Available Formats
Paperback, Revised and Updated Second Edition
Published: 23rd June 2015
Paperback
Published: 19th March 2025
Britain's Hoverflies: A Field Guide to the Hoverflies of Great Britain and Ireland Third Edition Fully Revised and Updated
By (Author) Stuart Ball
By (author) Roger Morris
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
19th March 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Reference works
Insects (entomology)
595.7740941
Paperback
344
Width 149mm, Height 210mm
A new, improved and updated edition of the bestselling photographic guide
Britains Hoverflies is a beautifully illustrated photographic field guide to the hoverflies of Great Britain and Ireland, focusing on the species that can be most readily identified. It is the perfect companion for wildlife enthusiasts, professional ecologists and anyone with an interest in this fascinating group of insects, and is designed to appeal to beginners and experts alike. This improved and significantly updated third edition covers 13 additional species and offers a host of improvements to aid reliable identification.
Accessible, authoritative and easy-to-use, this book contains hundreds of remarkable photographs of hoverflies in their various life stages. It features an essential guide to the hoverfly tribes and photographs of at least one representative from each of the British and Irish genera. The species included are mainly those that can be identified by eye or using a magnifying glass. Individual species accounts highlight key identification features, provide information on behaviour and habitat requirements, status, population trend and flight-period, and include an up-to-date distribution map covering Great Britain and Ireland. Sections on hoverfly biology, where and when to find them, legislation and conservation, recording hoverflies, putting data to good use and gardening for hoverflies are also included.
New features include:
Stuart Ball and Roger Morris have together run the Hoverfly Recording Scheme since 1991. They are authors of several atlases of British hoverflies and the most recent Status Review. As active members of the Dipterists Forum, they have run many identification training courses across Britain. Both originally worked as entomologists for the statutory nature conservation agencies. Stuart Ball continued to work for the Joint Nature Conservation Committee until 2016. Roger Morris worked for English Nature/Natural England before leaving in 2009 to become an independent consultant. Both are now happily retired.