Blogging Wildlife

Blogging Wildlife

The Perception of Animals by Hikers on the Appalachian Trail

Marx, Kate

Taylor & Francis Ltd

12/2020

172

Dura

Inglês

9780367351007

15 a 20 dias

489

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction 1. Hiking as Pilgrimage, and Wild Animals on the Trail 2. 'Real' Wilderness Needs a 'Real' Predator: Hikers and Black Bears 3. Cuteness on the Trail 4. Ugly, Scary, and Disgusting: Uncomfortably Close Encounters with Mice, Snakes, Insects, and Other 'Critters' on the Trail 5. Chirps, Quacks, Croaks, Howls, and 'What Was That?': Animal Sounds on the Trail Conclusion
At;Nonhuman Animal;wild;Black Bears;wilderness;Cute Response;walking;Long Distance Hikers;hiking;Ursus Americanus;Appalachian Trail;Agkistrodon Contortrix;encounters;Copperhead;interaction;Vice Versa;meaning;Folk Taxonomies;context;Equus Ferus Caballus;non-human animals;Castor Canadensis;journey;Cute Entity;reactions;Trail Animals;disgust;Black Bear;cute;Bear Encounter;cuteness;Autonomous Animals;revulsion;Slow Loris;risk;Nuisance Bear;predator;Barred Owls;auditory experience;Cute Aesthetic;pilgrimage;Water Voles;social sciences;Tamil Nadu;anthrozoology;Cute Object;anthropology;Shenandoah National Park;sociology;Animal sounds;Nonhuman animals;Wildlife tourism;Human-animal relations