Evolution of the Insects

Portada
Cambridge University Press, 16 may 2005 - 755 páginas
This book chronicles the complete evolutionary history of insects--their living diversity and relationships as well as 400 million years of fossils. Introductory sections cover the living species diversity of insects, methods of reconstructing evolutionary relationships, basic insect structure, and the diverse modes of insect fossilization and major fossil deposits. Major sections then explore the relationships and evolution of each order of hexapods. The volume also chronicles major episodes in the evolutionary history of insects from their modest beginnings in the Devonian and the origin of wings hundreds of millions of years before pterosaurs and birds to the impact of mass extinctions and the explosive radiation of angiosperms on insects, and how they evolved into the most complex societies in nature. Whereas other volumes focus on either living species or fossils, this is the first comprehensive synthesis of all aspects of insect evolution. Illustrated with 955 photo- and electron- micrographs, drawings, diagrams, and field photos, many in full color and virtually all of them original, this reference will appeal to anyone engaged with insect diversity--professional entomologists and students, insect and fossil collectors, and naturalists. David Grimaldi and Michael S. Engel have collectively published over 200 scientific articles and monographs on the relationships and fossil record of insects, including 10 articles in the journals Science, Nature, and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. David Grimaldi is curator in the Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History and adjunct professor at Cornell University, Columbia University, and the City University of New York. David Grimaldi has traveled in 40 countries on 6 continents, collecting and studying recent species of insects and conducting fossil excavations. He is the author of Amber: Window to the Past (Abrams, 2003). Michael S. Engel is an assistant professor in the Division of Entomology at the University of Kansas; assistant curator at the Natural History Museum, University of Kansas; research associate of the American Museum of Natural History; and fellow of the Linnean Society of London. Engel has visited numerous countries for entomological and paleontological studies, doing most of his fieldwork in Central Asia, Asia Minor, and the Western Hemisphere.
 

Índice

148
1
The Insects
4
THEIR NATURE AND NUMBER
6
RECONSTRUCTING EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY
15
Fossil Insects 33333
36
Cenozoic
76
Arthropods and the Origin of Insects
93
Earliest Insects
119
DICTYOPTERA
222
THE AFRICAN ROCK CRAWLERS
224
The Paraneopteran Orders
271
The Holometabola
332
Coleoptera and Strepsiptera
371
Ants Bees and Other Wasps
413
Antliophora and Amphiesmenoptera
468
The Caddisflies and Lepidoptera
548

THE BRISTLETAILS
148
0
153
Insects Take to the Skies
159
Dicliptera
169
NEOPTERA
188
THE STONEFLIES
194
THE CRICKETS KATYDIDS GRASSHOPPERS WETAS AND
202
THE STICK AND LEAF INSECTS
211
THE CALONEURODEANS
217
The Cretaceous and Tertiary Periods
607
LOVE JEWE the d
646
References
662
vii
663
Index
733
280
741
357
747
366
753
Página de créditos

Otras ediciones - Ver todo

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 691 - Anglln; or, an Attempt to divide into their natural Genera and Families such Species of the Linnean Genus Apis as have been discovered in England: with Descriptions and Observations.
Página 717 - An account of some insects of unusual interest from the Tertiary rocks of Colorado and Wyoming, iv, 519-545, 1878.
Página 707 - A GUIDE TO THE STUDY OF INSECTS, and a Treatise on those Injurious and Beneficial to Crops. For the use of Colleges, Farm Schools, and Agriculturists.
Página 702 - CD 1965. A classification of the bees of the Australian and South Pacific Regions. Bull.

Información bibliográfica