Meticulously researched and illustrated with more than 2000 colour photographs taken by the author, Flies is a landmark reference book that will be indispensable to any naturalist, biologist or entomologist. Most photographs in this encyclopaedic reference were taken in the field and show the insects in their natural environment. All of the world's fly families are included, with photographic coverage spanning the range from common deer flies and fruit flies through to deadly tsetse flies and malaria mosquitoes, with thousands of spectacular species such as exotic stalk eyed flies, giant robber flies and hedgehog flies in between. FLIES is broken up into three parts: Life Histories, Habits and Habitats of Flies; Diversity; and Identifying and Studying Flies. The 20 pages of profusely illustrated keys linked to the unprecedented photographic coverage of the world's fly families and subfamilies enable the reader to identify most flies quickly and accurately, and to readily access information about each family as well as hundreds of distinctive genera and species. AUTHOR: Stephen A. Marshall is a professor of entomology at the University of Guelph, where he developed a major insect collection and carries out research on insect systematics and biodiversity. He has discovered hundreds of new species, several new genera and even two new subfamilies. He is the author of INSECTS: THEIR NATURAL HISTORY AND DIVERSITY ILLUSTRATIONS: 2000 colour photographs
Meticulously researched and illustrated with more than 2000 colour photographs taken by the author, Flies is a landmark reference book that will be indispensable to any naturalist, biologist or entomologist. Most photographs in this encyclopaedic reference were taken in the field and show the insects in their natural environment. All of the world's fly families are included, with photographic coverage spanning the range from common deer flies and fruit flies through to deadly tsetse flies and malaria mosquitoes, with thousands of spectacular species such as exotic stalk eyed flies, giant robber flies and hedgehog flies in between. FLIES is broken up into three parts: Life Histories, Habits and Habitats of Flies; Diversity; and Identifying and Studying Flies. The 20 pages of profusely illustrated keys linked to the unprecedented photographic coverage of the world's fly families and subfamilies enable the reader to identify most flies quickly and accurately, and to readily access information about each family as well as hundreds of distinctive genera and species. AUTHOR: Stephen A. Marshall is a professor of entomology at the University of Guelph, where he developed a major insect collection and carries out research on insect systematics and biodiversity. He has discovered hundreds of new species, several new genera and even two new subfamilies. He is the author of INSECTS: THEIR NATURAL HISTORY AND DIVERSITY ILLUSTRATIONS: 2000 colour photographs
Part 1: Life Histories, Habits and Habitats of Flies. Chapter 1 - Life Histories of Flies. Chapter 2 - Flies, Plants and Fungi. Chapter 3 - Flies and Vertebrates. Chapter 4 - Flies and Invertebrates. Part 2: Diversity. Chapter 5 - Origins and Distribution of the Diptera. Chapter 6 - The Lower Diptera. Chapter 7 - The Lower Brachycera and Empidoidea. Chapter 8 - The Higher Brachycera or Cyclorrhapha. Part 3: Identifying and Studying Flies. Chapter 9 - Collecting, Preserving and Rearing Flies. Chapter 10 - Identifying Fly Families.
Stephen A. Marshall is a professor of entomology at the University of Guelph, where he developed a major insect collection and carries out research on insect systematics and biodiversity. He has discovered hundreds of new species, several new genera and even two new subfamilies. He is the author of Insects: Their Natural History and Diversity.
Meticulously researched and illustrated.... Flies is a landmark
reference book that will be indispensable to any naturalist,
biologist or entomologist.
*GrrlScientist, The Guardian*
If the title of this book turns you off, judge it instead by its
appealing cover photograph of two whimsically patterned insects
perched on a yellow flower. Author Marshall, a professor of
entomology at the University of Guelph, Ontario, has produced the
definitive work on creatures of the order Diptera, combining
scholarly thoroughness and popular accessibility with his own
eye-popping photos. Here you'll find descriptions of these
diminutive creatures' life histories and behavior, a complete guide
to classifying and identifying them, and even a section on trapping
and preserving specimens for display. Still, most readers,
conditioned to swat at the merest dipteran buzz, may prefer to make
this handsome book the extent of their personal fly collection.
*Natural History*
Marshall...renders mature scholarship accessible and interesting to
lay readers... Part 1 provides an overview of fly life histories
and their interactions with plants and animals. Part 2 introduces
the origins and distribution of the Diptera as well as a detailed
global overview of fly families and subfamilies. Part 3 deals with
collecting, preserving, and identifying flies... Over 2000 color
photographs, including many remarkable close-up views of flies,
supplement the text.... Notable for broad scope, cogent
organization, informed entries, clear writing, and revealing
photographs, [the book] merits a strong recommendation for
acquisition by academic, special, and public libraries.
*Booklist*
University of Guelph entomologist Marshall has been an insect
enthusiast since he was five. He notes that diptera (flies) have
been around for more than 300 million years and that they have an
enormous impact on the planet, killing millions of people by
transmitting disease but also pollinating plants and disposing of
dung and carrion that would quickly otherwise overwhelm us. Part 1
of the book describes the life of the creatures, Part 2 examines
their diversity, and Part 3 gives advice on how to study, collect,
and identify flies. With 2,200 stunning color photos, this book
offers a whole new perspective on a world of more than 160,000
species.
*Library Journal, Best Reference of 2012*
Robin McLeod reviewed (very positively) Stephen Marshall's Insects:
Their Natural History and Diversity in the February 2008 Cardinal
(No. 210). Dr. Marshall is a professor at the University of Guelph
and has advanced the technique of insect identification using
photography of living specimens. In his just-released book on
flies, he follows on with his winning format, presenting more than
2000 photos of flies from around the world. Part 1 of the book
discusses the life histories, habits, and habitats of flies. Part 2
covers the diversity of Diptera. Part 3 is devoted to collection
and identification.
*The Cardinal No. 229, The McIlwraith Field Naturalists of
London*
Stupendous ... unless you are a thorough dipterophobe, I urge you
to order a copy NOW! Both the pictures and the text will enlighten
and amaze you. As E. O Wilson rightly says: Stephen A. Marshall has
delivered one of the most beautiful and useful accounts of insect
life ever written.
*whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com*
Flies is written and imaged for both the academic and the
enthusiastic layperson. It contains some 2000 color images of flies
in their natural environment, nearly all taken by the author. He
has selected...those that he finds especially fascinating and those
essential for demonstrating global dipteran diversity in form and
function... Marshall's text tells compelling stories about all
these kinds of flies that are easily read by citizen naturalists
and high-schoolers in science class, as well as professional
biologists of all walks of study... Without a doubt, Marshall sets
high standards.
*ZooKeys 261:85-86 (2013)*
This voluminous book is the first worldwide treatment of the order
Diptera to be published. The author...is not only a well-known and
very experienced dipterist but also an excellent photographer of
insects, who is moreover endowed with an indisputably great
literary talent and enormous creativity. All these attributes and
abilities combined with great experience in science and teaching
were utilized in the preparation of this extraordinary
publication.... The Pictorial keys to the families of Diptera
worldwide, which include a review of the morphological characters
used, forms a particularly valuable part of the last chapter called
Identifying Flies... The major merit of this work is its
intelligibility and readability, which make it accessible not only
to dipterists but to a wide public interested in natural history.
The unusual number (over 2,000) of spectacular colour
macro-photographs of flies, which form an integral part of this
book, greatly increases its attractiveness. Even the most demanding
Diptera specialist is likely to be enthusiastic about Marshall's
Flies. This is because not only does it include up-to-date
information on all currently recognised families of Diptera but
also photographs of at least one representative of each family,
including some extremely rare or even mysterious ones, 99 percent
of which are of living specimens! If nothing else, the considerable
effort over many years that was required of the author to achieve
this should be greatly appreciated. Who of the contemporary
researchers in Diptera could say that he/she had studied or even
seen a species of all the families of flies in the world? Surely,
almost nobody, but Steve Marshall has enabled us to fill these gaps
in our personal knowledge of this order of insects. Finally, also
the esthetical aspects of flies should be stressed. The splendid
photographs show us the beauty of the colours, forms and diversity
of the often very peculiar structures of flies, all of which
further contribute to the attractiveness of this book. It is
admirable that the author was able to summarize the vast amount of
published data on taxonomy, phylogeny, biology, distribution etc.
in this valuable worldwide survey of the order Diptera. We the
reviewers have already been working with flies many years, but
nevertheless could not have produced such an enormous synthetic
study as this.... This excellent book can be recommended to all
readers interested in flies be they professional dipterists,
teachers or simply nature or photography enthusiasts. There is no
other similar comprehensive, well-illustrated and up-to-date book
on this extremely diverse and important group of insects.
*European Journal of Entomology Vol 110 No. 3*
A must have for fly fans.
*Birdbooker Report 241, GrrlScientist, The Guardian*
This is the first time that fly biology and natural history has so
thoroughly been covered in one place for novices, students, and
experts, and thereby adds a major access point to knowledge on
Diptera. ... The author, Stephen Marshall, is a world authority on
flies and a recognized teacher of entomology. He successfully mixes
fascinating biology, strong scientific context, and visual wonder
in this book... both novices and students can develop a sense of
the breadth of fly diversity in an organized and scientifically
accurate framework... A large fraction of the work is a
photographic compendium and guide to flies and so it functions as a
reference, an identification tool, a study guide, and a celebration
of fly diversity. The final two chapters will be particularly
valuable to students of insect diversity who need to know more
about collecting and identifying flies. This includes a chapter on
collecting and photographing flies that brings the author's
passions to light through his enjoyable journey and real passion
for documenting fly diversity. In all, this is a beautiful and
valuable scholarly resource for fly biologists, students, and
naturalists illuminating these little appreciated, but ubiquitous,
animals in all their complexity and wonder.
*Quarterly Review of Biology Vol 88 No 4*
I cannot recommend this book highly enough. If you are an insect
enthusiast, if you are at all interested in the diversity of life
and if you enjoy gasping at revelations about the tiny wonders that
flit around the world you have to read this book.
*Norfolk Naturalist*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |