Carolyn C. Smith
Berrill, N. J. and Jacquelyn Berrill.
1001 Questions Answered About
The Seashore
. Dodd, Mead and Company. New York. 1957.
This book is a guide to help a person to identify animals and plants of the seashore using a question and answer technique.
Buchsbaum, Ralph.
Animals Without Backbones
. The University of Chicago Press. Chicago. 1976.
This book presents the main groups of invertebrate animals, describing their basic structure and habits.
Hausman, Leon.
Seashore Life
. G. P. Putnam’s Sons. New York. 1949.
This book gives an account of the sea creatures which are found as you explore the shores of America.
Hay, John and Peter Farb.
The Atlantic Shore
. Harper and Row. New York. 1966.
This book gives a description of the human and natural history which exist from Long Island to Labrador.
Hickman, Cleceland P.
Biology of Invertebrates
. The C. V. Mosby Co. Saint Louis. 1967.
This book deals with major groups of invertebrates describing their characteristics through the evolutionary development.
Kane, Henry B.
The Tale of a Pond.
Alfred A. Knopf. New York. 1960.
This book lets you see the full year’s cycle in the life of a pond, from frozen weeks of winter, through the burgeoning of spring, the hot stillness of summer, and the colorful days of fall.
Meglitsch, Paul A.
Invertebrate Zoology
. Oxford University Press. New York. 1972.
This book gives a comprehensive account of some of the reasons why the form and functions of animals are so adaptive for the habitats they occupy.
Morgan, Ann Haven.
Field Book of Ponds and Streams
. G. P. Putnam’s Press. New York. 1930.
This book gives an account of the range of life in ponds and streams.
Reid, George K. and George S. Fichter.
Pond Life.
Golden Press. New York. 1967.
This book describes and illustrates some of the most common of the thousands of species of plants and animals found in or near the water.
Russell-Hunter, W. D.
A Biology of Higher Invertebrates
. The MacMillan Company. London. 1969.
This book deals with biological aspects of the whole animal discussing its functional morphology, behavior, and evolution.