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Grasshoppers and Crickets (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 120)
 
 

Grasshoppers and Crickets (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 120) [Kindle Edition]

Ted Benton
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Review

‘[…] Ted Benton's entomological opus Grasshoppers & Crickets led me into the weird world of British orthoptera, with their edible nuptial gifts, "mate-guarding", harems and extraordinarily complex songs. No field or meadow will seem or sound the same again.’ Robert Macfarlane, ‘Books of the Year 2012’, Guardian

‘An outstanding contribution […] The DVD a groundbreaking achievement.’
British Wildlife

Praise for the New Naturalist series:

'The series is an amazing achievement.'
The Times Literary Supplement

'The books are glorious to own.'
Independent

Product Description

For the first time ever, a DVD featuring exclusive video and audio material accompanies the latest New Naturalist volume, a multimedia first for the series.

Ted Benton offers a comprehensive account of the appearance, variations, behaviour, habitat, life-cycles and distribution of all the native British species of bush-crickets, crickets, groundhoppers and grasshoppers. Many details from direct field observation are included, which are published here for the first time.

With up-to-date information on newly arrived and recently established species, as well as long-established non-native species – such as the house cricket and greenhouse camel cricket – Benton pays special attention to a key area of evolutionary thought that has stimulated an international research focus on grasshoppers and crickets. Recent approaches to mating and reproduction emphasise differences and even conflicts of interest between males and females. The sexually selected adaptations and counter-adaptations to such conflicts of reproductive interest are used to explain the astonishing diversity of reproductive behaviour exhibited by grasshoppers and crickets: male territorial behaviour, coercive mating, complex songs, elaborate courtship performances, the donation of edible ‘nuptial gifts’, the reversal of sex-roles, mate-guarding, keeping of ‘harems’ and, in a few species, parental care of the offspring. These chapters provide an introduction to the theoretical issues and an overview of many case studies drawn from research on orthopterans from across the world (but including British species where relevant).

A unique DVD features many aspects of the behaviour of nearly all British species, including song, conflict, courtship behaviour, sex-role reversal and egg laying.

The book is lavishly illustrated with colour photographs and line drawings, covering all the British species (including immature stages in most cases), key habitats and many aspects of behaviour.


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 25169 KB
  • Print Length: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Collins; Har/DVD edition (5 July 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B006I1CGYS
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #553,915 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Grasshoppers and crickets 5 Aug 2012
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Books on British grasshoppers seem to come along at a rate of about one a generation. There was David Ragge's 1965 book in the Wayside and Woodland series, and more recently Marshall and Haes 1988 book on the subject. So if you have one of the earlier books, and are not a New Naturalist collector, is it worth buying another volume on the subject? In a word, yes. There have been many changes in the British Orthoptera since the last book came out, many new things about them have been discovered, and the range of many species has changed. The author deals well with all these matters.

The main way in which Marshall and Haes's volume outshines this one is in the illustrations. M & H had beautiful plates to illustrate the features of the species, whereas this volume only has photographs, where sometimes important features are either hidden or not clearly shown. However, the New Naturalist series has never been primarily a field guide, so this is in keeping with earlier volumes in the series.

There is also the matter of the DVD which accompanies the book. In the Introduction the author admits that recording the species for the DVD was a steep learning curve, and this shows in the technical production. However, the DVD often shows things that are otherwise hard to include in a book, such as the songs of many of the species, and both the author and publishers are to be congratulated on this innovation for the series.

There are a few things that puzzled me, for example why is the great green bush cricket described as nocturnal (p. 256)? I am familiar with this species, and find both males and females on most afternoons when I visit my local site. In addition to this there are the usual few typos, but none of these detract from the overall authority of the book.

A worthy addition to the New Naturalist series, and also well worth buying if you have an interest in the subject.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Grasshoppers and Crickets - New Naturalist 14 Sep 2012
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Here at last is a serious and comprehensive account of all the Orthopteran species of the British Isles. Amazingly, there has never been an earlier New Naturalist volume on this subject, nor indeed a comparable edition from any other publisher and this new publication more than fills the previous void in the literature.

Ted Benton, who only six years ago wrote the remarkable definitive account of British bumblebees for the Collins New Naturalist series, has now turned his extraordinary skills and experience as a field naturalist and amateur biologist to reviewing and explaining the latest research on the life histories,behaviour,identification, distribution, ecology and conservation of this fascinating but somewhat neglected group of insects. The book is generously endowed with photographs of every species, most taken by the author, but a fascinating bonus to the book, and an innovation for the NN series, comes in the form of a DVD showing the behaviour, particularly the mating behaviour, of many of the species described in the text, much of it never having been recorded visually before. This unique video footage (which includes sound recordings of the various songs used by each species to communicate, particularly during mating behaviour) was also taken by the author, clearly requiring many hours of patient observation in the field.

I cannot recommend too highly this outstanding book. It brings together all that we presently know about grasshoppers and crickets in a very readable way, while maintaining a scrupulously scientific approach to its subject. Like its author's previous New Naturalist book, 'Bumblebees', this will undoubtedly remain the definitive book on its subject for many years.
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Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Although I have only a general amateur interest in the subject, I found this to be a truly excellent, comprehensive, well-researched and illustrated addition to my bookshelf. I will certainly find this very useful for identification and knowledge of the species. The enclosed DVD is certainly an interesting and amusing addition, and the whole is well up to the very best of Collins New Naturalist Library standards. Recommended to amateurs, experts and all country lovers.
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