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When I finally got to the University of Arizona and started working with Floyd Werner, I had become indoctrinated into aquatics, not as the fisherman knows them, but as a biologist studies them. The joys and frustrations of capturing dragonflies are to me as stirring a hunt as stalking an elk, and most of the time just as difficult. I had experienced in graduate school what most desert dwellers dream of, wading in the water while enjoying the outdoors, but I also had a good idea of what kind of exciting creatures I would find beneath the water hiding perhaps under a rock.
My real awakening to the world of insects came by being in the field with Floyd, who unlocked many more doors of entomology with his keen eye and pioneer spirit. We spent hours exploring and discovering what the desert Southwest has waiting for the curious. Now I hope to carry on that naturalist-type position that Floyd epitomized until his death in 1992. I had the best of teachers to help me develop a broad knowledge of this fascinating microworld, and now I hope to share these joys, too. I am the preacher of good news when it comes to insects and what they do for us. I learned early to have confidence in insects and believe in Aldo Leopold’s land-ethic philosophy, which sums up for me what bugs really do on this planet. They may take, but in most cases they give back to the system to keep it healthy.
I do not find nature’s creatures to be selfish. On the contrary, they seem to have that built-in guide to stop them from messing up a good thing. It is the aim of most living things to maintain diversity, and this will then keep a healthy ecosystem. Once greed and selfishness creep into a system, you can bet trouble will soon follow. With insects I seldom find this to be the case. Oh, to the human’s aesthetic taste, insects are the destroyers, but to Nature, they are the recyclers, the reworkers and the designers. They’ve been at this game of survival much longer than human beings, and they’ve surely succeeded.
As I wander about this desert, I now try to figure out what insects are around making this world so delightful to me. I may become an oasis in the desert to the creatures. If that fly comes to my nose and becomes an irritation, I may shoo it away but I know why it comes to me. Life won’t always be as I wish it to be, so maybe I can return a little of me through some other life forms. Peace of mind comes in many ways, but to me it comes in the form of diverse shapes and sizes of all those microcreatures surrounding me in life.
The writing of this book seems to have taken ages as I look back. Floyd Werner began the task in 1989 after he retired. We discussed what insects, etc. would be good to include and then he sat down and wrote. During the three years Floyd worked on the book, many obstacles slowed its progress as Floyd battled ill health.
Finally in November 1992, Floyd asked me to complete this book, as he was one to never let things go unfinished. With great pride, I took the manuscript and began adding my touches. Needless to say, this project is a labor of love, both for Floyd and for the world of insects. This book writing is quite a job.
As you read the stories, they reflect experiences of both Floyd and myself. You may well detect two writing styles and hopefully they will window our souls to you. Some you will easily recognize as Floyd’s touch, because of the time factor. Others, well just guess!
As the reader homes in on a region of interest, it is good to have a feeling for the geographic boundaries. When studying insects, because of their importance to humans and the natural world, it is important to see where they live and which ones might be encountered during travels or home changes. Because of the mobility of insects, this is by no means a rigid distribution, for walls cannot be built high enough to stop the bugs, but it is very representative of the home range of the critters.
Copyright © 2000 Fisher Books. All rights reserved.
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