000 01837 a2200217 4500
008 211205b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780691206301
082 _a595.789156
_bHOR
100 _aHorn, Henry S.
245 _aSocial butterflies
260 _bPrinceton University Press,
_c2021
_aPrinceton:
300 _axviii, 272p. ;
_bpb,
_c23cm.
365 _aUSD
_b39.95
504 _aIncludes bibliography
520 _aThroughout his career, Henry Horn developed a unique approach to the study of butterflies. In this book, he brings together his research with recent findings to present the most recent account of social butterflies-that is, butterflies whose interactions are sufficiently complex as to resemble the level of organization and communication typically associated with vertebrates and some bees. The core of the book consists of focused studies of five species: the Plain Ringlet, Eyed Brown, Great-Spangled Fritillaries, Viceroy, and Pearly Eye, in order of increasing complexity of social interaction. In each chapter, Horn presents a descriptive account of the species' natural history and behavioral idiosyncrasies, ranging behavior, and a model to explain a characteristic aspect of its behavior. He then proceeds to emphasize key departures from these models in order to present the hypothesis that some butterflies make decisions-that is, they are not simply pre-conditioned to react to stimuli in a certain way-by looking at how butterflies interact with the landscape and each other. The book ends with a summary of key conclusions as well as a list of intriguing but yet unanswered questions in need of future research
650 _aButterflies - Behaviour
650 _aStudy of butterflies
650 _aButterflies - Adaptation
650 _aButterflies - Habit and Society
942 _2ddc
_cTD
999 _c55486
_d55486