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> Maybe that's the reason the paper isn't available... this keeps anyone else from citing it.
I hardly think that is the case. The author is Howard E. Evans, 1919 - 2002:
> As the world's leading authority on wasps, Howard Ensign Evans' lifelong study of this creature was only one aspect of his life as an acclaimed scientist and author. For readers, he illuminated the otherworldly lives of humble creatures in such popular books as "Life on a Little-Known Planet", "Wasp Farm", and "Pioneer Naturalists". Evans was a master entomologist who seems only to have been truly comfortable in places where the bugs called; there he found his beauty, his magic and his poetry. In this collection, which he completed just before his death at 83, it appears Evans knew all 900,000 species of his gems that to others were only insects, along with the lowly magpie and the birds of Australia as well.
See: The Man Who Loved Wasps: A Howard Ensign Evans Reader (Wilson, Edward O.) Paperback – Publisher : Bower House. March 15, 2005
See: Howard E. Evans: Known and Little-known Aspects of His Life on the Planet (MARY JANE WEST-EBERHARD) JOURNAL OF THE KANSAS ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 77(4), 2004, pp. 296-322
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