PREFACE
The national parks of America render as their most
important service a full free opportunity to all who will to find in
them a complete recreation, physical, mental, esthetic. In performing
this service the animal life existing within their borders constitutes a
valuable asset. For the best recreative forces in nature are those which
serve most quickly to call into play latent or seldom used faculties of
mind and body whose exercise tends to restore to normal balance the
human mechanism that has been disturbed by special or artificial
conditions of living. Foremost among these forces are the living things
that move and utter sounds, exhibit color and changing form, and by
these qualities readily attract and fix our interest. To seek
acquaintance with those primal objects of interest is to know the joy of
vigorous muscular activity; better still, it is to realize the
possession of the generally neglected senses of far-seeing and
far-hearing, and to invite an esthetic appeal of the highest type and an
intellectual stimulus of infinite resource.
Of the thousands who each year visit the Yosemite
Valley and its environs, a certain proportion are already interested in
natural history; and anyone who leaves the region without gathering some
definite knowledge of its natural history has failed to get adequate
gain from his opportunities. The geology, topography, and botany of the
Yosemite have been studied with some care; and there are instructive and
stimulating manuals available dealing with these subjects. But
heretofore only a few brief accounts have appeared in print concerning
the bird life of the region, and practically nothing has been made
available regarding its mammals, reptiles, and amphibians. It was in an
effort to supply this deficiency that a survey of the vertebrate natural
history of the Yosemite region was undertaken by the California Museum
of Vertebrate Zoology. The present volume deals with the results of that
survey.
The principal objects in view in undertaking the
survey were: To find out what species of mammals, birds, reptiles, and
amphibians exist, or have within modern times existed, in the
circumscribed area selected for study; to learn as much as possible
concerning the local distribution of each of these species, and to map
out the general life areas within the region; to learn as much as time
permitted of the food relations, the breeding habits, and the behavior,
individually, of each of the species; and finally to put all this
information on permanent record, in a form accessible to, and generally
assimilable by, the public, both lay and scientific.
In attempting the achievement of this last aim the
authors have brought together their materials with every precaution to
insure accuracy of fact and correctness of inference. No sacrifice of
precision has been made consciously with the end merely of affording
'attractive reading.' At the same time, technical terms, where the same
ideas could be expressed in words familiar to every reader of fair
education, have been avoided. Ideally, we have tried to present our
science, perfectly good science, in straightforward, readable form.
JOSEPH GRINNELL.
TRACY IRWIN STORER.
BERKELEY, July 6, 1922.
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