in the world, isotope-dated at 3,800 billion years, remnants, so the geological rumor goes, of the earth's earliest terrestrial crust.”
Lawrence Millman, Last Places: A Journey in the North

Amy Tan
“During daylight hours, they (Anna's Hummingbirds) feed every 15 minutes, be it tiny insects or nectar from flowers or feeders. If they don't consume food often enough, they can die during the day. If they have not eaten enough before nightfall, they can die while asleep as they hang in suspended animation with tiny feet clutched to a thin branch.”
Amy Tan, The Backyard Bird Chronicles

Amy Tan
“The (Anna's Hummingbird) males are deadbeat dads that contribute nothing to making the nest, or to feeding either the female or the nestlings. They are off to find other females they can impress with their deep dives, chasing skills, and commandeering of feeders.”
Amy Tan, The Backyard Bird Chronicles

Amy Tan
“I asked Bernd Heinrich if he knew why feeder birds, like finches, discard so many seeds. It turns out he and other scientiests did research on this back in the 1990s - of course, he did -measuring discarded seeds with painstaking accuracy. The short answer: Songbirds prefer shorter, fatter unshelled sunflower seeds, more depth than length, because they contain more oil. They take half a second to judge the seeds, dropping the low-density ones, until they find a seed to their liking.”
Amy Tan, The Backyard Bird Chronicles

Amy Tan
“If there is anything I have learned these past six years, it is this: Each bird is surprising and thrilling in its own way. But the most special is the bird that pauses when it is eating, looks and acknowleges I am there, then goes back to what it was doing.”
Amy Tan, The Backyard Bird Chronicles

“The prescription I've come to seems to be this. Know the heaven and earth that was, but experience the world that is.”
Dan Flores, Wild New World: The Epic Story of Animals and People in America

“Monarch Watch estimates that each day, 6,000 acres of Monarch breeding habitat in the United States are converted to something else.”
Sara Dykman, Bicycling with Butterflies: My 10,201-Mile Journey Following the Monarch Migration

“We call government support to farmers "subsidies." Support for poor people is instead referred to as "welfare.”
Sara Dykman, Bicycling with Butterflies: My 10,201-Mile Journey Following the Monarch Migration

“The (Milkweed) plants sat so vulnerable in ditches, the caterpillars never eating fast enough to keep the milkweed small and inconspicuous. It seemed inevitable that the plants would draw the attention of landowners who were oblivious to the architecture of life, and the monarch's habitat would succomb to mowing.”
Sara Dykman, Bicycling with Butterflies: My 10,201-Mile Journey Following the Monarch Migration

“We are told that manicured lawns are beautiful, that we must control nature in order to live with it, but that is a lie. Beauty is the give and take between plants and animals.”
Sara Dykman

“When I was young, I would ride my bike until I was lost...the realization that I could get where I was going on my own, under my own power, unclocked a bigger world for me.”
Sara Dykman, Bicycling with Butterflies: My 10,201-Mile Journey Following the Monarch Migration

“If all of us committed to one footprint of land...the world would be a better place.”
Sara Dykman, Bicycling with Butterflies: My 10,201-Mile Journey Following the Monarch Migration

“A coyote's primary prey happens to be our close fellow travelers, the mice and rats that flourish around and among us in profusion.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“In Denver coyotes had become an urban presence by the 1970s. Chicago, in the 1990's was next, and by roughly 200 almost every city in the united States and Canada, no matter how small and picturesque or sprawling and ear splitting, possessed a thriving population of coyotes as full-time residents.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“Altogether, we kill about 500,000 of them (coyotes) a year in the United States.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“From the time the bison slaughter commenced in the 1820s, it took little more than half a century to clear the Great Plains of that ancient population of animals, which during spans of good weather must have approached 25 to 30 million animals. One effect of that species cleansing was to open up the great grasslands to domesticated animals.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“We often express horror at animals that pursue and kill other animals, but such a response demonstrates a misunderstanding of our own evolutionary history. We have been a wildly successful speciesin part because of our predatory skills.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“In our twenty-first-century world, the terms "genocide" and "ethnic cleansing" sit uneasily in the mind, associated with some of our darkest and most disturbing thoughts about human nature. They conjure Darfur, Servia, Cambodia and Pol Pot, and most vividly of all for many of us, the horrors in Europe before and during World War II. "Spicies cleansing," on the other hand, is not a term that falls readily to hand, although we have engaged in it without much remorse for at least 10,000 years and probably more.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“But the most old-fashioned research topic of all - an idea Western culture had known since the time of Aristotle as "the balance of nature," the presence of a dynamic equilibrium in the natural world - began to push ecological sicence in the direction of understanding the role of predators. The Biological Survey's policies (the federal predator control agency) assumed the European fold position: predators were entirely disposable, and the banishment of wolves and cougards and coyotes from America would create a civilized paradise for deer and elk and ranchers and sheepmen.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“The ecological niche breakthrough was critical for understanding wild coyotes and appreciating predators generally. In nature a "niche," is analagous to an occupation in human culture.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“Aldo (Leopold) had argued ... for a revolutionary principle in human affairs: a recognition that other species in this world possess an innate right to existence.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“The prime directive (in living safely with coyotes) is straightforward and delivered with an exclamation mark: For chrissake, do not feed coyotes and accustom them to associating food with humans! To avoid the most common human conflict with coyotes, don't let your cats or small dogs outside at night.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

“Coyotes may also attack cats for the same reason they attack small dogs: they perceive domestic cats and dogs as intraguild predators operating in their territories. When coyotes attack dogs or cats, they most often don't intend to eat them; they're simply ridding their territories of roaming predators.”
Dan Flores, Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History

« previous 1 3