l62 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 85 



FuLLAWAY, David T. 



1920. Natural control of scale insects in Hawaii. Proc. Hawaiian Ent. 

 Sec. (1919), vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 237-246, June. Forty-four species 

 of scale insects, 87 parasites, 20 predators; varying up to 3 preda- 

 tors and 7 parasites to a species. 

 Garman, H. 



1898. The chinch bug. Bull. 74, Kentucky Agr. Exp. Sta., pp. 45-70, 

 figs, i-io, May. Coccinellids, toads, quail, and meadowlarks prey 

 upon it (p. 51) ; great fluctuations in abundance caused by disease. 

 Gibson, Edmund H. 



1916. The clover leafhopper and its control in the central States. Farmers' 

 Bull. ^2)7, U. S. Dep. Agr., 8 pp., 5 figs., June. Agallia sanguino- 

 lenta. More than 100 species of birds, chickens, turkeys, and guinea 

 fowl prey upon leaf hoppers (p. 5). 

 Hanft, H. 



1916. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Cicadinenfeinde. Zeitschr. wiss. Insekten- 

 biol., vol. 12, pp. 200-204, 217-223, 274-279, figs. Stresiptera, 

 Dryinidae, Serphoidea, Pipunculidae, Neuroptera, Nematoda, mites, 

 fungi. Bibliography. 



HUNGERFORD, H. B. 



1919. The biology and ecologj' of aquatic and semi-aquatic Hemiptera. 

 Kansas Univ. Bull., vol. 11, 265 pp., 30 pis. Gelastocoridae — grass- 

 hoppers, lace bugs, beetle larvae, capsids. Ochteridae — tabanid 

 larvae. Saldidae — drowned flies, etc. Hydrometra — Ostracoda, 

 culicid larvae and pupae. Mesovelia — springtail, crambus, chalcid, 

 Hydrometra, Ostracoda. Gerrls remigis — midges, notonectid 

 nymphs ; jassids, etc., falling in water, snails. Rheuniatobates — 

 Ostracoda and fallen insects. Microvclia — Ostracoda and fallen 

 insects, waterfleas. Belostoma — fish, snails. Lcthoccrns — frog, fish. 

 Nepa — mayfly nymphs, Gyrinidae, Daphnia, Cyclops, fish eggs, fish, 

 tadpoles. Ranatra — ostracod, fish, mayfly nymphs. Pica — Ostra- 

 coda and other small Crustacea. Notonecta — cannibalistic, Ostra- 

 coda and other small Crustacea, corixids. Bucnoa — Entomostraca, 

 corixids. Corixid nymphs cannibalistic. 



Jensen-Haarup, a. C. 



1924. Wasps preying on cicadas, Ent. Meddel, vol. 14, pp. 323-324. Also 

 birds, spiders, mantids, and dragonflies noted as their enemies. 



Johnson, Roswell H. 



1907. Economic notes on aphids and coccinellids. Ent. News, vol. 18, no. 

 5, pp. 171-174, May. Coccinellids, syrphids, spiders, and fungi as 

 aphid destroyers. 



KlRKALDY, G. W. 



1907. [Enemies of Aleyrodidae.] Bull. 2, Board Agr. and For. Terr. 

 Hawaii, pp. 80-84. Three species of flies, 4 of beetles, i of hemip- 

 tera, 22 of hymenoptera, i neuropteron, i thysanopteron, i mite, and 

 2 fungi. 



LOKANDO, N. T. 



1929. A biological method for destroying bedbugs. Sci. Monthly, pp. 265- 

 268, Sept. Spiders, reduviid bugs, cockroaches, and ants as enemies. 



