Books about Omnivorous from Amazon.com



Beyond Nose to Tail: More Omnivorous Recipes for the Adventurous Cook
From the proprietor of St. John Restaurant, which won the 2001 Moët & Chandon Restaurant Award, comes this fascinating, cutting-edge guide to preparing carnivorous dishes.
 
Written in the same entertaining and accessible voice that made Nose to Tail Eating a certified foodie classic, this beautiful new collection of recipes by Fergus Henderson teaches you everything you’ll ever need to know to prepare even more mouthwatering, offal classics, from pork scratching, fennel and ox tongue soup, and pressed pig’s ear to sourdough loaves and lardy cakes, chocolate baked Alaska, burnt sheep’s milk yogurt and goat’s curd cheesecake, among others. While taking you through more than a hundred simple, easy-to-follow recipes, Henderson explains why nearly every part of every animal we eat is a delicious treat waiting for the hands of a patient cook to prepare it.
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Price: $18.10 [Notify me when price goes down.]


From water into soil: trophic ecology of a caecilian amphibian (Genus Ichthyophis) [An article from: Acta Oecologica]
This digital document is a journal article from Acta Oecologica, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Tropical ecosystems have a great organismal diversity. However, the trophic relations of many components are poorly understood and this is particularly the case for caecilian amphibians. We analysed spatial and temporal aspects of the diet of a caecilian (Ichthyophis cf. kohtaoensis) at a field site in North-eastern Thailand (Mekong valley, Khemmarat District, Ubon Ratchathani Province). This is the first study to include both aquatic larvae and terrestrial adult stages of any caecilian. Larval I. cf. kohtaoensis feed exclusively on aquatic invertebrates (e.g., dragonfly larvae, water beetles and clam shrimps). A comparison of potential prey taxa available indicates that larval I. cf. kohtaoensis prefer benthic prey. Terrestrial I. cf. kohtaoensis consume mostly soil invertebrates such as megascolecid earthworms, ants and termites (soil ecosystem engineers). Numerically and in terms of their frequency of occurrence, these major prey groups varied strongly between seasons. Scarabaeid beetle larvae, oribatid and mesostigmatid mites and occasionally microhylid frogs were also recorded in the diet. During ontogeny, I. cf. kohtaoensis move from an aquatic to terrestrial existence. Despite this, accompanying changes in trophic position are superficial because both stages are carnivorous generalists. In this regard, they are more similar to salamanders than frogs with biphasic life history cycles. .
Price: $8.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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