SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS 



130 



Schenkling-Prevot, 1898, pp. 87-88, 98-100, 



105-106, II0-II2, I16-I18, 123-124, 171- 



172, 176-178, 183, 234-235, 241-242, 247. 



(General.) 

 ScHKAFF, B. A., T923. (Castes.) 

 Schmidt, H., 1950, pp. 1-37. (General.) 

 ScHREiBER, G., 1930-1931, pp. 757-827. (Ne- 

 oteny, disequilibrium in development so- 

 matic and germinal line.) 

 ScHUBOTZ, H., 19 1 2, pp. 328-334. (Africa.) 

 ScHUTT, O., 1862, pp. 250-252. (Japan.) 

 ScHWARZ, E. A., 1896, pp. 38-41. (T. fJavipes, 

 lucijugHs, tubijomians, Eutermes nigri- 

 ceps, fumosus, and Calotermcs in SW. 

 Texas.) 

 1901, p. 347. (First true queen found in 

 North America.) 

 ScuDDER, S. H. (1859), 1861, pp. 287-288. 

 (r. frontalis Hald., i.e. fiat'ipes.) 

 1878, p. 275. (Eutermes ripperti.) 

 Seabra, a. F. de, 1907, pp. 122-123. (Calo- 

 tcrmes flavicollis and T. htcijiigus, Portu- 



Sharp, D., 1894, p. vii-viii. (Neoteinic 

 queens.) 

 1895, p. 20. (Living Calotermcs from 

 Borneo.) 



1901, pp. 356-390. (General.) 



1902, pp. 253-256. (General.) 



Sharpe, C. F., 1894, pp. 228-229. (Deposits 

 made by white ants, patches of egglike 

 particles, fungi, Coonoor, Soudi India.) 



Shelford, V. E., 1913, pp. 220-252. (Middle 

 Beach association, Chicago region.) 



SiLANTjEv, A. A., 1903, p. 29. (Calotermcs 

 flaficollis in Caucasus.) 



SiLVESTRi, F., 1902, pp. 173-178, 257-260, 289- 

 293. 326-335- (South America, pp. 257- 

 260, relative number soldiers to workers 

 or nymphs: Calotermcs 1:10, Syntcrmes 

 1:10, Etctermes 1:15, Cornitermcs 1:20, 

 Armitermes 1:20, Microccrotermes 1:50, 

 Capritermcs 1:80, Microtermes 1:80.) 

 1903*, pp. 1-234. (South America.) 

 1904, pp. 353-378. (South America.) 

 I93^> PP- 65-72. (Hodotermes, Psammo- 

 termes, Fezzan, Sahara.) 



SjosTEDT, v., 1893, pp. 109-112. (Cameroon.) 



1903, pp. 89-101. 



Skaife, S. H., 1954b, pp. 41-67. (Africa, 

 secondary queens Amitermes atlanticus; 

 han'ester, dry-wood, and fungus-growing 

 termites, keys to families; mites scaven- 

 gers in nest.) 



Smeathman, H., 1781, pp. 139-192. (Africa.) 



Smith, H. H., 1879, p. 139. (Luminous ter- 

 mite hills, Brazil.) 



Smith, J. B., 1910, p. 49. (New Jersey.) 



Snodgrass, R. E., 1930, pp. 125-151. (Gen- 

 eral.) 

 Snyder, T. E., 1912a, pp. 107-108. (Queen 

 developed from winged found in U.S., 

 T. flavipes.) 



19 1 3, pp. 487-488. (Changes during qui- 

 escent stage soldier flavipes.) 



1913a, pp. 162-165. (Changes during qui- 

 escent stage soldier flavipes, nymphs.) 



19155 PP- 13-85- (General, U.S., mostly 

 Leucotermes.) 



1916, pp. 1-32. (General, U.S., mostly 

 Leucotermes.) 



1916a, pp. 1-20. (General, U.S., mostly 

 Leucotermes.) 



1919, pp. 97-104. (U.S., adaptations.) 



1920*, in Banks and Snyder, pp. 87-213. 

 (U.S., general, control, damage, flight, 

 food, foundation colonies, parasites, post- 

 adult growth, termitophiles, trophallaxis.) 



1920a, pp. 109-150. (U.S., colonizing re- 

 productive forms, postadult growth, p. 

 112; intermediates, p. 117; Zorotypus, 

 p. 127; flight, pp. 129-130; pseudoflight, 

 pp. 130-134; breeding, pp. 135-145.) 



1922a, pp. 60-74. (U.S., living in poles.) 



1924c, pp. 1-14. (Adaptations to social life.) 



1925c, p. 89. ("Pseudoflight" brachypterous 

 reproductive forms Reticulitcrmes, U.S.) 



I925f, pp. 32-33. {Reticulitcrmes, U.S.) 



I925g) PP- 466-477. (Communism among 

 termites, advantages and disadvantages.) 



1926, pp. 23-25. (U.S.) 



1926b, pp. 1-6. (Races or subspecies of 

 Rcticulitermes in U.S. and Europe, nas- 

 cent species, hybrids, or plastic species 

 with tendency toward a mean.) 



1926c, pp. 1-22. (U.S., last revision 1939.) 



i926f, pp. 522-552. (Biology of the castes, 

 general.) 



i926h, p. 254. (U.S., California.) 



1927J, pp. 337-342. (General, curious facts.) 



1927k, pp. 309-314. (U.S.) 



1928, pp. 274-276. (U.S.) 



1928a, pp. 135-138. (California, U.S., in 

 utility poles.) 



1928c, p. 381. (Coptotermes dissolves lime 

 mortar by frontal gland secretion.) 



1929a, pp. 40-46. (General, ecology.) 



I929d, pp. 143-151. (General, architecture.) 



19296, pp. 84-87. (General.) 



1929J, pp. 1-15. (Pacific area.) 



1929k, pp. 210-230. (U.S.) 



1929m, pp. 5-11, 31-42. (California, U.S.) 



I929n, pp. 96-108. (U.S., in utility poles.) 



1930, pp. 261-269, -90- (General.) 



1931*, pp. 531-571. (General.) 



1932a, p. 27. (U.S.) 



