aerial view of the Amazon river

Current Issue

Animals
Winter 2023 | Volume XXII, Number 2

Cover image: Jaguar skin for sale in Iquitos, Peru, Belen market. Courtesy of ⒸSteve Winter/National Geographic. 

Table of Contents

Editor’s Letter →

by June Carolyn Erlick

Writers on Pets (and Other Animals)

Ronco

Ronco

English + Español
He wakes up suddenly, the rosettes on his back shaking as if in an earthquake. It takes him a minute to figure out where he is.

Ramon’s Night

Ramon’s Night

English + Español
Sometimes he folds his body up and sometimes he curls into a ball and, other times, he sleeps all stretched out.

Pelusa

Pelusa

English + Español
This is the first time that I am living with a dog that will outlive me. Or at least, this is the first time I am living with a dog that I see as someone who might outlive me.

Thinking on Animal Rights

From Crocodiles to Bees

Hidden Treasures of the Antilles

Hidden Treasures of the Antilles

English + Español
The Antilles and treasures… the Antilles and treasures….these are perhaps the most frequent associations everyone makes with the group of islands in the Caribbean Sea, whether due to the genius of Robert Louis Stevenson or the charisma of Jack Sparrow…

Pink Fairy Armadillos

Pink Fairy Armadillos

I discovered the existence of the pink fairy armadillo in a childhood visit to London’s Natural History Museum, Gazing into a cabinet filled with long-dead, moth-eaten taxidermy specimens, I wondered at a tiny gnomic creature perched on a shelf towards the back of the exhibit.

Extinction, Violence, and Other Threats

DRAGONS ON THE LANDSCAPE

DRAGONS ON THE LANDSCAPE

English + Español
Seen from above the volcanic range—19 volcanos strung across the Pacific coast of Nicaragua—, it feels as if one is looking at fire-breathing beasts in a precarious sleep, awaking every so often with a tectonic symphony waving the land as in liquid matter.

Taking the Long View in Cuba:Luces Largas

Taking the Long View in Cuba:
Luces Largas

In 2014, I had the good fortune to teach a class in Cuba called “From Cows to Sea Cows.” In this travel course, we examined the connections between agriculture, marine ecology, and conservation with Patricia González-Díaz, one of Cuba’s leading coral biologists.

Book Reviews

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