WHOLE VOL. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TERMITES: SUBJECTS — SNYDER 



127 



(1904) 1905, pp. 436-449- (The phylo- 

 genetic metamorphosis of East Indian 

 termite guests.) 



1905a, pp. 199-200. {Termitusa, n. gen., 

 Aleocharine (Staph.) termitophile, T. 

 sjostedti.) 



1906*, pp. 565-580. (Species building.) 



1906a, pp. 212-216. (Guests.) 



1908a, in Schultze, 1908, p. 441. {Ter- 

 initotdits schultzei, n. sp. (Staph.), a 

 new guest of Hodotermes, also other 

 guests of Hodotermes, western and cen- 

 tral Africa.) 



1909a, pp. 1-190. (Bibliography Wasmann's 

 papers on termitophily.) 



1910b, pp. 97-102, 129-138, 161-181. (Man- 

 ner and origin of symphily.) 



191 1*, pp. 91-117, 145-176. (Termitophiles 

 from Belgian Congo.) 



1911b, in Escherich, 1911*, pp. 231-232. 

 (Coleoptera, Ceylon.) 



1911C, pp. 428-429. (Synopsis of Termito- 

 phya and Xenogaster species (Col.), with 

 statement of value observations by N. 

 Holmgren.) 



1912*, pp. 70-115. (Termitophiles.) 



1913, pp. 254-257. (Guests.) 



1913a, pp. 16-22. (Revision Termitoxenii- 

 nae. East Indies and Ceylon.) 



1915a, pp. I -4 1 3, XX. (Association ants and 

 termites.) 



1916, pp. 169-210. (Coleopterous guests, 



East Indies.) 

 1918, pp. 1-23. (Coleopterous guests, 



Scarab., East Indies.) 

 1918a, pp. 37-41. (Histeridae.) 



1920, pp. 80-82. {Orthogonitis assmuthi, 

 n. sp., from South India.) 



1921, pp. 14-30. (Rliysopaussinen.) 



1926, pp. 417-418. (Contribution made by 

 study of termitophile biology to taxon- 

 omy.) 

 1934, pp. 78-148. (Guests, with appendix 

 by H. Schmitz.) 

 Wasmann, E., and Brauns, H., 1925, pp. 



101-118. (Beetles, South Africa.) 

 Wheeler, W. M., 1918, pp. 314-316. (Exu- 

 date organs termitophilous beetle.) 

 1928, pp. 130-160. (Termitophiles.) 

 1936, pp. 159-243. (Ecological relations 

 ponerine and other ants to termites.) 

 WoMERSLEY, H., 1934, p. 103. (Australia, 

 Collembola, Entomobryoidea, Isotoma 

 termitophila, associated with termites.) 

 1940, p. 350. (A new termitophilous Col- 

 lembolan from South Australia.) 

 ZuMPT, F., 1952, pp. 1-18. (Ethiopian Sar- 

 cophaginae (Dipt.) ; new genus, Termito- 

 tneiopia.) 

 1953, p. 37. (Termitometopia, a true 

 guest.) 



USES IN INDUSTRY, ARTS, AND RELIGION 



Anonymous (J. M. C), 1915, pp. 224-281. 

 (Use in Australia brown secretion in 

 nest structure of mounds for tennis 

 courts.) 

 1938, p. 17. (Lime carbonite in mounds, 

 Tanganyika, Africa.) 



Berensberg, H. von p., 1907, pp. 757-762. 

 (Natal, use in manufactures.) 



Clausen, L. W., 1954. (Head-hunters of 

 Amazon River purify widow before re- 

 marriage by inhaling smoke from burn- 

 ing termite nest, p. 150; natives of lake 

 region, central Africa, chew clay from 

 certain termite nests as Arabs of that 

 region chew tobacco. Arabs suffered se- 

 vere nausea when they tried it, pp. 150- 

 151.) 



Cowan, T., 1865, pp. 132-137. (Use of nests.) 



Dietz, H. F., and Snyder, T. E. (1923), 

 1924, pp. 279-302. (Panama, nest ma- 

 terial used for floors native huts, and 

 tennis courts.) 



Froggatt, W. W., 1903, pp. 726-730. (Earth- 

 like material mound nests so fine is used 



by native jewelers to polish gems in Cey- 

 lon.) 



Lips, J. E., 1947, p. 427. (South Seas, ter- 

 mites souls of men.) 



Myers, J. G., 1938, pp. 7-8. (Sudan, termites 

 used as oracles.) 



Pax, F., 1950, pp. 264-271. (Practical use ter- 

 mites and their nests.) 



RoHLAND, P., 1911, pp. 178-179. (Nest ma- 

 terial in brickmaking.) 



Snyder, T. E., 1915, p. 23. (As scavengers 

 in the forest.) 

 i929d, pp. 143-151. (Tree nests (artificial 

 of concrete), used as decoration in archi- 

 tecture.) 

 I935e, p. 64. (Natives of South Africa, ac- 

 cording to C. Fuller in letter, have vener- 

 ated mounds for many hundreds of 

 years.) 

 1948, p. 75. (In Africa nest material is 

 used for floors native huts.) 



Taylor, }. E., 1942, p. 49. (Mounds used for 

 manure.) 



