BIBLIOGRAPHICAL APPENDIX 273 



and with birds of different species. Extracted and translated in Ibis, gi: 



140-143. 

 Fisher, J. and Hinde, R. A. (1949). The Opening of Milk-bottles by Birds. 



British Birds, 42 : 347-357- 

 Harvey, E. N. (1940). Living Light. Pp. xvi + 328 col. frontisp. and 



88 figs. Princeton. 

 Lynes, H. and Vincent, J. (1939). The White-rumped Swift M. coffer 



beginning to breed under the eaves of houses. Ostrich (Pretoria), 10 : 



75-S4- 

 MoREAu, R. E. (1933). The food of the Red-billed Oxpecker, Buphagus 



erythrorhynchus (Stanley). Bull. Ent. Res. London^ 24: 325-335. 

 *MoREAu, R. E. (1942). The nesting of African Birds in association with 



other Hving things. Ibis. (14), 6 : 240-263. 

 Myers, J. G. (1935). Nesting associations of Birds with social insects. 



Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 83 : 11-22. 

 Nelson, T. H. (1882). Small birds carried by Cranes in their migrations. 



The Zoologist, 60 : 73. 

 Supplement to the report of the twelfth annual meeting of the American 



Society of Parasitologists. Report of the Committee (1937). Journal of 



Parasitology, 23 : 325-32g. 



See also The Handbook of British Birds (Witherby) under the individual 

 species referred to in the text. 



Phoresy 

 fBEQUAERT, J. C. (1953). The Hippoboscidae or Louse-flies (Diptera) of 



Mammals and Birds. Ent. amer.j 32: 163-174. 

 fSMiT, F. G. A. M. (1953). Transport of Mallophaga by Fleas. Parasitology, 



43' 205-206. 

 Vachon, M. (1947). Nouvelles remarques a propos de la phoresie des 



Pseudoscorpions. Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. (2), Paris (in French), ig : 84-87. 

 Warburton, C. (1928). Ornithomyia avicularia (Diptera Hippoboscidae) as 



the carrier of Mallophaga, with some remarks on phoresy in insects. 



Parasitology (Cambridge), 20 : 175-178. 



Chapters 4, 5 and 6 



The Effect of Parasites on the Host 



The Effect of Parasitism on the Parasite 



The Origins of Parasitism and the Evolution of Parasites 



Relevant material will be found in all the books on the general 

 aspect of parasitism quoted above. The following publications should 

 also prove interesting. 



