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VOLUME .50, NUMBER 2 161 Lacking fossils, Dennis has to use paleoclimatic reconstruc tioas and knowledge of the climatic adaptations of extant species to try to reconstruct butterfly paleofaunas. This is more or Jess th e inverse of what ecohistory data producers deo , and it has no obvious reality checks. In 1994 Scott Elias published Quaternary Insects and Th eir Enuironllwnts (Smithsonian Institution Press , Washington, DC, 284 pp.; reviewed by B. Dnllnmond in News Lepid. Soc. 1994:77). There is almost nothing about butterflies in it, but it should be read by everyone who reads the Dennis books. The mountains of pal e ocoleopterological data give us a fine lesson in humility. (The only pretenders to truth who far e worse than ecohisto- rians a nd paleoecologists are vi cariance biogeographers.) The biggest problem turns out to be not changing climatic adaptation by morphospecies but vagility beyond our wildest dreams. An endemic Sicilian beetle with nothing at all to sugge':t it had eve r been any- wh e re but Sicily turns out to have been in Britain during a warm interglacial. A related beetle now confined to the Tibetan Plateau was in Britain during a periglacial stage. And so on. How can we retrodict faunas when we cannot define the pool of potentially available players? Similarly , how can we hope to predict future faunas? The lack of fossils makes butterfly workers dependent on a handful of bizarre relicts to remind us how feeble our imaginations are. The fact that Vanessa indica, a patent relict in the Canary Islands and Madeira, was rationalized away as a r ece nt introduction in commerce (Leestmans 1978, Linneana Belgica 7:130-156; Shapiro 1992, Entomologist Ill: 10- 21) is a case in point. Butterflies and Climate Change is a well-produced book. It is nearly free of typograph- ical errors; 1 noted five plus a serious lapsus calami (Colias for Colotis on p. 207 ). The text is very dense and cannot be read casually. The hibliography is huge-some 1100 entries-and eclectic, but in some ways unsatisfYing; hardly non-English-language works are cited, and it is surprisingly light on paleoentomology (three Coope papers, no Kenward ) and on the conceptual framework of pal e oenvironmental reconstruction. On the oth er hand, it cites velY recent theoretical papers in ecology and, as noted above , could even be used as a short text in butterfly biology in ge neral. Th e fact is that once on e begins doing a work like this, th e limits to one's coverage eventually become arbitrary and highly personal. Had I wlitten this book I would have a somewhat differ e nt, but no " bett e r," set of" in" and "out" topics and citations. I have only one public complaint about interpretation: on p' l ge 169 Dennis seems content to acce pt Shields ' claim that all the butterfly families were already in ex.istence in the Mesozoic. This may be true, but there are no fossils to support snch a claim. It is strictly a backward extrapolation of evolutionary rates. But does anyone think rates of adapti ve e volution are constant in geologic time'? De nnis is to be congratulated for an important achievement , even if r doubt the British hmna will behave predictably. It was G. K. Chesterton who described (in Napoleon of Notting Hill ) th e game of "Cheat the Prophet," ill which the young people listen respect- fully to the predictions of the sages, wait until the sages die, alld then do something different. Perhaps British lepidopterists will lIeed updated versions of Torben Larsen's Mid-East or tropical African butterfl y books to identifY the fauna of gardens in South Kensington! One final observation: modern biochemical-ge netic techniques (" phylogeography" or "genography") as applied to historical biogeography are rapidly rendering work of this sort obsolete. Arm-wavers like Dennis and me will have to go molecular or join an increasing number of hutterfly species in oblivion. ARTHUR M. SHAPIRO, Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis, California 95616. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society . 50(2). 1996, 161-166 BUTTERFLIES THROUGH BINOCULARS: A FIELD GUIDE TO BUTTERFLIES OF THE BOSTON- NEW YORK-WASHINGTON REGION, by Jeffr ey Glassberg. L993. (Forward by Edward O.
Transcript
Page 1: NUMBER 161 - Yale Universityimages.peabody.yale.edu/lepsoc/jls/1990s/1996/1996-50(2)161-Pyle.pdfLacking fossils, Dennis has to use paleoclimatic reconstructioas and knowledge of the

VOLUME .50, NUMBER 2 161

Lacking fossils, Dennis has to use paleoclimatic reconstructioas and knowledge of the climatic adaptations of extant species to try to reconstruct butterfly paleofaunas. This is more or Jess the inverse of what ecohistory data producers deo, and it has no obvious reality checks.

In 1994 Scott Elias published Quaternary Insects and Their Enuironllwnts (Smithsonian Institution Press , Washington, DC, 284 pp.; reviewed by B. Dnllnmond in News Lepid. Soc. 1994:77). There is almost nothing about butterflies in it, but it should be read by everyone who reads the Dennis books. The mountains of paleocoleopterological data give us a fine lesson in humility. (The only pretenders to truth who fare worse than ecohisto­rians and paleoecologists are vicariance biogeographers.) The biggest problem turns out to b e not changing climatic adaptation by morphospecies but vagility beyond our wildest dreams. An endemic Sicilian beetle with nothing at all to sugge':t it had ever been any­whe re but Sicily turns out to have been in Britain during a warm interglacial. A related beetle now confined to the Tibetan Plateau was in Britain during a periglacial stage. And so on. How can we retrodict faunas when we cannot define the pool of potentially available playe rs? Similarly, how can we hope to predict future faunas? The lack of fossils makes butterfly workers dependent on a handful of bizarre relicts to remind us how feeble our imaginations are. The fact that Vanessa indica, a patent relict in the Canary Islands and Madeira, was rationalized away as a recent introduction in commerce (Leestmans 1978, Linneana Belgica 7:130-156; Shapiro 1992, Entomologist Ill: 10- 21) is a case in point.

Butterflies and Climate Change is a well-produced book. It is nearly free of typograph­ical errors; 1 noted five plus a serious lapsus calami (Colias for Colotis on p. 207). The text is very dense and cannot be read casually. The hibliography is huge-some 1100 entries-and eclectic, but in some ways unsatisfYing; hardly an~! non-English-language works are cited, and it is surprisingly light on paleoentomology (three Coope papers, no Kenward) and on the conceptual framework of paleoenvironmental reconstruction. On the other hand, it cites velY recent theoretical papers in ecology and, as noted above, could even be used as a short text in butterfly biology in general. The fact is that once one begins doing a work like this, the limits to one's coverage eventually become arbitrary and highly personal. Had I wlitten this book I would have a somewhat different, but no "bette r," set of" in" and "out" topics and citations.

I have only one public complaint about interpretation: on p'lge 169 Dennis seems content to accept Shields ' claim that all the butterfly families were already in ex.istence in the Mesozoic. This may be true, but there are no fossils to support snch a claim. It is strictly a backward extrapolation of evolutionary rates. But does anyone think rates of adaptive evolution are constant in geologic time'?

D ennis is to be congratulated for an important achievement, even if r doubt the British hmna will behave predictably. It was G. K. Chesterton who described (in Napoleon of Notting Hill ) the game of "Cheat the Prophet," ill which the young people listen respect­fully to the predictions of the sages, wait until the sages die, alld then do something different. Perhaps British lepidopterists will lIeed updated versions of Torben Larsen's Mid-East or tropical African butterfly books to identifY the fauna of gardens in South Kensington!

One final observation: modern biochemical-genetic techniques ("phylogeography" or "genography") as applied to historical biogeography are rapidly rendering work of this sort obsolete. Arm-wavers like Dennis and me will have to go molecular or join an increasing number of hutterfly species in oblivion.

ARTHUR M. SHAPIRO, Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis, California 95616.

Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society .50(2). 1996, 161-166

BUTTERFLIES THROUGH BINOCULARS: A FIELD GUIDE TO BUTTERFLIES OF THE BOSTON­NEW YORK-WASHINGTON REGION, by Je ffrey Glassberg. L993. (Forward by Edward O.

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162 JOURNAL OF THE LEPIDOPTERISTS' SOCIETY

Wilson, Preface by Robert K. Robbins.) Oxford University Press. 200 Madison Avenue, New York, NY. 160 pages, 300 color photographs in 40 plates. Soft cover, 14 X 21 em, ISBN 0-19-507983-3, $19.95.

A few years ago Jeff Glassberg called to tell me that he and some others were starting a new organization to be called the North American Butterfly Aswciation, to be devoted to butterfly watching and appreciation. As a twenty-year proponent of this underrated activity, J was pleased to hear it. He went on to inform me that the group would be undertaking a new list of common names for American butterflit·s, and asked if I would be willing to sit on the committee. Since 1 had initiated the joint Xerces SOCiety-Lepi­dopterists' Society Common Names Committee in 1980, and took part in the arduous and contentious task of constructing a synonymy and list of such names, and since The Com­mon Names of North American Butterflies had only recently been published (1992) by Xerces and the Smithsonian Institution, under Jackie Miller's inspired leadership and editing (see review by R. R. White iu J. Lepid Soc. 46:3J 0-311), I replied that I would be happy to help the new group in any other way, but that there w~re several tall bUildings I would rather leap off than to be on another common names committee.

In spite of what I considered a monumental redundancy, NABA has indeed come about and has begun publishing the impressive magazine American B,"tterflies, co-sponsoring and conducting the Xerces Fourth of July Butterfly Counts, and promoting butterfly awareness. For this, Glassherg is to be congratulated. He also de~:erves praise for his new book, a manifesto of the butterfly watchers' creed and a gUide to doing it in the north­eastern states. Butterflies Through Binoculars takes this delightful avocation to a new level.

The cover copy of the book says, "while traditional guides cater to the collector, offering drawings of captured and mounted insects, this book provides photographs of living but­terflies in their natural poses and in the correct size relationship w other speCies, making identification qUick and easy." Other advertisements for the book have actually stated that this is the first book to do so. That, of course, is wrong. Areta A. Saunders used photo­graphs of live butterflies as long ago as 1932, in her Butterflie, of the Allegheny State Park. My Watching Washington Butterflies (Seattle Audubon SOCiety, 1974) and Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Butterflies (Knopf, 1981) both employed photo­graphs of live butterflies and a watchers' standpoint. And Paul Opler and George Krizek's Butterflies East of the Great Plains (Jobns Hopkins, 1984) also used photos from nature. So Glassberg is far from the first to take this approach. However, he has made many improvements over previOUS treatments and produced a near Stlte-of-the-art effort. Be­sides, authors should not be held responsible for publishers' flak.

Let us now take a field trip through the field gUide and see how it works. The clever cover shows two bright beauties as if through binoculars, inviting you in. The title is inspired, the subtitle unwieldy; it might have benefited from one of the nicknames for the region (Bosnywash, Bos-Wash Corridor). The region covered, excluding Long Island and outer Chesapeake, is small enough to treat in detail. 1 like the idea of addressing the resource near where most of the people live, rather than taking the view that would-be watchers must travel to distant wildlands.

The endpapers contain twelve black silhouettes representing seven "families" to be encountered in the book's range. This tool, borrowed from early Peterson guides, might help novices learn to recognize "type" more readily from the ba:;ic shape of the subject.

The text begins with brief commendations by Big Guns. E. O. "Vilson's Foreword speaks with grace of the impulse that leads us into these Elysian fields: " ... to re-acquire a sense of timeless languor ... to be free in a world without destmction or pollution, an aurelian again! " He characterizes the book, aptly enough, as "a peoplE's natural history," user­friendly, and an open door. Robert Robbins' Preface predicts an "explosion of interest in butterflies," something that is already coming true and which Glassberg'S book is poised to assist.

The author's copious acknowledgments conclude with a switch delightful for its attitude if not its syntax: "If you find something you find objectionable in this book, please ran­domly choose one of the above reviewers and assign the responsibility for the error to

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VOLUME 50, NUMBER 2 163

them." This fairly represents both the prose (workmanlike) and humor (good) of the following 160 pages.

The first twenty comprise an introduction telling how to use :he book. "How to Find Butterflies" is a bit brief and vague, but complemented by later habitat descriptions. "How to Identify" gives a good, clear opening to this demanding part of the practice. The impOltant sections on "Binoculars" and "Photography," although adequate, are very gen­eral. For a book with such an emphasis as this one has, more detail and brand comparison would have been warranted and helpful. Enthusiasts will quickly outgrow these curt re­marks and wish for more of the author's experience. The advice, what there is of it, is good, solid, and clear.

"Butterfly Lives" is still more concise, as is "Butterfly Gardening," followed by short lists of garden species and nectar sources. The detailed understarlding, it is implied, will come through your own observation. The two re maining text sections. however, are treated in more detail, and appropriately so. First, Glassberg assays "Migration" within the book's corridor. In addition to classic patterns of movement, he mentions the lesser-known phe­nomenon of nymphalids moving south in large numbers in the fall, citing his observation of some 16,000 butterflies of four species passing Brooklyn in one day. His theories are intriguing, though he fails to m ention the buckeye as a major mover: that's the one I saw mobbing Cape May along with the southbound warblers and accipiters. He also perpet­uates the erroneous belief that most of the California monarchs overwinter near Pacific Grove, but the migration section on the whole is a welcome plea to the many new watchers for further investigation of this murky subject.

The section on "Conselvation" stresses the preservation of habitat and diminished pes­ticide use and pollution. Glassberg e nvisions "an interconnecting network of small pro­tected habitat units along with a few larger units," which (if carefully chosen) he feels would suffice to protect most of onr butterfly species. Those who have been concerned about NABA's approach to collecting will be inte rested in Glassberg's statements on the subject, to which he devotes one paragraph. He does believe that collectors, operating without scruples, are "capable of having a Significant negative effE'ct on butterfly popula­tions." He cites Mitchell's satyr (Neonympha mitchellii) as an example, stating that it is "almost certainly gone from the northeastern United States, exti'1)ated by relentless col­lection pressure." Nowhere does Glassberg proscribe colle cting as such, although Wilson, in his Foreword, equates putting away the net and pins as havin~; "matured to the level of birders." Neither author m entions that the range data upon which all conservation activities are based owe almost entirely to the activities of collectors. Wilson later says that "butterfly biology is in an early stage of exploration," with :1 great deal left to be learned; but fails to make clear for the reader that such knowledge will again rely on the immatures who still collect. Nor is it explained that learning butterfly identification comes faster for those who maintain a refe rence collection, and that strict watchers will experi­ence frustration trying to achieve the powers of recognition that their collecting friends have long since mastere d.

We comc then to the species accounts, which are the heart of the book. At first glance these resemble every other attempt to pe rsonifY a creature in a few telegraphic para­graphs, but there are some real innovations here. Some work berter than others. Each account includes the follOwing features: name, size, similar species, identification, habitat, range, specific localities, flight period and abundance, major foodplant(s), and comments. Each of these be ars examination for its treatment.

Name. Glassberg explains why he started the committee I declined to jOin, and uses its recommended names in all cases, sometimes giving alternatives from other field gUides. To be fair, some of the committee's departures are improvements. On scientific names, the author discusses a couple of reasons for difference s among authors (omitting several reasons) and calls the ICZN gender gUideline "a rule only a pedaut could love." He fails to identifY the authOrity he follows for scientific names, nor does he deSignate authors or subspecies.

Size. The author recognizes radical variation in size among individuals of a species, then goes OIl to adopt a peculiar method of size deSCription involving "~ize standard" species. So when we look up Dion skipper, we read that it is the size of the ZabuloniHobomok

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164 JOURNAL OF THE LEPIDOPTERISTS' SOCIETY

skipper. vVe have to go to Table 1 to see that this equates to 10116 inches. Some are ( or ((, others) or )) than the standards. Yet we already know that they all vary, and not necessmily proportionately. From its cumbersome method of secondhand comparison to its quaint sixteenths of an inch , this is not the most successful "ection. This innovation offers nothing over the good old "23- 33 mm" system, or even "small/medium/large."

Similar SpeCies. These do not always correspond. For example, the cabbage white is similar to the checkered white, but apparently not the reverse. C onfUSingly similar species are some times ove rlooked. For example, many beginners confuse female eastern tailed blues with hairstreaks, a fact not noted here.

Identification. These chatty descriptions nicely capture the looks and sometimes the key behavioral qUirks of the species. The jacket hype promises "entirely new field marks" for identification; a tall order thiS, and I was skeptical. I compare d ten confusable species against Klots, Opler, and Pyle. This exercise turned up four new field marks to six estab­lished ones- not bad.

Habitat, Range, and Specific Localities. These sections give useful summaries of the species' occurrence-overall, throughout the region covered, and within the local land­scapp. Unfortunately, the latter section only appears in a minority of accounts-those that are "rare and/or local in one of the subregions," but not so rare as to be liable to what Glassberg calls "the substantial dange r of butterfly collectors dest roying the localized col­onies. "

Flight Period and Abundance. These notes are given for e ach of the four subregions, which correspond to the vicinities of the fou r major cities that de fine the region: Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Washington. Glassberg notes that this is only a rough guide to variable conditions. Maximum Ilumbers seen are given for some species and regions, though only sporadically and to uncertain ends: does it tell us anything, or just brag on the author's big days? This feature could use interpretation and more uniform application.

Food Plants. This completes the profile of the species wher'~abouts. Favored nectar plants are sometimes named.

Comments. Glassbe rg honestly states that "Here I include remarks of an unpredictable nature;" and abollt his more Iy'ical comments, he advises that we may either "accept these at face value, or view them as having been written with an ironic sense of detachment, laced with a nostalgia for an imagined Simpler time ." If he was nervous about lOSing his objectivity here, he should have relaxed and done it more. Th" comments, where they appear, offer some of the best reading in the book. Whether speaking of "hundreds of [Cabbagel Whites danCing around the blooming Purple Loosestrife" or the Gray Comma, "often overlooke d because it is most common in woodlands in October when butterfliers become rare," Glassberg broadens our view of the species in question when he indulges his own responses. Writing field gUides is the art of balanCing between the objectively descriptive and the pe rsonal reaction of the writer. When the latte r is lost, the book becomes more sterile. For example, the classic Klots Peterson Field Guide was full of personalia, including egregiOUS puns ("Nysa is very nysally distinguished from other Am­blysci-rtes of our area by the distinctive underside patte rn," etc.) With many more border species to cover, the OpleriMalikul replacement lacked the room for much in the way of authorial comment. The result is a supe rb guide but a diminish ed read. Glassberg'S own comments are highly e rratic. Among the swallowtails, only the hlack and the tiger rate comments. Skippers get very few overall. 1 would like more. It is through these asides that we can appreciate the author's individual lens on the subject, and Glassberg'S is a sharp and colorful view to be e njoyed, when he unveils it for m.

Six appe ndices follow, making up about a third of the book. Appendix A offers Descrip­tions and Checklists for Selected Butterflying Localities. This excellent section includes detail ed profiles of nine good butterfly-watching spots known for their diversity, abun­dance, and accessibility. Each gives a deSCription of the site, a nm-down on its butterflies, a list of species to be encountered, and directions , writte n up by persons familiar with the local conditions. Brie f notes follow for 37 additional sites. This will be one of the most useful parts of the book for many, though collectors should note that butterflies are pro­tected on most of the sites m entioned.

Appendix B gives both the median and ranges for flight periods of New York area

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VOLUME .50, NUMBER 2 16.5

butterflies. Appendix C conveys the same information graphically. adding the factor of abundance, through an ingenious form of phenogram. These break down the occurrence of New York area butterflies into five-day blocks over a five-year period, as expressed by black bars of three thicknesses for uncommon, common, or abundant. I like these dia­grams very much, as they express so much data so compactly. Their chief problems are two: though the data are attJibuted to the New York Butterfly Club. we are told nothing of the nature, location, or status of the data base itself. And the five years represented are not designated (is this 1875-80 or 1987-92, or what?) so that no comparisons are possible with climatic records, Season's Summaries, or other information. Clearly, the seasonal appearance and abundance of species will vary up and down the corridor of the book's concern. Still, these appendices will give field trippers a good ide a of what to expect.

Appendix D is a checklist of the specie s known to occur in the urhan-coastal strip, giving English names only. Many users would prefcr to see scientific names he re as well. Appendix E lists butterfly societies and clubs. Appendix F use fully lists the Xerces Society·s (now NABA co-sponsored) Fourth of July Butterfly Counts that take place regularly within the book's area. Impressively, this now totals 25 annual outings, and counting.

The text wraps up with a glossary of terms used, all anatomi cal except for the quirky inclusion of the genus Andropogon-ecological and biological additions would have been welcome ; a worthwhile , if brief, bibliography; photo credits; an C' an index to species. in both English and Latin, but giving only the primary page-mention.

The forty color plates of butterflies photographed from life ce.mplete the book. Their captions, on the opposite page, give both scientific and vernacular names; tell where and often when each was photographed (this is to h e applauded); reiterate the chief field marks; and apply an abundance rating for each subregion. Different forms , sexes, and orientations (dOl'sal , ventral) are often depicted. On the whole, t'he photographs are ex­cellent. None are obviously manipulated, bllt for one pinned speclmen. Focus is generally shalp, but occasionally sacrificed for sake of inclusiveness . Some of the subjects are worn-the mourning cloak will not break any hearts-but that's nature , and some of the best of contemporary butterfly photography is highlighted h e re. ~: everal pages have gaps , and one wonders whethe r the space might have been well filled with additional clarifying images or representative larvae .

D erivative of Peterson, black lines point out field marks; however, not only do these sometimes interfere with the image, but they have been used only fitfully, and. unless I'm missing something, arbitrarily. Likewise, sex is ofte n indicated bu t not infrequently omit­ted, even when it is obvious. The words sometimes do poor justice to the images, such as calling the subtle lilac-silver of the gemmed satyr a <'gray patch ," or the hyaline spots of Erynnis spp. "white." Skippers are not stinted he re . Though they will be daunted at first, diligent watchers should be able eventually to identifY most of their Bosnywash butterflies with their binoculars and the aide of this book.

It remains only to make a few gene ral comments and speCific corrections. The text would have gained from more consistent and ligorous editing. Jawbreaker jargon ("sig­nificantly facilitating") butts heads with a loose r, more pleasant voice ("preview your space in heaven"). Overgeneralization plagues the book. Glassberg describes lawns as deserts, but this need not always be true-we all know lawn skippers, blu>?s, and sulphurs on the right kind of lawns- the point is that chemically treated , overmown lawns are impover­ished. Likewise , powerlines are recommended as attractive habitat;. True, unsprayed lines can be very good, but others are maintained with he rbicides and ofTer little to the lepi­dopterist. I would have wclcomed these kinds of speCifies. The "field marks" concept should be credited to Roge r Tory Peterson, who both coined the term and popularize d its use. Glassberg encourages readers to keep lists of what they see and where, but this is too vague. He should give minimum data needs, including detailed date and locality deSCription, and explain why this is important (butterfliers can contribute valuable data). What about notes on be havior? And where ean observers "send it in?" State natural heritage programs, butterfly surveys, etc., rely 011 amateurs' field obse rvations; this should be noted and aided. Watching will n ever begin to replace catching as a tool for Imowle dge and conservation until watchers become adept record-keepers, like many birde rs. In meta­morphosis, moulting "will happen a numbe r of times." vVhy not b,,, speCific: "occurs four

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166 JOURNAL OF THE LEPIDOPTERISTS' SOCIETY

to six times. " The statement that som e species can overwinter in any stage needs docu­mentation. The author ignores watching without binoculars, and catch-and-release, both very important to versatile and successful butterfly watching as well as to teaching. Learn­ing to identifY butterflies comes much faster through careful capture, forceps-exam, and release (which need not injure the animal) than through mere "binocularing."

As with any ambitious book, one could continue to find minor faults until the butterflies come home. Howeve r, though it could use some refitting for the second edition , this book's strengths outweigh and outnumber its faults. When Jeff Glassberg made his self­styled apotheosis from collector to watcher, he decided to take as many with him as he could, and to attract the multitudes who, until now, havc been mired in the quotidian of birds and wildflowers. Happily, he has done so with style, and wit"hout actually denigrating collecting per se. He has certainly acted on his convictions, first by founding N ABA, and now with this book. T have no doubt that lepidopterology will benefit from a broader public, whatever their chief form of pursuit, so long as they are mutually tolerant and considerate. And I have no doubt that, because of this book, butterflies will win many more devotees among the most densely packed parcel of our populace.

Oxford University Press has produced a handsome, solid, and well-priced volume that is sure to enhance appreciation of a resource undervalued until recently. Lepidopterists will want it as well as those just discovering butterflies. I only wish I'd had it during the three years I spent in New Haven.

ROBERT MICHAEL PYLE, Swede Park, 369 Loop Road, Gray's River; Washington 98621-9702.

Journal of the Lepid"pterists' Society 50(2), 1996, 166-168

BIOLOGY AND CONSERVATION OF THE MONARCH BUTTERFLY, by Stephen B. Malcolm and Myron P. Zalucki (editors ). 1993. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Science Series No. 38. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900 Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90007. 419 pages, 2 color plates, numerous B&W photographs and text figures. Hardcover, 18 X 26 cm, IS BN 0079-0903. $90 (+ $9 p&h).

In the Introduction to this volume, the editors, Steve Malcolm and Myron Zalucki, suggest that the Monarch butterfly and its relationships to the biotic and abiotic environ­ment provide a valuable model for investigating a range of questions in all aspects of biology. It was exciting and encouraging to look over this book and realize just how much this butte rfly species, its relatives , and its ecological and evolulionary interactions have contributed to our understanding of many basic tenets of biology.

The book is the product of the Second International Conf,~rence on the Monarch Butterfly ("Moncon-2"), held in September, 1986, at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County in California. The international make-up of the participants (from seven countries and four continents) is reflected in the contributions , which served to remind me that, although the Monarch has been proposed as the national insect of the United States, this butte rfly does in fact have a very wide distribution and is an important com­ponent of the fauna of many parts of the world. The goal of the book, like the goal of the Conference, seems to be to bring together a variety of papers that exemplifY the diversity of studies that have featured aspects of the biology of t e Monarch butterfly. In that it was successful: the book is diverse in subject matter, represents many different perspectives, and encompasses many different fields of endeavor.

The book is divided into 10 sections: Introduction; Systematics; Chemical Communi­cation; Mating Behavior; Hostplant Use, Cardenolide Sequestration, and Defense Against Natural Enemies; Physiological Ecology and the Annual Cycle; Migration; Overwintering Biology; Conservation; and Conclusions. Each section contains from one to nine chapters that range from short notes, to observational studies, to field ancl laboratory experiments.


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