* Preface [to the 2004 Edition] * Introduction *1. The Colony Cyclev *2. Economy of the Colony *3. The Flight Machine and Its Temperature *4. Warming Up *5. Heating the Nest *6. The Heat Transfer System *7. Juggling Costs and Benefits *8. Commuting and Foraging Movements *9. Foraging Optimization by Individual Initiative *10. Competition between Species *11. Pollination and Energetics *12. Ecology and Coevolution * Summary * Appendix A: How to Rear Bumblebees * Appendix B: The Bumblebees of North America * References * Index
Bernd Heinrich is Professor Emeritus of Biology at the University of Vermont. He has written several memoirs of his life in science and nature, including One Man’s Owl, Ravens in Winter, and A Year in the Maine Woods, which won the 1995 Rutstrum Authors’ Award for Literary Excellence.
This is a remarkable and rewarding book, complementary to, yet in
some respects going far beyond, its predecessors. It is highly
recommended.
*New York Times Book Review*
Extraordinary...the implications of work such as Heinrich’s seem to
me more resonant than the promise of a rich harvest of new
research.
*Harper’s Magazine*
A magnificent book that combines the best of both writing and
science...Heinrich has performed a masterful job of sharing his
personal research efforts and those of others in his field. He has
written an extremely interesting book and in the process has shown
how one kind of organism can be used as a model to investigate
behavior, physiology, ecology and evolution. Bumblebee Economics
should serve as a model for good scientific writing.
*Quarterly Review of Biology*
Heinrich is the author of several notable books about nature. This
one, first published in 1979, is a classic, a fascinating, readable
study of life as organized (sort of) by a most endearing little
creature. A new preface summarizes findings of the last
quarter-century. A splendid work.
*Globe and Mail*
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