Introduction. Systematics. Bagrada hilaris (Burmeister), the bagrada stink bug or painted bug. Halyomorpha halys (Stål), the brown marmorated stink bug.
J. E. McPherson is professor emeritus of zoology at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale (SIU). He obtained his Ph.D. in entomology from Michigan State University in 1968 and joined SIU in 1969 as assistant professor. He was promoted to associate Professor in 1974 and to professor in 1979. He retired in July 2012 but has continued to conduct research, maintaining the same office and laboratory space he had during his employment and still managing the entomology collection.
Dr. McPherson has written broadly on the ecology and systematics of the Heteroptera, particularly the Pentatomoidea, Reduvioidea, and various aquatic and semiaquatic taxa. He has authored or co-authored 200 refereed journal articles and three books, presented papers at both national and regional meetings, and given invited lectures at various universities. He has received several research grants, primarily from the USDA Forest Service.
Dr. McPherson is a member of the Entomological Society of America (ESA) and has served on numerous ESA national and branch committees. He was the recipient of an ESA national Service Award in 1991 for his work on the Editorial Board of the American Entomologist, the society' flagship publication, and served as editor of that publication from 1993 through 2001. He was the 1993 recipient of the Distinguished Achievement Award in Teaching, the 1997 recipient of the C. V. Riley Achievement award, and the 2006 Award of Merit, all from the ESA North Central Branch. He also was the 1996 recipient of the Outstanding Teacher in the College of Science, SIU. He served 6 years on the ESA Governing Board, 3 (1994) as Section A (now Systematics, Evolution, and Biodiversity) representative and 3 as an officer (Vice-President, 2001; President, 2002; Past-President, 2003). He was elected an Honorary Member in 2004 and a Fellow in 2007 of the ESA.
Dr. McPherson is a member of several additional societies including the Entomological Society of Washington, Florida Entomological Society, Michigan Entomological Society, and the New York Entomological Society. A Festschrift was dedicated to him in 2012 by the Governing Board of the Michigan Entomological Society and was comprised of a series of papers, primarily on the Pentatomidae, contributed by colleagues and former students.
"Comprehensive, exceptionally well written, organized and
presented, Invasive Stink Bugs and Related Species is enhanced with
the inclusion of 27 color and 136 b/w illustrations, a twenty-one
page Insects and Spiders Index, a sixteen page Plants index, and a
three page Microoranisms and Plant Diseases Index, making it an
ideal curriculum textbook and an unreservedly recommended addition
to professional, college, and university library collections." -
John Taylor, Midwest Book Review, March 2018"A behemoth covering
all aspects of the biology of stink bugs, Invasive Stink Bugs and
Related Species has 260 pages devoted to six prominent invasive
pentatomids, a short chapter on three potentially invasive species,
and a 45-page chapter on management of insects in general with some
sections particularly relevant to stink bugs... This book is
copiously illustrated, including with beautiful color plates of key
species and those that resemble them. For the invasive species
there are maps of the dynamics of the invasion as well as of
predicted ranges generated by the environmental niche models." -
Daniel Simberloff, Biological Invasions, March 2018"The book
comprises the first of its kind to collate and detail the biology
of invasive Pentatomoids (and related true bug species), and the
associated ‘economic and environmental concerns’. It’s a hefty book
with a correspondingly hefty price tag. However, this book includes
everything that you would want to know about stink bugs, and is the
culmination of more than 60 stink bug specialist’s expertise from
15 countries. The detail is impressive. Perhaps surprisingly for a
book of this type, the writing is approachable and engaging, and
overall, produces an authoritative but accessible work." - Kate
Priestman (CEnv, MCIEEM), Inside Ecology, May 2018"This is a nice
addition to the literature, as I know of no other comprehensive
source of information about the 6 important invasive stink bugs now
found in North America. Many of the chapters, such as those on
semiochemistry and vectors of plant pathogens, are very timely.
This is a volume that stink bug workers will want, and research
libraries should possess." - John L. Capinera, Entomology &
Nematology Dept, University of Florida, in Florida Entomologist,
Volume 101 No.2, 2018"Overall, this book provides a broad-based and
up-to-date treatment of pentatomoids, not just the several species
that have become invasive. Given ongoing taxonomic changes and the
continued expansion of some species’ ranges, this volume will serve
as an important reference and synthesis of current knowledge in
pentatomoid classification and management practices for the
forthcoming decades."- Randall T Schuh, in American Entomologist,
Volume 64, Issue 3, 15 September 2018
"Comprehensive, exceptionally well written, organized and
presented, Invasive Stink Bugs and Related Species is enhanced with
the inclusion of 27 color and 136 b/w illustrations, a twenty-one
page Insects and Spiders Index, a sixteen page Plants index, and a
three page Microoranisms and Plant Diseases Index, making it an
ideal curriculum textbook and an unreservedly recommended addition
to professional, college, and university library collections." -
John Taylor, Midwest Book Review, March 2018"A behemoth covering
all aspects of the biology of stink bugs, Invasive Stink Bugs and
Related Species has 260 pages devoted to six prominent invasive
pentatomids, a short chapter on three potentially invasive species,
and a 45-page chapter on management of insects in general with some
sections particularly relevant to stink bugs... This book is
copiously illustrated, including with beautiful color plates of key
species and those that resemble them. For the invasive species
there are maps of the dynamics of the invasion as well as of
predicted ranges generated by the environmental niche models." -
Daniel Simberloff, Biological Invasions, March 2018"The book
comprises the first of its kind to collate and detail the biology
of invasive Pentatomoids (and related true bug species), and the
associated ‘economic and environmental concerns’. It’s a hefty book
with a correspondingly hefty price tag. However, this book includes
everything that you would want to know about stink bugs, and is the
culmination of more than 60 stink bug specialist’s expertise from
15 countries. The detail is impressive. Perhaps surprisingly for a
book of this type, the writing is approachable and engaging, and
overall, produces an authoritative but accessible work." - Kate
Priestman (CEnv, MCIEEM), Inside Ecology, May 2018"This is a nice
addition to the literature, as I know of no other comprehensive
source of information about the 6 important invasive stink bugs now
found in North America. Many of the chapters, such as those on
semiochemistry and vectors of plant pathogens, are very timely.
This is a volume that stink bug workers will want, and research
libraries should possess." - John L. Capinera, Entomology &
Nematology Dept, University of Florida, in Florida Entomologist,
Volume 101 No.2, 2018"Overall, this book provides a broad-based and
up-to-date treatment of pentatomoids, not just the several species
that have become invasive. Given ongoing taxonomic changes and the
continued expansion of some species’ ranges, this volume will serve
as an important reference and synthesis of current knowledge in
pentatomoid classification and management practices for the
forthcoming decades."- Randall T Schuh, in American Entomologist,
Volume 64, Issue 3, 15 September 2018
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