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Bibliography of general references on papilionoidea and hesperioidea


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EBERHARD, S.H., & KRENN, H.W. 2003. Salivary glands and salivary pumps in adult Nymphalidae (Lepidoptera). Zoomorphology (Berlin) 122 (4): 161-167. [Vanessa cardui; general reference]

EBERHARD, S.H., & KRENN, H.W. 2005. Anatomy of the oral valve in nymphalid butterflies and a functional model for fluid uptake in Lepidoptera. Zoologischer Anzeiger 243 (4): 305-312.

EDGAR, J.A. 1984. Parsonsieae: ancestral larval food plants of the Danainae and Ithomiinae. Symposia of the Royal Entomological Society of London No. 11: 91-93.

EDGAR, J.A., & CULVENOR, C.C.J. 1974. Pyrrolizidine ester alkaloid in danaid butterflies. Nature, London 248 (5449): 614-616.

EDGAR, J.A., CULVENOR, C.C.J., & PLISKE, T.E. 1974. Coevolution of danaid butterflies with their host plants. Nature, London 250 (5468): 646-648.

EDGAR, J.A., CULVENOR, C.C.J., & SMITH, L.W. 1971. Dihydropyrrolizine derivatives in the ‘hair-pencil’ secretions of danaid butterflies. Experientia 27 (7): 761-762.

EDMUNDS, M. 1974. Significance of beak marks on butterfly wings. Oikos 25 (1): 117-118.

EHRLICH, A.H., & EHRLICH, P.R. 1978. Reproductive strategies in the butterflies: 1. Mating frequency, plugging and egg number. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 51 (4): 666-697.

EHRLICH, P.R. 1956. The use of the Leitz “Ultropak” microscope for studying the scales of Lepidoptera in situ. The Lepidopterists’ News 10 (5): 160.

EHRLICH, P.R. 1957a. The higher systematics of the butterflies. The Lepidopterists’ News 11 (4-5): 103-106.

EHRLICH, P.R. 1957b. Systematics and subspecies. The Lepidopterists’ News 11 (4-5): 155.

EHRLICH, P.R. 1958. The comparative morphology, phylogeny and higher classification of the butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). Kansas University Science Bulletin 39: 305-370.

EHRLICH, P.R. 1983. Genetics and the extinction of butterfly populations. Biological Conservation Series 1: 152-163.

EHRLICH, P.R. 2001. Tropical butterflies: a key model group that can be “completed”. Lepidoptera News 2: 1, 10-12.

EHRLICH, P.R., & DAVIDSON, S.E. 1960. Techniques for capture-recapture studies of Lepidoptera populations. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 14 (4): 227-229.

EHRLICH, P.R., & MURPHY, D.D. 1981 (1982). Butterfly nomenclature: A critique. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 20 (1): 1-11. . [PDF file on CD 1].

EHRLICH, P.R., & MURPHY, D.D. 1981 (1983). Nomenclature, taxonomy and evolution. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 20 (4): 199-204. . [PDF file on CD 1].

EHRLICH, P.R., & MURPHY, D.D. 1982 (1983). Butterflies and biospecies. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 21 (4): 219-225. . [PDF file on CD 1].

EHRLICH, P.R., & MURPHY, D.D. 1983. Butterfly nomenclature, stability, and the rule of obligatory categories. Systematic Zoology 32 (4): 451-453.

EHRLICH, P.R., & MURPHY, D.D. 1987. Monitoring populations on remnants of native vegetation. In: SAUNDERS, D.A., ARNOLD, G.W., BURBIDGE, A.A., & HOPKINS, A.J.M. [Eds]. Nature conservation: the role of remnants of native vegetation. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Limited, Australia: i-xiii, 1-410. Chapter pagination: 201-210.

EHRLICH, P.R., & RAVEN, P.H. 1965. Butterflies and plants: a study in co-evolution. Evolution. Lancaster, Pa. 18: 586-608.

EISNER, T., JUTRO, P., ANESHANSLEY, D.J., & NIEDHAUK, R. 1972. Defense against ants in a caterpillar that feeds on ant guarded scale insects. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 65 (4): 987-988.

EITSCHBERGER, U. 1984. Studies einiger ausgewahlter Mikrofeinstrukturen der Praeimaginal-Stadien bei Papilioniden (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae). Atalanta (Markleuthen) 15 (3-4): 350-372.

ELIOT, J.N. 1973. The higher classification of the Lycaenidae (Lepidoptera): a tentative arrangement. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) (Entomology) 28 (6): 371-505.

ELFFERICH, N.W. 1988. Gerauschproduktion bei Lycaeniden-Puppen (Lepidoptera). Mittelungen der Entomologischen Gesellschaft Basel 38 (4): 156-168.

ELMES, G.W., THOMAS, J.A., MUNGUIRA, M.L., & FIEDLER, K. 2001. Larvae of lycaenid butterflies that parasitize ant colonies provide exceptions to normal insect growth rules. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 73 (3): 259-278. [Lepidochrysops]

EMMEL, T.C. 1968. Methods for studying the chromosomes of Lepidoptera. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera. 7 (1): 23-28. . [PDF file on CD 1].

EMOTO, J. 1980. A phylogenetic process and origin of the mesopleuron in butterflies. International Congress of Entomology Proceedings 16: 51.

ENDO, K., MASAKI, T., & KUMAGAI, K. 1988. Neurendocrine regulation of the development of seasonal morphs in the Asian comma butterfly, Polygonia c-aureum L.: difference in activity of summer-morph-producing hormone from brain-extracts of the long-day and short-day pupae. Zoological Science (Tokyo) 5 (1): 145-152.

ENGLER-CHAOUAT, H.S., & GILBERT, L.E. 2007. De novo synthesis vs. sequestration: negatively correlated metabolic traits and the evolution of host plant specialization in cyanogenic butterflies. Journal of Chemical Ecology 33 (1): 25-42.

FAGERSTROM, T., & WIKLUND, C. 1982. Why do males emerge before females? Protandry as a mating strategy in male and female butterflies. Oecologia (Berlin) 52 (2): 164-166.

FAJER, E.D., BOWERS, M.D., & BAZZAZ, F.A. 1989. The effects of enriched carbon dioxide atmospheres on plant-insect herbivore interactions. Science (Washington D C) 243 (4895): 1198-1200.

FEENY, P.P. 1987. The roles of plant chemistry in associations between swallow tail butterflies and their host plants. Series Entomologica (Dordrecht) 41: 353-359.

FEENY, P.[P.] 1991. Chemical constraints on the evolution of swallowtail butterflies. In: PRICE, P.W., FERNANDEZ, G.W., LEWINSOHN, T.M., & BENSON, W.W. [Eds]. Plant-animal interactions: evolutionary ecology in tropical and temperate regions. Wiley, New York: i-xiv, 1-639. Chapter pagination: 315-340.

FEENY, P., ROSENBERRY, L., & CARTER, M. 1983. Chemical aspects of oviposition behavior in butterflies. In: AHMAD, S. [Ed.] Herbivorous insects, host-seeking behaviour and mechanisms. Academic Press, New York: 1-257. Chapter pagination: 27-76.

FEINSTEIN, J. 2004. DNA sequence from butterfly frass and exuviae.

FELLERS, G.M. 2001. Binoculars for butterflying. American Butterflies 9 (2): 24-32.

FERMON, H., WALTERT, M., VANE-WRIGHT, R.I., & MUEHLENBERG, M. 2005. Forest use and vertical stratification in fruit-feeding butterflies of Sulawesi, Indonesia: impacts for conservation. Biodiversity and Conservation 14: 333-350. . [PDF file on CD 1].

FERRIS, C.D. 1972. Ultraviolet photography as an adjunct to taxonomy. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 26 (4): 210-215.

FERRIS, C.D. 1986. Presidential address 1986: Unexplored horizons – the role of the amateur lepidopterist. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 40 (4): 247-254.

FIEDLER, K. 1988. Die Bezichungen von Blaulingspuppen (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae) zu Ameisen (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Nachrichten des Entomologischen Vereins Apollo 9 (1): 33-58.

FIEDLER, K. 1991a. Systematic, evolutionary, and ecological implications of myrmecophily within the Lycaenidae (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). Bonner Zoologische Monographien 31: 1-210.

FIEDLER, K., & MASCHWITZ, U. 1988a. Functional analysis of the myrmecophilous relationships between ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and lycaenids (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae). 2. Lycaenid larvae as trophobiotic partners of ants – a quantitative approach. Eoecologia (Berlin) 75 (2): 204-206.

FIEDLER, K., & MASCHWITZ, U. 1988b. Functional analysis of the myrmecophilous relationships between ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and lycaenids (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae). 3. New aspects of the function of the retractile tentacular organs of lycaenid larvae. Zoologische Beitraege 31 (3): 409-416.

FIEDLER, K., & MASCHWITZ, U. 1989. Functional analysis of the myrmecophilous relationships between ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and lycaenids (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae). 1. Release of food recruitment in ants by lycaenid larvae and pupae. Ethology 80 (1-4): 71-80.

FIEDLER, K., & SAAM, C. 1995. A “microbial cost” of butterfly-ant mutualisms (Lycaenidae). Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 49 (1): 80-84.

FIEDLER, K., CAITHNESS, N., & VILLET, M.H. 2001. Ants that associate with Lycaeninae butterfly larvae: Diversity, ecology and biogeography. Diversity and Distributions 7 (1-2): 45-60.

FIEDLER, K., SEUFERT, P., PIERCE, N.E., PEARSON, J.G., & BAUMGARTEN, H-T. 1992. Exploitation of lycaenid-ant mutualisms by braconid parasitoids. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 31 (3-4): 153-168. . [PDF file on CD 1].

FISCHER, K., BOT, A.N.M., BRAKEFIELD, P.M., & ZWAAN, B.J. 2003. Fitness consequences of temperature-mediated egg size plasticity in a butterfly. Functional Ecology 17 (6): 803-810. [Bicyclus anynana]

FISCHER, K., BOT, A.N.M., BRAKEFIELD, P.M., & ZWAAN, B.J. 2006. Do mothers producing large offspring have to sacrifice fecundity? Journal of Evolutionary Biology 19 (2): 380-391. [Bicyclus anynana]

FISCHER, K., BRAKEFIELD, P.M., & ZWAAN, B.J. 2003. Plasticity in butterfly egg size: Why larger offspring at lower temperatures? Ecology (Washington, DC) 84 (12): 3138-3147. [Bicyclus anynana]

FISCHER, K., EENHOORN, E., BOT, A.N.M., BRAKEFIELD, P.M., & ZWAAN, B.J. 2003. Cooler butterflies lay larger eggs: Developmental plasticity versus acclimation. Proceedings of the Royal Society Biological Sciences Series B 270 (1528): 2051-2056. [Bicyclus anynana]

FISCHER, K., O’BRIEN, D.M., & BOGGS, C.L. 2004. Allocation of larval and adult resources to reproduction in a fruit-feeding butterfly. Functional Ecology 18 (5): 656-663. [Bicyclus anynana]

FISCHER, K., ZWAAN, B.J., & BRAKEFIELD, P.M. 2002. How does egg size relate to body size in butterflies? Oecologia (Berlin) 131 (3): 375-379. [Bicyclus anynana]

FLANDERS, S.E. 1962. Did the caterpillar exterminate the giant reptile? Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 1 (1): 85-88. [PDF file on CD1].

FLEISHMAN, E., & MACNALLY, R. 2003. Linking models of species occurrence and landscape reconstruction. Transactions of the Western Section of the Wildlife Society 38-39: 1-4.

FLEISHMAN, E., BETRUS, C.J., BLAIR, R.B., MACNALLY, R., & MURPHY, D.D. 2002. Nestedness analysis and conservation planning: The importance of place, environment, and life history across taxonomic groups. Oecologia (Berlin) 133 (1): 78-89.

FLYNN, D.J., & NIELSEN, M.G. 1982. Two species of skippers collected at antifreeze-filled pitfall traps in Arizona. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 36 (2): 157-158. [General reference; Hesperiidae]

FORBES, W.T.M. 1954. Notes on the terminology of the lepidopterous male genitalia. The Lepidopterists’ News 8 (6): 167-168.

FORBES, W.T.M. 1955. Lepidoptera. In: KESSEL, E.L. [Ed.]. A century of Progress in the Natural Sciences, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco. Chapter pagination: 540-555.

FORBES, W.T.M. 1956. On the limiting of subspecies. The Lepidopterists’ News 10 (1-2): 35-36.

FORBES, W.T.M. 1957. The lycaenid antenna. The Lepidopterists’ News 11 (1-3): 13-14.

FORD, E.B. 1953. The genetics of polymorphism in the Lepidoptera. Advances in Genetics 5: 43-87. [General reference; review]

FORD, E.B. 1971. The Lepidoptera in scientific research. Journal of the Lepidopterist’s Society 25 (3): 155-168.

FORD, E.B. 1975. Butterflies. William Collins Sons, Glasgow. 11-368.

FORD, E.B. 1975. Ecological genetics. Chapman & Hall, London. i-xx; 1-447.

FORSBERG, J. 1987. A model for male mate discrimination in butterflies. Oikos 49 (1): 46-54.

FORSTER, W. 1961. ‘Taxonomic units’ – Presidential address. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 15 (1): 57-62.

FOX, R.M. 1966. Forelegs of butterflies I. Introduction: chemoreception. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 5 (1): 1-12. [PDF file on CD1].

FRANCKE, W. 1989. Terpenoids from bark beetles, solitary bees and danaine butterflies. Pure and Applied Chemistry 61 (3): 539-542.

FRANKINO, W.A., ZWAAN, B.J., STERN, D.L., & BRAKEFIELD, P.M. 2005. Natural selection and developmental constraints in the evolution of allometries. Science (Washington D C) 307 (5710): 718-720. [Bicyclus anynana]

FRAZER, J.F.D. 1973. Estimating butterfly numbers. Biological Conservation 5 (4): 271-276. [General reference; GOT]

FREITAS, A.V.L., & BROWN, K.S. 2004. Phylogeny of the Nymphalidae (Lepidoptera). Systematic Biology 53 (3): 363-383.

FRENCH, V., & BRAKEFIELD, P.M. 1992. The development of eyespot patterns on butterfly wings: morphogen sources or sinks? Development (Cambridge) 116 (1): 103-109. [Bicyclus anynana; Bicyclus safitza]

FRENCH, V., & BRAKEFIELD, P.M. 1995. Eyespot development on butterfly wings: the focal signal. Developmental Biology 168 (1): 112-123. [Bicyclus anynana]

FRIC, Z., KLIMOVA, M., & KONVICKA, M. 2006. Mechanical design indicates differences in mobility among butterfly generations. Evolutionary Ecology Research 8 (8): 1511-1522.

FRIEDLAENDER, M., SETH, R.K., & REYNOLDS, S.E. 2005. Eupyrene and apyrene sperm: Dichotomous spermatogenesis in Lepidoptera. Advances in Insect Physiology 32: 206-208.

GALL, L.F. 1985. Measuring the size of lepidopteran populations. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 24 (2): 97-116. . [PDF file on CD 1].

GARCIA-BARROS, E. 2000a. Clima y tamano en mariposas diurnas (Lepidoptea: Papilionoidea). Boletin de la Asociacion Espanola de Entomologia 24 (1-2): 47-64.

GARCIA-BARROS, E. 2000b. Egg size in butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea and Hesperiidae): A summary of data. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 35: 90-136. [PDF file on CD 1]

GARCIA-BARROS, E. 2000c. Body size, egg size, and their interspecific relationships with ecological and life history traits in butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea, Hesperioidea). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 70 (2): 251-284.

GARCIA-BARROS, E. 2002. Taxonomic patterns in the egg to body size allometry of butterflies and skippers (Papilionoidea & Hesperiidae). Nota Lepidopterologia 25 (2-3): 161-175.

GARDINER, A.[J.] 1997. The potential use of butterflies & dung beetles in environmental impact studies: an example from Zimbabwe. Metamorphosis Occasional Supplement No.3: 129-132.

GARDINER, B.O.C. 1978. Decorative art in butterflies. Entomologist’s Record and Journal of Variation 90 (9): 249-250.

GEIGER, H. 1990. Enzyme electrophoretic methods in studies of sytematics and evolutionary biology of butterflies. In: KUDRNA, O. [Ed.] 1990. Butterflies of Europe. Volume 2. Introduction to lepidopterology. AULA-Verlag, Weisbaden, 1-557. Chapter pagination: 397-436.

GHIRADELLA, H. 1989. Structure and development of iridescent butterfly scales: lattices and laminae. Journal of Morphology 202 (1): 69-88.

GHIRADELLA, H., ANESHANSLEY, D., EISNER, T., SILBERGLIED, R.E., & HINTON, H.E. 1972. Ultraviolet reflection of a male butterfly: interference color caused by thin-layer elaboration of wing scales. Science, New York 178 (4066): 1214-1217.

GIBSON, D.O. 1984. How is automimicry maintained? Symposia of the Royal Entomological Society of London No. 11: 163-165. [Danaus chrysippus]

GILBERT, L.E. 1979. Development of theory in the analysis of insect-plant interactions. In: HORN, D.J., STAIRS, G.R., & MITCHELL, R.D. [Eds] 1979. Analysis of ecological systems. Ohio State University Press, Columbus: 1-312. Chapter pagination: 117-154.

GILBERT, L.E., & EHRLICH, P.R. 1970. The affinities of the Ithomiinae and the Satyrinae (Nymphalidae). Journal of the Lepidopterist’s Society 24 (4): 297-300.

GILBERT, L.E., & SINGER, M.C. 1973. Dispersal and gene flow in a butterfly species. American Naturalist 107 (953): 58-72.

GILBERT, L.E., & SINGER, M.C. 1975. Butterfly ecology. Annual Rev. Ecol. Syst. 6: 365-397.

GILBERT, L.E., & SMILEY, J.T. 1978. Determinants of local diversity in phytophagous insects: host specialists in tropical environments. Symposia of the Royal Entomological Society of London No. 9: 89-104.

GILCHRIST, G.W. 1990. The consequences of sexual dimorphism in body size for butterfly flight and thermoregulation. Functional Ecology 4 (4): 475-487.

GILLHAM, N.W. 1956. Geographic variation and the subspecies concept in butterflies. Systematic Zoology 5: 110-120.

GOLDSMITH, T.H., MARKS, B.C., & BERNARD, G.D. 1986. Separation and identification of geometric isomers of 3-hydroxyretinoids and occurrence in the eyes of insects. Vision Research 26 (11): 1763-1769.

GOLICHER, D.J., O’HARA, R.B., RUIZ-MONTOYA, L., & CAYUELA, L. 2006. Lifting a veil on diversity: A Bayesian approach to fitting relative-abundance models. Ecological Applications 16 (1): 202-212.

GOMURGEN, A.N. 1991. Studies on the structure of some adult hesperiids (Hesperiidae, Lepidoptera). Doga Turk Zooloji Dergisi 15 (1): 1-15.

GRAHAM, M.R.W. DE V 1950. Postural habits and colour-pattern evolution in Lepidoptera. Transactions Soc. Brit. Ent. 10: 217-232.

GRAHAM, S.M., WATT, W.B., & GALL, L.F. 1980. Metabolic resource allocation vs mating attractiveness: adaptive pressures on the ‘alba’ polymorphism of Colias butterflies. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Biological Sciences 77 (6): 3615-3619.

GRAY, P.H.H. 1954. Aristotle’s description of the life history of a butterfly (psyche). The Lepidopterists’ News 8 (5): 145.

GRAY, P.H.H. 1960. A method for estimating the wing radius in Lepidoptera. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 14 (1): 63-66.

GREENEY, H.F., & JONES, M.T. 2003. Shelter building in the Hesperiidae: a classification scheme for larval shelters. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 37: 27-36. . [PDF file on CD 1].

GREENSLADE, P. 1999. What entomologists think about listing species for protection: a survey of butterfly specialists in Australia. In: PONDER, W., and LUNNEY, D. [EDS]. The other 99%: the conservation and biodiversity of invertebrates. Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales. Mosman: i-vii, 1-454. Chapter pagination: 345-349.

GREY, L.P. 1964. Keeping records. Journal of the Lepidopterist’s Society 18 (1): 58-63.

GUPPY, R. 1953. Papilio zelicaon and hilltops. The Lepidopterists’ News 7 (2): 43-44. [hilltopping behaviour; first person to hypothesise that hilltopping is a mate-locating strategy?]

GUPPY, R. 1962. Collecting Oeneis nevadensis (Satyrinae) and other genera on Vancouver Island, with a theory to account for hilltopping. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 16 (1): 64-66.

HAEUSER, C.L., HOLSTEIN, J., & STEINER, A. 2004. Das globale Artregister Tagfalter – GART Ein Web-basiertes Informationssystem. Mitteilungen der Deutschen Gesellschaft fuer Allgemeine und Angewandte Entomologie 14 (1-6): 145-148.

HAFERNIK, J.E. 1982. Phenetics and ecology of hybridization in buckeye butterflies (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae). University of California Publications in Entomology 96: v-vii, 1-109. [Junonia]

HAGEN, R.H. 1999. Prolegs of Papilionini (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae): alternative solutions to the problem of attachment. University of Kansas Museum of Natural History Special Publication 24: 237-251.

HALL, A. 1983. A monograph of the butterflies of the subfamily Nymphalinae. 44 volumes. Booth Museum of Natural History, Brighton.

HALL, J.P.W., & HARVEY, D.J. 2002. A survey of androconial organs in the Riodinidae (Lepidoptera). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 136 (2): 171-197.

HAMMOND, H.E. 1960. The preservation of lepidopterous larvae using the inflation and heat-drying technique. Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 14 (1): 67-78.

HAMMOND, P.C. 1990 (1991). Patterns of geographic variation and evolution in polytypic butterflies. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 29 (1-2): 54-76. [PDF file on CD1]

HANCOCK, D.L. 1983. Classification of the Papilionidae (Lepidoptera): a phylogenetic approach. Smithersia 2: 1-48.

HANCOCK, D.L., HAUGUM, J., SPERLING, F., PAGE, M.G.P., & RACHELI, T. 1983. Introducing the male genitalia of the Papilionidae, a pictorial series. Papilio International 1 (2): 19-35.

HANSKI, I. 1999. Metapopulation ecology. Oxford University Press, Oxford etc.: i-ix, 1-313.

HANSON, W.R. 1967. Estimating the density of an animal population. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera 6 (3): 203-247. [PDF file on CD1].

HARDWICK, D.F. 1950. Preparation of slide mounts of lepidopterous genitalia. Canadian Entomologist 82: 231-235.

HARRISON, S., QUINN, J.F., BAUGHMAN, J.F., MURPHY, D.D., & EHRLICH, P.R. 1991. Estimating the effects of scientific study on two butterfly populations. American Naturalist 137 (2): 227-243.
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