100 THE ENDOPARASITES OF THE DINGO, 
There are then three known parasites of Canis dingo, 
viz., Dipylidium caninum, Ancylostoma caninum and 
Linguatula serrata, all of which are known in Australia 
as entozoa of the domestic dog. The hydatid most probably 
occurs, and the presence of several other cestodes and 
nematodes is not unlikely*. 
LITERATURE. 
R. ETHERIDGE. 
1916 The warrigal or dingo, introduced or indigenous? Mem. Geol. 
Survey, N.S.W., Ethno]. Ser. No. 2, 1916, pp. 43-54. 
E. A. JOHNSON. 
1910 Note on a new Linguatula. Trans. Roy. Soc., South Austr., 34, 
1910, pp. 248-50, pl. 46. 
T. H. JoHNSTON. 
191la Notes and Exhibits, P.L.S., N.S.W., 36, 1911, p. 157-8. 
19115 Exhibitsand Remarks. Austr. Med. Gazette, June, 1911, p. 336. 
T. H. JoHnston AND J. B. CLELAND. 
1910 A Note on the occurrence of Pentastomes in Australian Cattle. 
P.R.S., N.S.W., 1910, p. 315-8. 
R. V. LENDENFELD. 
1886 Tenia echinococeus. Zool. Jahrb., 1, 1886, p. 409-410. 
T. S. Raupx. 
1865 Austr. Med. Jour., 10, 1865, p.. 6 
*Gilruth, Sweet and Dodd (Parasitology 4, 1911, p. 1) have referred 
to the presence of bodies resembling Anaplasma marginale, Theiler, in 
the blood of a young dingo, three months old, in the Melbourne Zoological 
Gardens. 
