How insects and environment shape the beauty of flowers—and why that matters to pollinators
This classic work argues that the visible traits of flowers—color, patterns, and structures—are driven in large part by interactions with insects and their environment. It weaves together history, observation, and theory to explain how flowers may adapt their appearance to attract visitors and energize the plant’s reproductive process.
Readers will follow a clear thread from early ideas about environment and variation to concrete examples of how petals change color, how nectar guides and nectaries direct pollinators, and how lighting and growth conditions influence pigment and form. The discussion ties together color, nutrition, and the subtle signals flowers use to engage insect visitors.
- How insect visits influence the color and markings of petals.
- The role of nectar guides and nectaries in guiding pollinators.
- How light, growth, and nutrition affect color development and variability.
- Historical context on the shifting view of environment versus inheritance in plant form.
Ideal for readers of botany, evolutionary biology, and natural history who want a thorough, historically grounded look at how flowers become finely tuned to their animal partners. This edition features extensive illustrations to illuminate the ideas.