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Books > Sport & Leisure > Natural history, country life & pets > Wild animals > Insects & spiders
While day-flying butterflies have long captured the attention of
nature enthusiasts, moth species outnumber butterfly species by
about fifteen to one, with many being overlooked due to their
mostly nocturnal habits. Although they are far less noticeable to
us, moths are essential to many other species, including the plants
they pollinate and the animals they nourish. In their caterpillar
or larval form they provide a primary source of sustenance for
birds, and as adults they feed everything from tiny bats to large
mammals.Native plants are of utmost importance for moths, as they
evolved alongside them, and they are the principal factor for
dictating moth species range and distribution. Like butterflies,
moths require native plant species they recognize in order to lay
their eggs. This user-friendly, heavily illustrated follow-up to
Lynne and Jim Weber's highly successful Native Host Plants for
Texas Butterflies describes over 100 native, larval host plants for
moths in Texas. More than 150 moth species are illustrated in the
book, both larval and adult phases, with one to two species for
each of the larval host plants. Today there are about 4,700 species
of moths recognized in Texas, with new species and their host plant
associations still being discovered. Native Host Plants for Texas
Moths will prove to be an informative introduction to this less
widely known world of moths and their host plants, providing a
better understanding of how to discover, support, and protect these
important insects.
After a chance meeting in the pub, Roger Morgan-Grenville and his friend Duncan decide to take up beekeeping. Their enthusiasm matched only by their ignorance, they are pitched into an arcane world of unexpected challenges.
Coping with many setbacks along the way, they manage to create a colony of beehives, finishing two years later with more honey than anyone knows what to do with. By standing back from their normal lives and working with the cycle of the seasons, they emerge with a new-found understanding of nature and a respect for the honeybee and the threats it faces.
Wryly humorous and surprisingly moving, Liquid Gold is the story of a friendship between two unlikely men at very different stages of their lives. It is also an uplifting account of the author’s own midlife journey: coming to terms with an empty nest, getting older, looking for something new.
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