by wood boring beetle larvae and under rags on poles supporting 

 the shed. In a borrow pit in which cattle slept, ticks were found 

 in cracked walls of the pit, under turf, etc. 



PERVa-IAISKY (l95CfB). USSR. As H. anatolicum excavatun ; mating 

 wi't'^ H* marginatum, r-mandromorphs . See H. marginatum , 

 P^e , also H. dromedarii above, and Pervomaisiq^ (1954-). 



PSlva-IAISHT (195^). USSR. Breeding experiments demonstrate 

 that progeny of H. a. anatolicum may in part resemble H. 

 a. excavatum and that progeny of H. a. excavattra may in 

 part resemble H. a. anatolicum . IJriTical characters of 

 both subspecies described. ITesults obtained from partheL. 

 nogenetic oviposition are similar to those described 

 above for H. dromedarii . 



Mosaic gynandromorphs (H. a. anatolicum ) , after feeding ai;id 

 mating with males of the same species, give rise to normal 

 males and females. (There follow some remarks in support 

 of genetic theories in vogue in the USSR at the time\his 

 was written. Similar remarks occur in this author's 1950B 

 paper). Variations, deformities, survival in spite of 

 physical damage, etc., are discussed in some detail. 



CHUliAKOV (195-^). USSR.. As H. anatolicum ; isolation of Q fever 

 (C. burnetii) from specimens in Central Asia. 



- 379 - 



