Product Details
Insects of Britain and Western Europe (Domino Field Guide)

Insects of Britain and Western Europe (Domino Field Guide)
By Michael Chinery

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Product Description

Over 2,000 of the most commonly observed and most distinctive insect species of Britain and western Europe, from all orders and most families, are illustrated in this essential pocket guide. The text summarises key identification points, and introductory sections for each group covered give useful guidelines on the characteristics of the orders, families and genera covered. This is the most comprehensive guide available on the insects of this region and will be of great use to all naturalists with an interest in insect life.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #10720 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-06-28
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Were I forced to limit my selection of natural history books to a shelf of 10, choice number one would be "Insects" This modestly sized volume contains such a vast amount of readily accessible information couched in understandable terms and is in my hands pretty well every day.' Eastern Daily Press (September 2007) 'The best general field guide to insects on the market.' British Wildlife (August 2007) 'An extraordinary and marvellous book - get one today and start really enjoying the wildlife in your garden.' Organic Gardening 'an invaluable guide to the bugs in your garden this pocket guide features more than 2000 of the most distinctive insect species of Britain and Western Europe.' Garden (December 07) 'a suberb, comprehensive guide with excellent colour illustrations, which make an often overlooked animal group instantly accessible.' Guardian Unlimited (November 07)

British Wildlife (August 2007)
'The best general field guide to insects on the market.'

Organic Gardening
'An extraordinary and marvellous book - get one today and start really enjoying the wildlife in your garden.'


Customer Reviews

Insects of Britain & Western Europe5
Very possibily, the best book on layman insect identification, is now back in print. It is detailed enough to be useful to those people with more than just a passing interest. The full colour drawings I find are far far better than photos on glossy paper, easier on the eye, you will see what I mean when you purchase. The book is also a handy size
190mm X 120mm making it a useful for carting around when on a walk for example.
Highly recomended publication.

An excellent beginners guide but also invaluable for any level of entomologist5
It's clear that a lot of painstaking effort has been taken in producing this wonderfully comprehensive and well balanced field guide. The illustrations are superbly clear and the narrative informative and sufficiently detailed to accurately identify different species, although I have struggled a bit with bumble bees, simply because there appears to be so much natural variation. This book really opens your eyes to a whole new world that you might otherwise have taken for granted. Its really quite amazing how much diversity there is on your doorstep, especially moths. I'd recommend carrying a camera with good macro/ telephoto capability though, simply because recalling details later on can be difficult, especially if you're a beginner.

Excellent beginners guide, but not to butterflies 4
"Insects of Britain and Western Europe" is an almost classical field guide, now in a revised 2007 edition. Of course, no field guide can cover *all* species of insects. In Europe alone, there are about 100,000 insect species known to science! Chinery has selected over a thousand representative species for his field guide, and these are all superbly illustrated (in full color) by Richard Lewington, Stephen Falk and others. After looking through bird books where the poor birdies looked like Donald Duck, this comes as a pleasant surprise! The text and the color plates are on facing pages, and the vernacular names are given on the plates, provided such exist. There is also a chapter on creatures frequently confused with insects, including spiders, scorpions and woodlice.

"Insects of Britain and Western Europe" is, I assume, mostly directed at beginners. If you have a strong special interest for a particular kind of insects, say butterflies or dragonflies, there are better field guides that concentrate on these. But if you simply want an overview of what's out there, and spend your time strolling around parks, meadows or forests, this is the field guide for you. Provided that your strolling takes place in Britain and Western Europe, of course!

You wont be able to identify every individual species you come across, but you will be able to place them in the correct order, and sometimes family, with the help of this book. You will also be able to identify the most conspicuous species. Thus, this is not a book for someone who absolutely wants to identify brown lacewings, ascalaphids or fruitflies. Rather, it's a book that aids the beginner to tell the difference between bugs and beetles, or dragonflies, damselflies and antlions, or various kinds of wasps. How do I know all this? Well, let's just say that I spent my summer holidays as a child in places where insects were very abundant. I sometimes feel that I've seen all the species mentioned in Chinery's book...and been attacked by at least half of them, LOL.

There is no such thing as a perfect field guide, and even "Insects of Britain and Western Europe" have certain short-comings. First, the most well-known species often have a less prominent position on the plates than the rarer species, which may confuse the beginner. Second, the geographical area covered by the book isn't entirely clear. It seems to cover Scandinavia, Germany, the British Isles, Benelux and France, but what about Spain, Portugal and Italy? My impression is that the author has haphazardly included some species from those nations (the coolest ones?), and excluded many others. It's also unclear how far east "Western Europe" goes. Finland? Poland? East Germany? Third, the butterfly section is a real disappointment, strangely enough since butterflies are the most conspicuous insects. Many species aren't even illustrated, and others are only illustrated from one angle. Perhaps Chinery wanted to de-emphasize the well-known butterflies in favor of the other insects? Still, an otherwise excellent insect book with bad butterflies doesn't feel completely alright.

This being said, this is still the best beginners' guide to creepy critters of Britain, Scandinavia and the westernmost parts of the European landmass.

PS. Please note that this review is of the 2007 Revised Edition, the one published by Domino. Amazon sometimes places reviews of one edition at the product pages of the other editions as well, which is somewhat confusing, and not just to the beginner...