WHOLE VOL. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TERMITES: SUBJECTS — SNYDER 



SUBJECT HEADINGS 



(For complete citations see List of Authors and Titles beginning on page 149. References marked 

 with an asterisk are not listed in tliis publication, but will be found in Snyder's "Catalog of the 

 Termites of the World," Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 112, 1949.) 



ANATOMY, See MORPHOLOGY 

 ARSENIC HAZARD 



Anonymous, 1953k, pp. 42, 44, 46. (Dosages 



arsenic recommended as safe by U.S. 



Dept. Agriculture.) 

 Hay, H. R., 1939, pp. 126-130. (No hazard 



from arsene gas.) 

 KoFoiD, C. A., 1934, 2d ed., p. 17. (Relation 



moisture to production arsene.) 

 1934a, pp. 47-50. (Arsenic not a termite 



barrier.) 

 KoFoiD, C. A., et al., 1934, 2d ed., p. 582. 



(Arsenic hazard.) 



KoFoiD, C. A., Stohler, R., and Hendee, E. C, 

 1934, 2d ed., pp. 766-771. (Hazard where 

 arsenic used in dwellings.) 



Kreer, J. G., 1936, pp. 38-40. (No health haz- 

 ard.) 



Snyder, T. E., 1950, pp. 12-14. (No health 

 hazard.) 

 1952b, pp. 34, 48. (No health hazard when 

 used as soil poison, wallboard poison, or 

 wood preservative.) 



BACTERIA 



Anonymous, 1930a, pp. 172-173. (Symbiosis 

 in decomposing cellulose.) 



Baldacci, E., in Visintin, 1941-1942, pp. 157- 

 159, 1941. (Schizomycetes or Protozoa 

 in digestion cellulose?) 



Baldacci, E., and Verona, O., 1940, pp. 592- 

 593. (Presence of Cytophaga and Cell- 

 vibrio in digestive systems Reticulitermes 

 lucifugus and Calotermes ftavicoUis.) 



Beckwith, T. D., and Light, S. P., 1927, 

 pp. 656-657. (Spirals Vibrio and Spiro- 

 chaeta for class use.) 



Beckwith, T. D., and Rose, E. J., 1929, p. 4. 

 (Cellulose digestion by organisms from 

 the termite gut.) 



Bequaert, J., 1925, pp. 289-294. (Two types 

 spirochaetes in intestines Neotermes.) 



Brues, C. T., and Dunn, R. C, 1945, pp. 336- 

 337. (Treatments with penicillin and 

 sulpha drugs indicate bacteroids are sym- 

 biotic in cockroaches and Mastotermcs.) 



Buchner, p., 1928, pp. 1-64. (Symbiosis and 

 wood nutrition.) 



Cleveland, L. R., 1926, pp. 51-60. (Spiro- 

 chaetes in intestines Termitidae digest 

 cellulose.) 

 1928, pp. 231-237. (U.S., reladon of spiro- 

 chaetes to termites and to intestinal 

 Protozoa.) 



Damon, S. R., 1926, pp. 31-36. (Spirochaetes 

 of termites.) 



Dickman, a., 1931, pp. 85-92. (Spirochaetes 

 in gut Reticulitermes and Termopsis, true 

 significance not demonstrated, ability in- 

 testinal flora to digest cellulose.) 



Ergene, S., 1949, pp. 49-70. (^Calotermes 

 flavicollis, role bacteria in assimilation 

 and fixation of atmospheric nitrogen.) 



Ghidini, G. M., 1941, pp. 103-113. (Bacteria 

 do not have prevailing role in digestion 

 of cellulose.) 



Ghidini, G. M., and Archetti, I., 1939, pp. 

 125-140. (The spirochaetes of Reticuli- 

 termes lucifugus.^ 

 1941, pp. 55-62. (The spirochaetes of Italian 

 termites.) 



GoETscH, W., Offhaus, K., and Toth, L., 

 1944, p. 48. (Symbiosis bacteria and 

 termites.) 



Henderson, J. C, 1941, pp. 357-378. (Bacteria 

 in intestine Cubitermes, Africa.) 



Hirst, L. P., 1933, pp. 47-48. (Ceylon, bac- 

 teria associated with dry-wood termites 

 that might cause sprue.) 



Hollande, a. C, 1922, p. 23. (Spirochaetes 

 of termites, process of division, formation 

 of schizoplast.) 



Hungate, R. E., 1936, pp. 240-249. (Role 

 bacteria in cellulose decomposition in 

 nutrition of Zootermopsis.) 



Jirovec, O., 1929, pp. 346-356. (Greece, "Calo- 

 termes" (sic!) lucifugus, bacteria and 

 spirochaetes, cocci and vibrios.) 



Jucci, C, 1932, pp. 1422-1429. (Bacteriocytes 

 in fatty tissue, symbiotic.) 

 1952, p. 837. (Bacteriocytes in fatty tis- 

 sue, symbiotic, Masotermes darwiniensis, 

 phylogenesis.) 



Kirby, H., Jr., in Kofoid, 1934, 2d ed., pp. 

 91. 97- 



