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Check out this new series from Star Trek's Walter Koenig. Two hundred years after the apocalypse the human race, buried in the bowels of the earth, is a few tortured breaths from extinction. It offers up one last gift to the poisoned surface and the mutant life forms that survive there; a new species. Up until now the creatures of fiction, these new beings must determine the purpose of their being. Are they only the violent spawn of mankind's evil doomed to a soulless eternity, or the progenitors of a better, more hopeful world? Is it possible for them to tear the throats from their prey, drink the blood, and still pray to god?
A graphic novel from one of the stars from the original Star Trek series follows a clash between two alien species. Original.
In "Warped Factors", original "Star Trek" star Walter Koenig (a.k.a. Ensign Pavel Chekov) provides a fascinating and often riotous chronicle of his life and career. of color photos.
The actor who portrays Lieutenant Pavel Chekov of the Starship Enterprise describes his experiences and provides portraits of fellow actors during the filming of the Star trek movie based on the popular television series.
Human killing human. Vampire killing vampire.Disorder into derangement. Anarchy into chaos.
Actor Walter Koenig is known to millions around the world as Pavel Chekov in Star Trek. This autobiography moves from his early days as a struggling actor in New York to the fateful day when he auditioned for the role of a cocky young Russian Ensign in Star Trek.
From a distant world the invaders came. In their wake nearly all of the human population is disintegrated. Now survivors, both human and alien, trudge through this wasteland. Some are aimless, others purposeful, but all cling to survival and their own sanity, unaware their fates are intertwined. When Earth’s champions gather, is there hope for a better world? No, definitely not.
Cooperative breeders are species in which more than a pair of individuals assist in the production of young. Cooperative breeding is found in only a few hundred bird species world-wide, and understanding this often strikingly altruistic behaviour has remained an important challenge in behavioural ecology for over 30 years. This book highlights the theoretical, empirical and technical advances that have taken place in the field of cooperative breeding research since the publication of the seminal work Cooperative Breeding in Birds: Long-term Studies of Behavior and Ecology (1990, HB ISBN 0521 372984, PB ISBN 0521 378907). Organized conceptually, special attention is given to ways in which cooperative breeders have proved fertile subjects for testing modern advances to classic evolutionary problems including those of sexual selection, sex-ratio manipulation, life-history evolution, partitioning of reproduction and incest avoidance. It will be of interest to both students and researchers interested in behaviour and ecology.
Brings together long-term studies of cooperation in vertebrates that challenge our understanding of the evolution of social behavior.