Fires of Life:

Endothermy in Birds and Mammals

Vividly narrated and illustrated. . . . Provocative and fascinating for specialists and lay readers alike.
— Southeastern Naturalist

A groundbreaking argument on how endothermy—arguably the most important innovation in vertebrate evolution—developed in birds and mammals

This pioneering work investigates why endothermy, or “warm-bloodedness,” evolved in birds and mammals, despite its enormous energetic costs. Arguing that single-cause hypotheses to explain the origins of endothermy have stalled research since the 1970s, Barry Gordon Lovegrove advances a novel conceptual framework that considers multiple potential causes and integrates data from the southern as well as the northern hemisphere. Drawing on paleontological data; research on extant species in places like the Karoo, Namaqualand, Madagascar, and Borneo; and novel physiological models, Lovegrove builds a compelling new explanation for the evolution of endothermy. Vividly narrated and illustrated, this book stages a groundbreaking argument that should prove provocative and fascinating for specialists and lay readers alike.

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Fires of Life: Endothermy in birds and mammals (Yale University Press, 2019)

ISBN: 9780300227161
Publication Date: June 25, 2019

384 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
60 b/w illus.

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