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Reddit mentions of Peterson Field Guide to Moths of Northeastern North America (Peterson Field Guides)

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of Peterson Field Guide to Moths of Northeastern North America (Peterson Field Guides). Here are the top ones.

Peterson Field Guide to Moths of Northeastern North America (Peterson Field Guides)
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    Features:
  • Anti-glare (matte) film engineered to reduce glare and fingerprints
  • Made from the high quality Japanese PET film for easy installation and no residue when removed
  • Real touch sensitivity for a natural feel that provides flawless touch screen accuracy
  • Protects your screen from daily scratches, dust and scrapes
  • Include 3 pcs screen protectors
Specs:
Height7.25 Inches
Length4.5 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateApril 2012
Weight1.5 Pounds
Width1.276 Inches

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Found 4 comments on Peterson Field Guide to Moths of Northeastern North America (Peterson Field Guides):

u/Owlsblood · 5 pointsr/whatsthisbug

If you're interested in fostering a moth obsession, I recommend this book to help set the stage!

u/koinobionic · 3 pointsr/Entomology

The Peterson Field Guide to Insects: America North of Mexico should suit you just fine. Of course it covers a wide range and isn't specific to just your area but you should still be able to get to the family level with this book. The only downside of this book is that it was written a while ago and so some names and classifications have changed, but other information is valid and accurate. I personally have this and would recommend it. I am not aware of other field guides for insects that are specific to eastern/central North America except where specific orders or insect types are concerned, like the Field Guide to Moths of Northeastern North America, or perhaps something relating to specific geography like the Rockies or PNW or something.

u/coleopterology · 2 pointsr/Entomology

I'd also suggest ditching the Audubon guide. Quite frankly, it's rubbish. Poorly organized, and a number of the photos are incorrectly ID'd. I highly recommend the Kauffman Guide to Insects by Eric Eaton for a broad overview of North American insect fauna.

Otherwise, if you're focusing on butterflies, the Peterson guides are quite useful. The eastern and western volumes by Opler are both useful, but lack quality keys.

The recently revised Peterson guide to Northeastern moths by Beadle & Leckie is impressive in its coverage (but by no means comprehensive) but similarly lacks any sort of useful key for identification.

If you're looking for other field guide recommendations, I'd be happy to share!

u/maaarshall · 2 pointsr/insects

Peterson is pretty good.