100 Caterpillars: Portraits from the Tropical Forests of Costa Rica

Review
–Margaret D. Lowman, author of It’s a Jungle Up There: More Tales from the Treetops (20060401)
Furry, thorny and psychedelic–it’s a shame that these caterpillars will turn into butterflies, so remarkable are they in their current state. Working with local gusaneros (caterpillar collectors) for the Area de Conservación Guanacaste, the authors have documented 25 years of biodiversity in Costa Rica’s Lepidoptera. Consider this beautiful book their long-awaited greatest hits album. (Seed 20060605)
The authors present close-ups of 100, generally ostentatious, macrocaterpillars from the estimated 9,500 species inhabiting northwestern Costa Rica’s Area de Conservacicn Guanacaste. The species accounts include comments on behavior, range, abundance, food plants, predators, and parasites. Accompanied by an image of the adult, each highlights a relevant natural history theme. (Science 20060701)
The transformation from caterpillar to butterfly or moth is one of nature’s most beguiling acts of magic. Masters of deception and camouflage in the early stage of life, these insects must survive what seem insurmountable odds before taking flight, when they reveal yet another sleight of hand. Yet most of us see only a fleeting moment of this metamorphosis, much less the variety and color palette of 225,000 known species of butterflies and moths. Seldom do we embrace in detail the many masks worn by caterpillars, often their only strategy for survival. That mosaic is captured in the new book 100 Caterpillars: Portraits From the Tropical Forests of Costa Rica by Jeffrey Miller, Daniel Janzen and Winifred Hallwachs. The authors reflect on how caterpillar diversity plays a part in behavior and ecology and forms one of the interconnected webs of nature…The result of their labors is a collection of stunning large-format photographs that document myriad shapes, colors, textures and cryptic markings.
–Kurt Loft (Tampa Tribune 20060708)
More than 100 large-format photographs document a conservation project that has been 25 years in the making. The book is also full of caterpillar trivia: many live solitary lives, even indulging in cannibalism. Groups of caterpillars (an army in case you were wondering) stay together by secreting a chemical track that others can follow. (Daily Telegraph 20060729)
The pictures are backed up by painstaking ecological research that makes sense of the exuberance and vibrancy. This is a treasure trove of natural history that should remind conservationists what we are doing this for.
–Adrian Barnett (New Scientist 20061128)
This is truly an impressive book. It combines the visual appeal of a coffee table book of insects that anyone might pick up, with detailed information on the ecology of each species that will interest the entomologist…Complementing the brilliant photographs are accounts of the life-histories and host-plants of each species together with first hand descriptions of the circumstances of collection and a small colour photograph of the adult insects. This remarkable book is strongly bound in cloth-covered cardboard with an attractive fly cover. It will appeal to anyone interested in natural history, entomology, insect photography and art!
–Dr. Garry Levot (General and Applied Entomology 20061231)
This collection of more than 100 full-color portraits of plant-eating machines that develop into moths and butterflies captures the beauty of these creatures up close. Each specimen was collected by the authors or by gusaneros, the resident caterpillar collectors of the Area de Conservación Guanacaste in Costa Rica. From the nearly 9,500 species of caterpillars that make their home in the area, the authors, who are conservation biologists, selected 100 of the most colorful and distinctive for their gallery of full-page, finely detailed photos at the front of this book. At the back are pages, about one per species, describing each speciman and–in an unusual twist on butterfly books–a small rendering of each one’s adult form. What results is an homage to some of nature’s most fascinating creatures with some of the weirdest appearances. (Science News )
I opened the book and fell headlong into a world of unbelievable creatures…Leaf through the large-format photographs in 100 Caterpillars and you’ll see all the latest in caterpillar-wear from the mountains and forests of Costa Rica. We’re talking pine-needle coats, detachable red tails, and fake orange eyes. That is, if you can find the caterpillars. Consider the incredibly cryptic Narope, completely indistinguishable from a papery sheath of bamboo, or Archaeoprepona meander, twin to a torn leaf…What’s not to love?
–Ketzel Levine (NationalPublicRadio.org )
[This book does] justice to [its] photogenic subjects…100 Caterpillars showcases the richness of a single UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Area de Conservacion Guanacaste in northwestern Costa Rica. The uniformly posed caterpillars, arranged as an inventory of species, look like so many fat worms in Mardi Gras drag. Matching photographs and descriptions of their adult forms occupy the second half of the book.
–Laurence A. Maschall (Natural History )
Before you can have a butterfly, it helps to have a caterpillar. Here’s a beautifully photographed album of 100 of them, set against matte-black backgrounds, in colors that range from neon green to stained-glass red and yellow.
–Michael Upchurch (Seattle Times )
The photographs of the caterpillars are utterly gorgeous, with a profusion of shapes, colours and patterns that go beyond the fantastical into the otherworldly. In the second half of the book, the three authors present serious caterpillar science in a chatty fashion, describing the fate of one spiny species as becoming ‘a fully sized package of high-quality food for the fly maggot.’
–Peter Calamai (Toronto Star )
Product Description
Every bright monarch butterfly or striking luna moth started out in a far subtler form of nature’s mosaic, a humble caterpillar. It is this early stage of life–crafted by natural selection into machines for converting a vast array of plant matter, mostly leaves, into the beautiful adults that have captivated humans for millennia–that this book brings to dazzling light. Unobtrusive as they go about their business, these caterpillars are rarely seen by humans–and are virtually never seen from the perspective presented in this sumptuous volume: photographed in extreme close-ups at a resolution that captures in sharp detail the exquisite colors and features eluding the casual observer.
Gathered by biologists Daniel Janzen, Winifred Hallwachs, and Jeffrey Miller in the tropical dry forests, cloud forests, and rain forests of northwestern Costa Rica, over 100 large-format photographs of caterpillars document the dizzying variety of shapes, vivid colors, and cryptic markings among these species. The pictures are accompanied by capsule species accounts–revealing life histories as diverse as their forms–and magnificent images of the adult butterfly or moth. Throughout, the authors convey an intimate sense of these creatures–studied over twenty-five years–by focusing on how their features figure in their behavior and ecology, and on the beauty of nature in this life stage, as well as the nature of that beauty.
The story of the caterpillars is also the success story of Area de Conservacion Guanacaste–where the long-term work of Janzen and Hallwachs, and a team of gusaneros (caterpillar collectors and rearers), along with the participation of neighboring farming communities, has deepened understanding of Costa Rica’s Lepidoptera and has brought about advances in restoration ecology of tropical habitats, biodiversity prospecting, biological control of pests, biotechnology, residents’ bioliteracy, and ecotourism development.
(20060609)
Buy 100 Caterpillars: Portraits from the Tropical Forests of Costa Rica at Amazon
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We do not much like the insects in general, remembering that itch, become ill, or impoverish us, and forgetting that they make us an invaluable service in the reproduction of new generations of countless species of plants. We do like butterflies because they are so beautiful and harmless, but we do not like because they are restless and the caterpillars eat our plants. There are countless books with pictures of beautiful butterflies and moths, but few with the larval forms of the insect. A look at caterpillars _100: Portraits of the Tropical Forests of Costa Rica_ (The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press), Jeffrey C. Miller, Daniel H. Janzen, and Winifred Hallwachs shows that the emphasis on ways of flying may be misplaced. The beautiful, large format images here are all the colors of the adult butterflies, which can be assumed, and a huge variation in patterns, picks, hair, body plans, and more. In fact, after a hundred photographs, the book has a section devoted to the description of the behavior and ecology of each track, and for each there is a small snapshot of the adult population in which to grow. Almost all adults are more monotonous and less interesting than their larvae.
The caterpillars are to perform two functions, to eat and avoid being eaten. The pictures rarely show feeding caterpillars, but often are defensive structures that keep others from feeding them. There are many tracks here with stinging hairs or spines, filled with an irritant that can cause severe pain. So beware of the thorns, but you never have to worry about a mouthful, the caterpillars never developed a poisonous bite, which may even walk on the thorns you. The hamata_ wonderful _Acraga seems as if covered in a mosaic of transparent glass beads, which is a gelatinous material that breaks if you took the caterpillar. Several of the specimens here are difficult to see because they look like a broken leaf or a branch or a carpet of fungus. To imitation, there is nothing to beat _Hemeroplanes triptolemus_, a dark gray green caterpillar when at rest. When disturbed, however, raises and inflates its rear end, which takes the appearance of a snake's head, eyes, mouth, nose and patches. You still in this position, but if further provoked, can even make it strikes the head of the snake in the predator to offend, but no threat of a bite. The authors say that even if you know it's hard not to withdraw her hand in shock if you are performing the experiment.
This beautiful book includes photos of the "Guanacaste Conservation Area, World Heritage Site that contains the forest where they come from these samples, and also pictures of the locals who work as gatherers, and the barn where bags caterpillars feeding pattern and development. There are also descriptions of equipment used to make these spectacular photos, and recommendations on how others can do the same. The authors include a section on ethics commendable in treatment of small creatures that obviously admire and love: it must not anesthetize the caterpillar or cold as a means of forcing the stillness, and must not disturb the caterpillar in excess "respond negatively, either curl up for hours, fainting and falling of the helix, breaking into a fight in progress, or worse, regurgitation of intestinal contents. "Words to live.
This book will change the way we feel about caterpillars. It becomes ugly pest objects of beauty and intellectual fascination. Based on over twenty-five years of field research in the tropics, Janzen and Hallwachs and their assistants, which contains the photos not only gorgeous, but also a wealth of information about the behavior and ecology of the species represented . It is both a beautiful coffee table book and a great story, of course, read. In short, I loved this book and intend to give as Christmas gifts to all my friends who love nature.
100 Caterpillars is an excellent book and habitual: Few books function macro close-ups of caterpillars in exquisite detail. The caterpillars of this book – small creatures with outrageous and subtle majesty – questioning the idea that one must become a butterfly to be beautiful.
It's not a freak of evolution on each page, a caterpillar that appears to be made of ice took my breath away, another that inflates when threatened so convincingly imitate the head of a poisonous snake made me laugh with delight. What strange and wonderful world we live this book on your table you can always remember that.