The Colours of Animals: Their Meaning and Use offers a clear tour of how color, pattern, and appearance help creatures survive. Focusing largely on insects, it connects striking coloration to real science, not just stories or legends. The book invites readers to notice how warning colors, mimicry, and protective resemblance shape animal lives.
- Learn how bright and contrasting colors warn predators, and how some species use deception to hide or confuse enemies.
- See how color helps insects communicate, mate, and defend themselves, with accessible explanations of key ideas.
- Discover historical moments in science, including how Darwin and Wallace helped shape our understanding of color in nature.
- Explore examples across groups—from caterpillars and butterflies to reptiles, amphibians, and marine life—and why appearance matters in each case.
Ideal for curious readers who want takeaways they can observe in nature, classrooms, or field trials, and for anyone who enjoys the puzzle of how color serves living creatures.
The book uses vivid illustrations and careful explanations to show color as a functional tool in the natural world, not just ornament. It helps readers develop sharper powers of observation and a deeper appreciation for the science behind animal appearances.