| ||||||||||||
Product Details
|
Tag this product(What's this?)Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items. |
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent and honest overview of insect evolution,
This review is from: Evolution of the Insects (Hardcover)
Le Français suit.This book is an extensive overview of the recent knowledge concerning insect evolution and phylogeny. It uses studies of both morphological and molecular studies from live and fossilized specimens while beeing thoroughly illustrated by stunning electron microphotographs and pictures. The authors present commonly accepted ideas as well as more controversial theories but, when relationships are unclear, they do present most divergent hypothesis while choosing one and explaining why they support it. It is very useful for entomology students and professors that do not specialize in evolution. A certain knowledge of entomology-related vocabulary is necessary. This book is not an identification book and does not present all families or genuses nor all informations on insect biology. Only those information relevant with the reconstruction of evolutionary lines are presented. Ce livre est un large survol des récentes connaissances sur l'évolution des insectes et leur phylogénie. Il se base sur des études morphologiques et moléculaires conduites sur des spécimens actuels comme sur des fossiles tout en étant abondamment illustré d'images au microscope électronique et de photographies. Les auteurs présentent les idées largement acceptées, mais aussi les théories plus controversées pour lesquels ils présentent plusieurs hypothèses avant d'en choisir une et d'expliquer leur choix par des arguments clairs. Le livre peut être très utile aux étudiants en entomologie et aux professeurs qui ne sont pas spécialisés en évolution. Une certaine connaissance du vocabulaire entomologique est requise. Ce livre n'est pas un livre d'identifications, ne présente pas toutes les familles et genres ni toutes les information sur la biologie des insectes. Seules les information pertinentes pour la reconstruction des lignes évolutives y sont présentées. Nicolas C.-L. Entomology undergratuate student at McGill University, Étudiant de premier cycle en entomologie à l'Université McGill
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.9 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews) 49 of 49 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Book on Old Bugs!,
By Scott McKenzie "Paleontology instructor" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Evolution of the Insects (Hardcover)
When I read "History of Insects" by Rasnitsyn & Quicke, I was happy, when I read "Evolution of the Insects" I became ecstatic! This book has colorful, well chosen illustrations that illuminate the chapters. The book is well written to the point of being hard to put down.The authors have included much about living insects which will make this accessible volume useful to biologists as well as paleontologists. Teachers and libraries ought to have this book. Fossil collectors and naturalists will be drawn to it. The price of this hardbound treasure is low enough to be irresistable. To be sure, there are some errors; all chert is not volcanic(P. 49), and the 'spider' in photo 2.4 on P. 45 is actually the Holotype of a whip scorpion relative called a Schizomid. The authors accept impact for the Triassic mass extinction which is still debated, while curiously balking to accept the widely acknowledged impact termination to the Cretaceous. All in all, this is a MUST HAVE book. I still love the more technical "History of Insects" for its many illustrations of Asian fossils which are seldom seen in English language publications. "Evolution of the Insects" is perhaps the finest treatment yet given to any fossil group! 26 of 26 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Definitive Work,
By John Matlock "Gunny" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Evolution of the Insects (Hardcover)
Every so often a breakthrough book is published afterwhich everything that follows will be different. This is one of those books. This is the most complete, the most detailed and easily the best illustrated book on insect evolution ever even attempted.The cover photograph (a 120 million year old orthopteran of the extinct family Elcanidae) sets the tone. This photograph is as complete and beautifully made as if it were taken yesterday of a living insect. And this is only one outstanding picture. Altogether there are 995 photographs and illustrations in the book, the majority of which are in color. Extensively researched, there are some 70 pages (large size pages) of references. Every aspect of insect evolution is at least touched upon from the history of the prominent scientists to the insects themselves as they began, developed wings and other distinguishing features, evolved to the forms we see today. This is the definitive book on the subject. 38 of 44 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great overview,
By J. A. Haverstick - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Evolution of the Insects (Hardcover)
Entymologists may have a take on this that I don't, being a mere natural history buff. I actually read the first 250 pages straight through (in bed - no mean trick with this 10 pound item), then browsed the rest for information, returning to steady reading at the end. The beginning chapters give a history of insect studies and go at some questions of general interest (what was the evolutionary history of the development of insect wings, for example... fascinating stuff). The final chapters deal with general questions of modern insect history and the future in our increasingly screwed up planet. Both the beginning and end of the book could be read usefully as essays in themselves. The great middle bulk deals with the evolution of the particular families and orders, and is,again, full of interesting details (no, the modern roach doesn't go back to the Carboniferous, no matter what they say in the Exterminex commercial!)So the technical (but perfectly clear) middle five hundred pages becomes for me a once-scanned part of my reference library to which I'm sure I'll be returning many times. For me, not being a trained biologist, one good feature of the book is that I got a - hopefully partially retainable - idea of the various ages and epochs in geological time (how many times have I tried to get those down?) and a general notion of the various features of groups of insects and their relationships to one another. I think it's much easier to retain this information in the framework of evolutionary history than from a field guide or books on specific groups. But ask me again in a year. Of course, the book is very well illustrated and generously sprinkled with graphs and timelines. |
|
|