Product Details
Dragonflies and Damselflies of the West (Princeton Field Guides)

Dragonflies and Damselflies of the West (Princeton Field Guides)
By Dennis Paulson

List Price: $29.95
Price: $19.77 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

35 new or used available from $18.78

Average customer review:

Product Description

Dragonflies and Damselflies of the West is the first fully illustrated field guide to all 348 species of dragonflies and damselflies in western North America. Dragonflies and damselflies are large, stunningly beautiful insects, as readily observable as birds and butterflies. This unique guide makes identifying them easy--its compact size and user-friendly design make it the only guide you need in the field. Every species is generously illustrated with full-color photographs and a distribution map, and structural features are illustrated where they aid in-hand identification. Detailed species accounts include information on size, distribution, flight season, similar species, habitat, and natural history. Dennis Paulson's introduction provides an essential primer on the biology, natural history, and conservation of these important and fascinating insects, along with helpful tips on how to observe and photograph them.

Dragonflies and Damselflies of the West is the field guide naturalists, conservationists, and dragonfly enthusiasts have been waiting for.

  • Covers all 348 western species in detail
  • Features a wealth of color photographs
  • Provides a color distribution map for every species
  • Includes helpful identification tips
  • Serves as an essential introduction to dragonflies and their natural history


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #116361 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-05-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 536 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Review
Bird watching has been a common hobby for centuries, and butterfly watching has become popular in the last few decades. Odonate watching is the newest pastime. Here, Paulson offers a comprehensive guide to Odonata of western North America. . . . This well-written, informative guide is a 'must have' for any person, amateur or scholar, interested in these insects.
(Choice )

Who knew that there were 348 species of dragonflies and damselflies in the Western United States? That fact alone should make nature lovers who enjoy traveling to wild places want to check out Dennis Paulson's new book, Dragonflies and Damselflies of the West, published by Princeton University Press. . . . This guide includes information on flight seasons, habitat and natural history in the description of each insect as well as helpful tips on how to observe and photograph them.
(Salt Lake Tribune )

Review
Extremely well organized, and very well written. This is a superb treatment. With its impressive number of large, clear images and thorough text, it will immediately become the must-have field guide for western odonate watchers and researchers.
(Giff Beaton, author of "Dragonflies and Damselflies of Georgia and the Southeast" )

From the Inside Flap

"Extremely well organized, and very well written. This is a superb treatment. With its impressive number of large, clear images and thorough text, it will immediately become the must-have field guide for western odonate watchers and researchers."--Giff Beaton, author of Dragonflies and Damselflies of Georgia and the Southeast

"Dennis Paulson is recognized as one of the very best odonatologists in the world. This is a fine book, and will sell many thousands of copies. The text is well organized, and the color photos are gorgeous."--Sidney W. Dunkle, author of Dragonflies through Binoculars


Customer Reviews

A must book for any dragonfly enthusiast5
Basics: 2009, 535 pages, softcover, 850+ color photos of all 348 species in western US and Canada, range maps

This is an exceptional book for any dragonfly enthusiast with a focus on identification. This is the most complete and best quality of any related book available.

As noted in the title, the "West" refers to all species found in (a) Alaska, (b) Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Nunavut and all provinces west, and (c) N/S Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas and all other states west. This region encompasses 348 species, all of which are shown in this book.

All photographs are in color and of very good quality and size. All but 4 or 5 of the species are shown with at least 2 photos. Many species have 3 or 4 photographs. The photos show differences between male and female, adult and immature, and variations due to pruinose and heteromorphs. These photographs will be very helpful with the identification of most odonata you encounter - except for those frustratingly similar species. This is where the detailed text will be very informative and useful.

The text, ranging from ½ to a full page for each species, consists of 6 distinct sections. The bulk of the material is found in Description, Identification, and Natural History. A single, yet potent, sentence is given to each of the other three sections of Habitat, Flight Season, and Distribution.

The identification section does a good job of comparing similar species, giving pointers of how to differentiate between the finer points. The description of each can often be very detailed, which might be a bit too detailed for the novice or a person with a passing interest to know what to call that dragonfly flitting around the garden. To truly identify down to the species level, the book often describes the individual with terms of lateral thoracic stripes, postocular spots, abdomen black above S2-7, and other necessary "scientific" descriptors.

Expanding on this detail are wonderful drawings of the abdominal tips and appendages, which are sometimes the only means for identification.

The book has other brief sections on research, collecting, naming, anatomical labels (to help with terms in the identification section), and natural history.

Lastly, a distribution map is supplied for each individual. Where relevant, the maps zoom in to the restricted ranges for many of the species. The boundaries for the states and provinces are shown, which help with better detail.

This is, by far, the best odonate book available for the US. I certainly hope an eastern companion will follow in the near future.

I've listed several related books below...
1) Common Dragonflies of the Southwest by Biggs
2) Dragonflies and Damselflies (Odonata) of Texas, Volume I by Abbott
3) Dragonflies and Damselflies of Texas and the South-Central United States by Abbott
4) Dragonflies and Damselflies of California by Manolis
5) Dragonflies & Damselflies of the Border Southwest by Behrstock
6) Dragonflies of Alaska by Hudson
7) Dragonflies through Binoculars by Dunkle
8) Dragonflies And Damselflies of Georgia And the Southeast by Beaton
(written by Soleglad at Avian Review or Avian Books, May 2009)

Monumental Release!5
This new field guide of dragonflies and damselflies of the Western U.S. and Canada, it undoubtedly one of the best of its kind in a fairly compact volume. Photos are large, sharp and clear with many represented that show diagnostic features so valuable for positive identification. This volume is destined to become a classic and "must have" for all odonata enthusiasts from the amateur to the professional. However, distribution maps are not current with some area records that have been common knowledge since late 2007. Still, This doesn't detract noticeably from the wealth of information and user-friendly format that comes wonderfully packaged in this indispensable tool! For these many superb reasons, I give it a solid 5 stars! Don't delay, order yours today! You won't regret this purchase and especially at this introductory price of just $19.77!!!!

Where's the key?3
If I was an entomologist specializing in Odonata, I would be full of praise for this volume. This book has great photographs and plenty of information. However, the book assumes a level of expertise that most amateurs and even professional scientists probably do not possess - that users are able identify Odonata down to the genus level before the book reveals it's usefulness. The lack of a key makes this volume more of a reference manual than a useful field guide. I would have to create a key before I can use this volume in the field.

The author spent a great deal of time and effort developing common names so that amateurs would be more comfortable with the Order - I find it odd that he did not include a method for interested non-experts to tease the genera apart.