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With a warm climate, dry soil and an abundance of flowers, Australia is such a perfect place for bees that it has become a biodiversity hot-spot for this insect family. More than 2,000 of the world's 20,000 bee species are found there, with many of these being endemic and occurring nowhere else. This total is growing all the time since scores of Australian bee species are not yet scientifically named and more are likely to be discovered in future. This remarkable book will be the most comprehensive volume available on the subject. Within the five Australian bee families - Colletidae,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
With a warm climate, dry soil and an abundance of flowers, Australia is such a perfect place for bees that it has become a biodiversity hot-spot for this insect family. More than 2,000 of the world's 20,000 bee species are found there, with many of these being endemic and occurring nowhere else. This total is growing all the time since scores of Australian bee species are not yet scientifically named and more are likely to be discovered in future. This remarkable book will be the most comprehensive volume available on the subject. Within the five Australian bee families - Colletidae, Stenotritidae, Halictidae, Megachilidae and Apidae - it covers every one of the more than 120 genera, and almost all of the subgenera. Using concise but detailed text and stunning macro photographs it showcases at least one species from each subgenus, covering 280 species in total. The introduction encompasses two indispensable topics: 1. How to tell apart a bee from other types of insects (wasps, flies, beetles and so on), which can be tricky in some cases; and 2. Naming and illustrating all the body parts referred to later in the book.
Autorenporträt
Bernhard Jacobi is an expert entomologist and photographer based in Germany. He has travelled the world in order to study his chosen specialist subject of bees, and his expeditions have taken him to every corner of Australia over a period of three decades.