Dragon Songs: Love and Adventure Among Crocodiles, Alligators, and Other Dinosaur Relations

 
   

When Vladimir Dinets was accepted into the PhD program in zoology at the University of Miami, he thought crocodiles were a dead-end research topic until he witnessed groups of up to seventy alligators performing mating choruses that included infrasound vibrations—a form of communication extremely rare in nature—and a “dance” unknown in the scientific literature but that resembled a scene from Jurassic Park. To prove his thesis about the language of crocodiles, he spent the next six years traveling around the world, studying almost every living species. With adventures on five continents, Dragon Songs is his account of this quest. It includes an escape from a boiling lava lake in the Afar Desert, being chased up a tree by a tiger in India, hitching a ride with a cocaine smuggler in Bolivia, and diving with giant Greenland sharks—all in the name of studying crocodiles, among which he routinely paddled in his inflatable kayak. His ground-breaking research helped change the field.