388 JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY [Vol. 4 



The following list makes no claim to completeness, but is believed 

 to include most of the English and American publications. Only a 

 few of the Continental papers are included. It may serve as a supple- 

 ment to the bibliography given in my "Insects and Disease." 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Text or Reference Books 



Braun, M. and Liihe, M. A Handbook of Practical Parasitology. (Bale) Lon- 

 don, 1910. (Trans, by Linda Foster.) An account of the chief parasites of man and 

 domesticated animals. 



Castellani, Aide and Chalmers, A. J. Manual of Tropical Medicine. (Wood & 

 Co.) New York, 1910. Some four hundred pages are devoted to biological causes 

 of diseases and animal parasites and carriers. 



Chapin, C. V. Sources and Modes of Infection. (Wiley & Son) New Y^ork, 

 1910. 



Daniels, C. W. and Wilkinson, E. Tropical Medicine and Hygiene; Part 1, 

 Diseases due to Protozoa. (Bale) London, 1909. 



Doane, R. W. Insects and Disease. (Holt & Co.) New York, 1910. \ popu- 

 lar account of the way in which insects cause or spread some of our common 

 diseases. 



Hewitt, C. Gordon. The Housefly {Musca domestica). (Sherra H. Hughes) Man- 

 chester, 1910. This is a bringing together of his recent excellent papers on this 

 subject. 



Hiss, P. H. and Zinsser, H. A text-book of Bacteriology. New Y'ork, 1910. 

 Latest and best book of this class. 



Morrell, C. C. Death-dealing Insects and Their Story. Manchester, 1910. 



Ross, Ronald, with contributions by Gorgas, LePrince, Boyce, el. al. The Pre- 

 vention of Malaria. (J. Murray) London, 1910. "A most valuable work for the 

 medical man, the biologist and the naturalist." 



Theobald, F. V. Monograph of the CuUcidse of the World. Vol. V. (Brit. Museum) 

 London, 1910. 



Report of the Ad\asory Committee for the Tropical Diseases Research Fund for 

 the Year, 1909. London, 1910. The appendices contain reports on malaria, try- 

 panosomiasis, plague, leprosy, etc. 



Mosquitoes 



Balfour, A. Mosquitoes with reference to immigration and horse sickness. Lan- 

 cet, January 8, 1910. 



Boyce, R. and Lewis, F. C. The effect of mosquito larvae upon drinking water. 

 Annals Tropical Med. and Parasit. Vol. 3 (1910) no. 5, p. 591-594. The experiments 

 show that the presence of larvae adds very materially to the number of bacteria 

 present. 



Craig, C. F. Importance to the army of diseases transmitted by mosquitoes 

 and methods for their prevention. Military Surgeon, March, 1910. 



Darling, S. T. Notes on mosquitoes. Jour. Trop. Med. & Hyg. Vol. 13 (1910) 

 no. 1. Experiments conducted with Anopheles albimanus, A. psendopimctipennis 

 and Stegomyia calopus show that isolated females after 24 hours suck blood as readily 

 as fecundated ones; males seem to live as long as females. 



Harms, W. B. Anti-mosquito organizations in California. Bull. Cal. St. Bd. 

 Health, November, 1910. 



