About the Book

Smaller than a human finger, creatures climbing, scampering, and flying out of sight make up 99 percent of all animal life visible to the naked eye. This is the “smaller majority” that we meet eye-to-eye, often for the first time and certainly as never before, in Piotr Naskrecki’s spellbinding book. A large-format volume of over 400 exquisite, full-color photographs, some depicting animals never before captured with a camera, The Smaller Majority takes us on a visual journey into the remote world of organisms that, however little known, overlooked, or even reviled, are critical to the life of our planet.

Here are the species who truly dominate the tropics, both in terms of their diversity and the ecological functions they play--invertebrates such as insects, arachnids, or flatworms, but also little-known vertebrates such as the pygmy chameleons of Madagascar or legless, underground frog kin known as caecilians; here is behavior never before documented, as in katydids preying upon one another, photographed in places few have visited. Using pioneering camera techniques that allow us to see the world of these creatures from their point of view, the book exposes the environment in which they live, the threats they face, and the devastating impact their disappearance may have.

   



about the book

about piotr naskrecki
prologue
savannas
deserts
tropical humid forests
about the photography
species index
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(left): Glass frog (Hyalinobatrachium valerioi) (Costa Rica)

(right): A nymph of an unidentified planthopper (Guinea)

"Many rainforest organisms have evolved ways of letting the sun’s rays shine right through their bodies, thus appearing one with the leaves on which they rest during the day."

Photos: ©Piotr Naskrecki