The
Science magazine reviewer described the book as a "mighty tome" and commented that it would "surely take its place among the greatest of all
entomology books", as it was "a wonderful exploration of almost every ramification of
evolutionary biology, from developmental biology to the structure of ecological communities". The illustrations are praised as lavish and extremely detailed, with monochrome drawings and 24 colour plates. All the 297 extant genera are illustrated and identifiable with the supplied keys. But "
The Ants, like every great book and every ant colony, is much more than the sum of its parts." Diana Wheeler, reviewing the book in
The Quarterly Review of Biology, comments that
William Morton Wheeler thought his book not practical to revise as it would require too much work and would make the book too expensive, and that it was fortunate that the authors "did not flinch" at the challenge. They had produced a massive but affordable volume, and it was accessible to the public as well as to entomologists. ==See also==