0

    Beetles of Eastern North America

    by Arthur V Evans


    Paperback

    $35.00
    $35.00

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • ISBN-13: 9780691133041
    • Publisher: Princeton University Press
    • Publication date: 06/08/2014
    • Pages: 560
    • Product dimensions: 8.10(w) x 10.07(h) x 1.27(d)

    Arthur V. Evans is an entomologist, author, lecturer, photographer, and broadcaster. He has written and cowritten many books, including An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles, the Field Guide to Beetles of California, and the National Wildlife Federation Field Guide to Insects and Spiders of North America.

    Table of Contents

    Preface 7

    Acknowledgments 8

    How to Use This Book 9

    Classification 9

    Key to Families 9

    Family Diagnoses 9

    Species Accounts 9

    Species Identification 10

    Introduction to Beetles 11

    Beetle Anatomy 11

    Behavior and Natural History 19

    When and Where to Find Beetles 33

    Observing and Photographing Beetles 36

    Beetle Conservation and the Ethics of Collecting 38

    Collecting and Preserving Beetles 39

    Making a Beetle Collection 45

    Keeping and Rearing Beetles in Captivity 49

    Taking an Active Role in Beetle Research 52

    Illustrated Key to the Common Beetle Families of Eastern North America 53

    Beetles of Eastern North America 59

    Reticulated beetles (Cupedidae) 60

    Telephone-pole beetles (Micromalthidae) 61

    Minute bog beetles (Sphaeriusidae) 62

    Ground, tiger, and wrinkled bark beetles (Carabidae) 63

    Whirligig beetles (Gyrinidae) 94

    Crawling water beetles (Haliplidae) 96

    Burrowing water beetles (Noteridae) 97

    Predaceous diving beetles (Dytiscidae) 99

    Water scavenger beetles (Hydrophilidae) 105

    Clown beetles (Histeridae) 110

    Minute moss beetles (Hydraenidae) 114

    Featherwing beetles (Ptiliidae) 115

    Primitive carrion beetles (Agyrtidae) 117

    Round fungus beetles (Leiodidae) 118

    Burying and carrion beetles (Silphidae) 120

    Rove beetles (Staphylinidae) 124

    Stag beetles (Lucanidae) 142

    Bess beetles (Passalidae) 145

    Enigmatic scarab beetles (Glaresidae) 146

    Hide beetles (Trogidae) 147

    Earth-boring scarab beetles (Geotrupidae) 149

    Sand-loving scarab beetles (Ochodaeidae) 152

    Scavenger and pill scarab beetles (Hybosoridae) 153

    Bumble bee scarabs (Glaphyridae) 155

    Scarab beetles (Scarabaeidae) 156

    Plate-thigh beetles (Eucinetidae) 178

    Minute beetles (Clambidae) 179

    Marsh beetles (Scirtidae) 180

    Cicada parasite beetles (Rhipiceridae) 183

    Metallic wood-boring or jewel beetles (Buprestidae) 184

    Pill or moss beetles (Byrrhidae) 195

    Riffle beetles (Elmidae) 196

    Long-toed water beetles (Dryopidae) 198

    Travertine beetles (Lutrochidae) 200

    Minute marsh-loving beetles (Limnichidae) 201

    Variegated mud-loving beetles (Heteroceridae) 202

    Water penny beetles (Psephenidae) 203

    Ptilodactylid beetles (Ptilodactylidae) 204

    Chelonariid beetles (Chelonariidae) 206

    Callirhipid beetles (Callirhipidae) 207

    Artematopodid beetles (Artematopodidae) 208

    Rare click beetles (Cerophytidae) 209

    False click beetles (Eucnemidae) 210

    Throscid beetles (Throscidae) 211

    Click beetles (Elateridae) 213

    Net-winged beetles (Lycidae) 229

    Glowworms (Phengodidae) 233

    Fireflies, lightningbugs, and glowworms (Lampyridae) 234

    False soldier and false firefly beetles (Omethidae) 237

    Soldier beetles (Cantharidae) 238

    Tooth-neck fungus beetles (Derodontidae) 243

    Wounded-tree beetles (Nosodendridae) 244

    Jacobsoniid beetles (Jacobsoniidae) 245

    Skin beetles (Dermestidae) 246

    Endecatomid beetles (Endecatomidae) 249

    Bostrichid beetles (Bostrichidae) 250

    Death-watch and spider beetles (Ptinidae) 252

    Ship-timber beetles (Lymexylidae) 258

    Bark-gnawing beetles and cadelles (Trogossitidae) 259

    Checkered beetles (Cleridae) 263

    Soft-winged flower beetles (Melyridae) 271

    Fruitworm beetles (Byturidae) 274

    Cryptic slime mold beetles (Sphindidae) 275

    False skin beetles (Biphyllidae) 276

    Pleasing fungus and lizard beetles (Erotylidae) 277

    Root-eating beetles (Monotomidae) 281

    Silken fungus beetles (Cryptophagidae) 283

    Silvanid flat bark beetles (Silvanidae) 285

    Flat bark beetles (Cucujidae) 288

    Parasitic flat bark beetles (Passandridae) 289

    Shining flower and shining mold beetles (Phalacridae) 290

    Lined flat bark beetles (Laemophloeidae) 291

    Short-winged flower beetles (Kateretidae) 293

    Sap beetles (Nitidulidae) 295

    Cybocephalid beetles (Cybocephalidae) 304

    Palmetto beetles (Smicripidae) 305

    Bothriderid beetles (Bothrideridae) 305

    Minute bark beetles (Cerylonidae) 307

    Handsome fungus beetles (Endomychidae) 308

    Lady beetles (Coccinellidae) 311

    Minute hooded and fungus beetles (Corylophidae) 320

    Minute brown scavenger beetles (Latridiidae) 322

    Hairy fungus beetles (Mycetophagidae) 323

    Archeocrypticid beetles (Archeocrypticidae) 325

    Minute tree-fungus beetles (Ciidae) 326

    Polypore fungus beetles (Tetratomidae) 327

    False darkling beetles (Melandryidae) 329

    Tumbling flower beetles (Mordellidae) 333

    Ripiphorid beetles (Ripiphoridae) 338

    Zopherid beetles (Zopheridae) 340

    Darkling beetles (Tenebrionidae) 344

    Synchroa bark beetles (Synchroidae) 359

    False longhorn beetles (Stenotrachelidae) 360

    False blister beetles (Oedemeridae) 362

    Blister beetles (Meloidae) 365

    Palm and flower beetles (Mycteridae) 369

    Conifer bark beetles (Boridae) 371

    Dead log beetles (Pythidae) 372

    Fire-colored beetles (Pyrochroidae) 373

    Narrow-waisted bark beetles (Salpingidae) 376

    Antlike flower beetles (Anthicidae) 377

    Ischaliid beetles (Ischaliidae) 382

    Antlike leaf beetles (Aderidae) 382

    False flower beetles (Scraptiidae) 384

    Disteniid longhorn beetles (Disteniidae) 387

    Longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae) 388

    Megalopodid leaf beetles (Megalopodidae) 428

    Orsodacnid leaf beetles (Orsodacnidae) 429

    Leaf and seed beetles (Chrysomelidae) 429

    Pine flower snout beetles (Nemonychidae) 457

    Fungus weevils (Anthribidae) 458

    Cycad weevils (Belidae) 462

    Leaf-rolling and thief weevils, and toothnose snout beetles (Attelabidae) 462

    Straight-snouted and pear-shaped weevils (Brentidae) 466

    Weevils, and snout, bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae) 469

    Appendix: Classification of the Beetles Covered in This Book 501

    Glossary 523

    Selected References and Resources 527

    Photo and Illustration Credits 530

    Index 537

    Eligible for FREE SHIPPING details

    .

    Beetles of Eastern North America is a landmark book—the most comprehensive full-color guide to the remarkably diverse and beautiful beetles of the United States and Canada east of the Mississippi River. It is the first color-illustrated guide to cover 1,406 species in all 115 families that occur in the region—and the first new in-depth guide to the region in more than forty years. Lavishly illustrated with over 1,500 stunning color images by some of the best insect photographers in North America, the book features an engaging and authoritative text by noted beetle expert Arthur Evans.

    Extensive introductory sections provide essential information on beetle anatomy, reproduction, development, natural history, behavior, and conservation. Also included are tips on where and when to find beetles; how to photograph, collect, and rear beetles; and how to contribute to research. Each family and species account presents concise and easy-to-understand information on identification, natural history, collecting, and geographic range. Organized by family, the book also includes an illustrated key to the most common beetle families, with 31 drawings that aid identification, and features current information on distribution, biology, and taxonomy not found in other guides.

    An unmatched guide to the rich variety of eastern North American beetles, this is an essential book for amateur naturalists, nature photographers, insect enthusiasts, students, and professional entomologists and other biologists.

    • Provides the only comprehensive, authoritative, and accessible full-color treatment of the region's beetles
    • Covers 1,406 species in all 115 families east of the Mississippi River
    • Features more than 1,500 stunning color images from top photographers
    • Presents concise information on identification, natural history, collecting, and geographic range for each species and family
    • Includes an illustrated key to the most common beetle families

    Read More

    Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

    Recently Viewed 

    From the Publisher
    Honorable Mention for the 2015 National Outdoor Book Awards, Nature Guidebooks, NOBA Foundation

    "If you are interested in beetles, then this is a must have."—Roberta Gibson, Wild about Ants

    "Few entomologists are also skilled at writing for a general audience, but Evans makes it seem effortless. He has a real gift for simplifying concepts so that they are not intimidating to an amateur naturalist yet not condescending to veteran entomologists. The introductory section is as well-illustrated as the remainder of the book, and explains many puzzling physical features of beetles. . . . In short, this is the most compact, affordable, comprehensive, and useful beetle book to come along since I can't remember when."Bug Eric

    "'Beetle-maniacs' will adore this beautifully illustrated, comprehensive volume written by the renowned entomologist Arthur Evans. Those who don't realize beetles are such a fascinating topic will be happily surprised."—Catriona Tudor Erler, New York Journal of Books

    "Anyone east of the Mississippi with more than a passing interest in insects will want a copy. Now."—Bill Cannon, Scientist's Bookshelf

    "Stunning."Dan Tallman's Bird Blog

    "Beetles of Eastern North America is an excellent book that will be much loved by field naturalists and entomologists alike, especially given its very modest price."—Robert F. Foster, Canadian Field-Naturalist

    "This guide is detailed, easy to use and nicely illustrated. It will open your eyes to these interesting little creatures, many of which are stunningly colorful and beautiful."—R. E. H., Wildlife Activist

    Sign In Create an Account
    Search Engine Error - Endeca File Not Found