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Species Camponotus fragilis

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Field Guide to Beetles of California
By Arthur V. Evans and James N. Hogue
University of California Press, 2006
This is the companion volume to Introduction to California Beetles published in 2004. Features from the publisher website:

¥ 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

List price is $24.95; Amazon and other discount booksellers have it at about $16.50 plus shipping.

A Dictionary of the Roots and Combining Forms of Scientific Words
By Tim Williams
Squirrox Press, 2006


(I have copied the following text from the book's back page)

If you are curious about words you can use this book to find out exactly what ARTIODACTYL means, what an ECTOLOPH is and where you can find CANTIUM. Within this book are over 12,800 entries, plus directions for using the roots, rules of pronunciation, guidance for constructing scientific names and general principles for changing Greek letters into their English equivalents.

Additionally there are appendices listing adjectival forms of geographical names, some common terms for animals, plants and structures, activities and habitats, shapes, sizes, colors, textures, patterns, numbers, quantity, direction and location, parts of the year and chemical elements.

Plants and Animals of the Pacific Northwest: An Illustrated Guide to the Natural History of Western Oregon, Washington and Briti
By Eugene N. Kozloff
University of Washington Press, 1978
This book covers a wide range of plants and animals from Western British Columbia down through Western Oregon.
It has a very good section on non-insect invertebrates (snails & slugs, centipedes & millipedes, sowbugs & pillbugs).

It is also divided by habitat, rather than Classification.

Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
By Attenborough, David
BBC Warner, 2006
Though this is a BBC special, there are insects featured from all over the world including North America.

This rivals Microcosmos as far as the cinematography goes, but has the addition of Attenborough's natural history nuggets of info on different species as well. This is a must for any fan of Bug Guide!

Secret Weapons : Defenses of Insects, Spiders, Scorpions, and Other Many-Legged Creatures
By Thomas Eisner, Maria Eisner, Melody Siegler
Belknap Press, 2005
A very nice introduction to Thomas Eisner's work on chemical ecology of arthropods. If you haven't read any of his work, you are in for a treat and an inspiration.
It is full of great facts and references that would be great for fleshing out guide pages.

Identification Guide to the Mosquitos of Connecticut
By Theodore G. Andreadis, Michael C. Thomas, John J. Shepard
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, 2005
A summary of Darsie and Ward and Carpenter and LaCasse for the mosquitos of Connecticut which is almost the same for all of New England.

The Insects and Arachnids of Canada: Part 1, Collecting, Preparing and Preserving Insects, Mites and Spiders
By J.E.H. Martin
Biosystematics Research Institute, Agriculture Canada, 1977
A guide to collection and preservation techniques for terrestrial arthropods.
Link here: https://esc-sec.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/AAFC_insects_and_arachnids_part_1_eng.pdf

Invertebrates Of Central Texas Wetlands
By Stephen Welton Taber, Scott B. Fleenor
Texas Tech University Press, 2005
Companion book to Insects of the Texas Lost Pines (1). Has some color photographs, apparently, though I have not seen the book.

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