They appeared on earth 400 million years ago, long before the first reptile, bird, or mammal. They make up about 75 percent of the 1.2 million currently known species of animals. As many as 30,000 of them coexist and interact in one square yard of the top inch of a forest's soil. The unparalleled success of insects is the story told in this highly entertaining book. How do these often tiny but indefatigable creatures do it? Gilbert Waldbauer pursues this question from hot springs and Himalayan slopes to roadsides and forests, scrutinizing insect life in its many manifestations. "Insects through the Seasons" will educate and charm the expert, the passionate amateur, and the merely curious about our most populous and tenacious neighbors.
Waldbauer (Entomology/Univ. of Illinois) loves bugs, and he wants you to love them, too. Or at least to be fascinated enough to stop and look before squashing them underfoot. This thoroughly gratifying survey of that most successful animal group (now 400 million years old) is given both temporal and Darwinian perspectives. Starting with the optimistic swarm of spring, Waldbauer paints the landscape of each season, filling it with every manner of creature (though insects take center stage) and describing their evolutionary talents: how they find mates, how they find food, how they avoid being found as food for others. He never has to stretch for the fantastic or sensational example, for the insect world is one long, strange parade of curiosities: critters with ears on their legs, teeth on their genitals, the smell of carbona on their breath. Waldbauer gives the scoop on the tricks of a dead leaf butterfly, cracks the code of the cricket's chirp, tends bar for a boozing moth, shares the satin bowerbird's obsession with the color blue. In the process, he puts the entire ecological picture into context - the integrated community of interdependent organisms, in which we humans have no reason to feel superior. Without the pollinating and scavenging talents of our multilegged friends, we never would have made it here in the first place. And Waldbauer never skirts the rarefied stuff, giving the exceedingly complex notion of natural selection, for example, the elasticity it deserves and rarely gets, somehow putting it across with the clarity of an easy reader. Waldbauer's wisdom is served up like a tantalizing tray of hors d'oeuvres, none of which will likely be declined. (Kirkus Reviews)
| Preface | |
| First Things | |
| The Most Successful Animals on Earth | |
| Finding and Courting a Mate | |
| After the Courtship's Over | |
| Caring for Offspring | |
| Defense against Predators | |
| The Parasitic Way of Life | |
| Recognizing Food | |
| Taking Nourishment | |
| Coping with the Seasons | |
| Silken Cocoons | |
| Winter | |
| Selected Readings | |
| Acknowledgments | |
| Index | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780674454897
ISBN-10: 0674454898
Audience:
General
Format:
Paperback
Language:
English
Number Of Pages: 308
Published: 11th February 1998
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Dimensions (cm): 23.4 x 15.6
x 1.6
Weight (kg): 0.435