Field Guide to Beetles of CaliforniaWith perhaps 8,000 different species, beetles are easily the largest group of animals in California and can be found virtually everywhere in the state. They grapple over flower heads, lurk in pantries, paddle through pristine mountain streams, amble over dunes, and buzz about porch lights on warm evenings. But until now, there was no single resource for identifying the most commonly encountered beetles in California’s mountains, valleys, and deserts. This valuable field guide, a companion volume to Introduction to California Beetles published in 2004, identifies more than 500 of the state’s more conspicuous and colorful species, with the majority presented in stunning color photographs. Written and designed for amateur naturalists, students, and field biologists, it is chock-full of what every beetle watcher wants to know, including suggestions for finding beetles, starting a beetle collection, and keeping beetles in captivity. The informative, accessibly written species accounts include information on beetle identification, natural history, and distribution. * Features 300 color photographs, 110 drawings, and 2 maps * Covers 569 species in 56 families * Lists California’s sensitive, threatened, and endangered species * Provides resources and web sites for further study of California beetles |
Contents
Acknowledgments | |
Checklist of North American Beetle Families | |
Californias Sensitive Beetles | |
Collections Societies and other Resources | |
Glossary | |
Selected General References | |
Art Credits | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
11-segmented abdomen active adult antennae appear areas attack attracted to lights bark beetles base beneath blue body Borer brown California central Cerambycidae claws club Coast coastal collected color Colorado common completely covered Curculionidae dark dead develop distinct distinctly distinguished distributed eggs elytra emerge equal eyes False FAMILIES feed female five flat flattened flowers four fungus genera genus green grooved ground habitats hairs head insects known lacks larvae leaf leaves legs length lights live male margins markings metallic METHODS Mountains nearly North America northern occurs orange pair pale pests pine plants Plate pronotum pupae Ranges reddish regions roots scarab scutellum segments shaped shiny short side Sierra Nevada similar simple soil sometimes southern species spring streams summer surface tarsal throughout tips Transverse trees United usually Valley visible weevils western widely wood yellow yellowish
References to this book
National Wildlife Federation Field Guide to Insects and Spiders & Related ... Arthur V. Evans No preview available - 2007 |