Subject Editor: Jadranka Rota
This book comes nicely bound, of a convenient size, with an ample supply of colour pages like others in the Esperiana Memoir series. The abstract details nine new synonymies and mentions that 191 new species are described out of the 307 treated.
There is a brief introduction to the family
The bulk of the text then follows, comprising a description or redescription of each of the species, followed by a few photographs of localities and 23 pages of colour photographs of the adult specimens, and two of larvae. There are then 45 pages of monochrome photographs of male genitalia and 47 pages of female genitalia.
The species are all given a number and the illustrations are labelled with the same number, imagines with suffix -i, male genitalia with suffix -m, female genitalia with suffix -f with an additional suffix when more that one photograph was deemed necessary. This seems to be a sensible and helpful arrangement. Since the male genitalia are so diverse and difficult to interpret parts are labelled with arrows at times when the parts might be easily confused. All the photographs of adults are presented in a rectangle of the same size; it is easy in this computerised age for this to be done and they fit conveniently into a page. However even though a scale bar is included one does lose the sense of whether a species is a large or small one and I personally would prefer to have them reproduced at a constant scale.
The author has chosen type material to illustrate specimens whenever possible and this must be commended, and in the text the location of the holotype is specified.
Since I was asked to check the English I have to accept responsibility and not blame the author for one recurring error: the derivation of each new name is given under the heading “Ethymology” which of course should read Etymology.
No doubt a professional entomologist with more resources at his disposal would have had recourse to analysis of the DNA of some genera and species so that a robust structure for the family could be attempted. He would no doubt have examined other collections such as those at Tervuren and elsewhere which was not attempted by this author. This work was compiled by a retired teacher who has also undertaken other works during the same decade.
A publication of this type does raise some deeper questions. The Afrotropical Region is vast; the Democratic Republic of Congo alone is the size of Western Europe.