Life Among the Butterflies
LITTLE BLUE BOOK NO. 796 Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius
Vance Randolph, B. Sc., A.M.
Drawings by Peter Quinn
HALDEMAN-JULIUS COMPANY GIRARD, KANSAS
Copyright, 1925, Haldeman-Julius Company.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Many ancient and mediaeval writers dealt with butterflies, but the first descriptions of American species are found in the works of Linnaeus, the great Swedish naturalist who wrote about 1750, and invented the system upon which all modern classification is based. Pictures of several American butterflies were published in 1759 by Charles Clerck, who had studied with Linnaeus.
Johann Christian Fabricius, a professor at the University of Kiel, published a few more descriptions in 1796, and Peter Cramer, at about the same time, brought out four large volumes on the butterflies of Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Most of these early books were written in Latin, and are now so rare and expensive that few American students have ever seen them.
Jacob Hübner published his great volumes on exotic butterflies in the early part of the nineteenth century. This work was written in German, and contained more than six hundred colored plates, but a good copy now costs about eight hundred dollars, and is of very little use anyway.
In 1797 Sir James Edward Smith brought out his two-volume work on The Natural History of the Rarer Lepiodopterous Insects of Georgia , the first books ever devoted exclusively to North American species. This work is valuable chiefly because it contains some drawings by John Abbot, an Englishman who had actually lived in Georgia and studied moths and butterflies at first hand. Some of Abbot’s pictures were later used in another work on American lepidoptera by Dr. J. A. Boisduval of Paris, and Major J. L. LeConte of New York, who wrote in French about 1833. The books of both Smith and Boisduval are now practically unobtainable.
In 1841 the Biological Survey Commission of Massachusetts published a report on injurious insects by Dr. Thaddeus William Harris, which described many New England butterflies. It is now out of print, the last edition appearing in 1862.
Vance Randolph
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Life Among the Butterflies
LIFE AMONG THE BUTTERFLIES
CONTENTS
LIFE AMONG THE BUTTERFLIES
THE HEAD, EYES, AND MOUTH PARTS
THE THORAX, WINGS AND LEGS
THE ABDOMEN
THE DIGESTIVE APPARATUS
THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
THE RESPIRATORY TRACT
THE EXCRETORY ORGANS
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
THE REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS
THE FIRST STAGE OR EGG
THE SECOND OR LARVAL STAGE
THE THIRD OR PUPAL STAGE
THE FOURTH STAGE OR IMAGO
OVIPOSITION
THE EGG
THE EMERGENCE OF THE CATERPILLAR
THE CATERPILLAR
MOULTING
PUPATION
THE CHRYSALIS
PUPAL MOVEMENTS
THE APPEARANCE OF THE BUTTERFLY
SUBKINGDOMS, CLASSES, ORDERS, AND SUBORDERS
THE FOUR FAMILIES
SUBFAMILIES, GENERA, AND SPECIES
THE VALUE OF SCIENTIFIC NOMENCLATURE
VARIETIES
THE FOUR-FOOTED BUTTERFLIES
THE EUPLOEINAE
THE HELICONIANS
THE NYMPHALINAE
THE SATYRINAE
THE LIBYTHEINAE
THE GOSSAMER-WINGED BUTTERFLIES
THE LYCAENINAE
THE SWALLOWTAILS AND THEIR ALLIES
THE PIERINAE
THE PAPILIONINAE
THE SKIPPERS
PROTECTIVE COLORATION
OFFENSIVE ODORS AND TASTES
WARNING COLORATION
PROTECTIVE MIMICRY
HELIOTROPISM AND LIST
FEIGNING DEATH