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knowledge of foodplants and speciation. Thanks also to Roberto de la Maza, Jr.,
Alida Enkerlin, Thomas and Domingo Ro-driguez, Jane Ruffin, Andres and Pilar Sada, Lucy Sada, Tino Sanchez, Jane V. Scott, Jenn Sinasac, and Jim Springer for accom-panying me on forays into the field.
For the first edition, Barbara Ribble’s and Jane V. Scott’s careful eyes found typographical errors while Jason Hall, Bob Robbins, Jane V. Scott and Keith Wilmott, looked over all or portions of this work and each made useful suggestions for its improvement. My heartfelt thanks to all of you.
© 2017 by Jeffrey Glassberg
Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
All rights reserved. No part of this publica-tion may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo-copying, recording or otherwise, without the express and prior written permission of the publisher.
ISBN 978-0-691-17648-2 Library of Congress Control Number:2017951508Printed on acid-free paper. ∞
Printed in China
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Half-title page: A Wavy-lined Sunstreak (Arcas cypria)
Title page: A Black-patched Bluemark (Lasaia agesilas)
Acknowledgements My wife, Jane Vicroy Scott, accompanied me on many trips, and made many sugges-tions about the text and layout. Surpris-ingly, my extended absences while in the field caused her some dismay. Her love and big heart are what nurtured this project. See pg. 294.
About 2800 of the approximately 3700 photographs in this book were taken by the author, but other photographers provided many wonderful photographs that increase the usefulness of this guide. Thanks to all of them for allowing their photographs to be used in this work. I’d like to especially thank Will and Gill Carter, Kim Garwood, Dan Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs, John Kemner, Jean-Claude Petit and Pierre Boyer, and Jane Ruffin, each of whom not only provided more than 50 photographs, but also took the significant time and effort to find the photos and to deliver them to me.
Museum visits were crucial in prepar-ing the first edition of this work. Thanks to Dave Grimaldi, Jim Miller and Eric Quinter at the American Museum of Natural His-tory, New York, to John Burns, Don Harvey and Bob Robbins at the United States National Museum, Smithsonian Institution and to George Austin, Tom Emmel, Jackie and Lee Miller, and Steve Steinhauser at the Allyn Museum/McGuire Center in Sara-sota/Gainesville, Florida for allowing me to work with specimens under their care.
A large number of people have contrib-uted to our understanding of Mexican and Central American butterflies and so it would be impossible to thank them all here. For Mexico, I need to single out the de la Maza family, the UNAM-based group of Jorge Llorente, and John Kemner. Their distribu-tion records contributed greatly to the maps in this book. For Central America, the thorough work of Dan Janzen and Win-nie Hallwachs in the Guanacaste region of Costa Rica has led to an explosion of our
Swallowtails8
Brushfoots86
Whites and Yellows
21
Whites 21
Skippers170
Skipperlings 234
Yellows 29Mimic-Whites 33
Actinotes, True-Brushfoots 86
Gossamer-wings
36
Metalmarks58
ContentsIntroduction
1
Metalmarks 58
Admirals and Relatives 109
Leafwings and Emperors 136Owls, Satyrs, Monarchs, Ticlears 150
Firetips 170
Spreadwing Skippers 175Eudamini 175
Pyrgini 205
Conclusion290
Selected Bibliography 290Selected Websites 292
About NABA 293Dedication 294
Photo Credits 299
Grass-Skippers 242
Welcome to Mexico 1
Abbreviations 6
Mexican Ecosystems 4About the Plates 5
About the Maps 6
Hairstreaks 36
Coppers and Blues 57
Index 296
Swallowtails 8
Visual Index 302
© Copyright, Princeton University Press. No part of this book may be distributed, posted, or reproduced in any form by digital or mechanical means without prior written permission of the publisher.
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