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FIELD GUIDE TO BUTTERFLIES OF THE PHILIPPINES

FIELD GUIDE TO BUTTERFLIES OF THE PHILIPPINES

  • £4500


by Peter B. Hardy and James M. Lawrence

Siri Scientific Press (2017) 978-0-9957496-0-3 RRP £45.00
448 pp, 240 x 165 mm, soft cover, 1280 colour photographs & illustrations (157 colour plates)

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Reviews
Tropical Lepidoptera Research (2017, 27(2): 28 - summary): "This book is certainly very useful for schools, research institutions, and universities, especially in the Philippines. As a person who grew up in the country, there is definitely a need for schools to have natural history books in their libraries and P. Hardy and J. Lawrence’s book should be in those libraries to help students, teachers, researchers, and citizen scientists in their subjects in biology and environmental science."

Antenna - Bulletin of the Royal Entomological Society (2018, 42(1): 36, - snippets): "The book was written by two experienced lepidopterists: Peter B. Hardy, a retired civil servant with a passion for Lepidoptera from Cheshire who is the sole author of ‘Butterflies of Greater Manchester’ and (co)author of some 50 papers on butterfly ecology and diversity, and Dr James M. Lawrence of the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa who is the author of ‘Field Guide to Butterflies of Seychelles’ and some 30 papers devoted to ecology and conservation of invertebrates ... The book constitutes a reliable visual guide to butterflies of the Philippines and will be useful both for the beginners and for experienced entomologists. Moreover, it is safe to assume that the audience of this richly illustrated book will potentially be very broad and include not only entomologists, but also wildlife photographers and interested eco-tourists. Indeed, the book is good value for money. I highly recommend this book to both amateur and professional entomologists alike."

From the foreword: “This work will undoubtedly generate a new era in the study of butterflies of this region, an accessible guide that will underpin many a serious study to come in butterfly biology, ecology and, most importantly, conservation.
Prof Roger L.H. Dennis FRES, FLS – IESR Staffordshire University

From the back cover
The need for a comprehensive field guide to the butterflies of the Philippines has long been apparent. Interest in the butterflies in this country is rapidly moving away from the museum and commercial collector approach towards appreciating them as living organisms with a significant role in the ecosystem.

All the 947 known Philippine butterfly species are listed in this book, with two-thirds of them illustrated, mostly from life (1,080 photographs, supplemented with an additional 176 photographs of museum specimens), on the 157 colour plates. These plates should permit the interested amateur naturalist to identify any of the commoner species, and indeed most of the more localised ones.

The detailed introductory section discusses Philippine geography, climate, vegetation and butterfly biology, including taxonomy, life cycle, adult intraspecific variation, mimicry, biogeography and conservation. An index to scientific and vernacular names is included.

About the Authors
Peter B. Hardy is a retired civil servant with a passion for Lepidoptera ever since his school days. His interests are in studying and photographing live butterflies in their natural habitats, and in preserving those habitats. As a regional co-ordinator in the Butterflies for the New Millennium recording scheme he has studied the butterflies around Manchester, U.K. in great detail and is the author of Butterflies of Greater Manchester, and is author or co-author of around fifty scientific papers on butterfly ecology. From the 1980s he also travelled abroad extensively, having a special leaning towards the Oriental region and in particular the Philippines, where he lived from 2000 to 2002, as well as making a number of shorter visits between 1988 and 2011.

James M. Lawrence has a PhD in Entomology from the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa. He is author of Field Guide to Butterflies of Seychelles and has published more than thirty scientific papers on the ecology and conservation of Seychelles and South African invertebrates, focusing mainly on butterflies and millipedes. James currently lives in South Africa where he works as a pilot for a local airline, and is a Research Fellow at the University of South Africa.


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