
Peterson Field Guide To Moths Of Northeastern North America
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Product details
- Paperback | 624 pages
- 111.76 x 182.88 x 35.56mm | 680.39g
- 17 Apr 2012
- Houghton Mifflin
- Boston, MA, United States
- English
- Original
- 0547238487
- 9780547238487
- 875,836
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Back cover copy
The best-selling field guides of all time
There are thousands of moth species in the northeast of North America, and while it might seem that they are all drab grays and browns, there is actually a startling variety. They come in a rainbow of colors, from brilliant oranges and pinks to soft greens and violets. There are moths with colorful leopardlike spots, and ones that look more like B-movie aliens; some that are as large as your hand, and others the size of a grain of rice.
With helpful tips on how to attract and identify moths, range maps and season graphs showing at a glance when and where to find each species, and clear photographs that use the unique Peterson arrow system for easy identification, this guide provides everything an amateur or experienced moth-watcher needs.
Sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation and the Roger Tory Peterson Institute
DAVID BEADLE has been studying and photographing moths in the province of Ontario for more than twenty years.
SEABROOKE LECKIE is a freelance biologist and writer with a passion for nature, especially moths.
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About David Beadle
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