BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE IXODOIDEA 



Abn Mansur Muwaffak (?), vide Robert, Histol. Studien, in. pp. 143, 153. Cit. 

 Huber bibl., 1910, p. 21. 



Absolon, Ph. C. K. (1899), Ueberdie Fauna der Hohlendes mahrischen Devonkalkes. 

 Zool. Anz., xxn. 321-325. (Refers briefly to the occurrence of Eschatocephal us 

 gracilipes Frauenfeld, on Chiroptera hibernating in caves, (l.e.r.)) 



Aclogue, A. (1905), Les Argas. Le Cosmos, N.S., nil. 536 (inaccessible). 



(1907), Le mode de nocuite des Argas. Le Cosmos, N.S., lvi. 33-36. 



Agassiz, L. (1846), Nomenclatoris zoologici Index Universalis, continens nomina 



systematica classium, ordinum, famUiarum et generum animalium omnium, 

 tarn viventium quam fossilium, secundum ordinem alphabeticum vnicum disposita 

 adjectis homonymiis plantar um, necnon variis adnotationibus et emendationibus, 

 pp. viii + 393, 4°, Soloduri. (Only lists genera : Argas, Ixodes, etc.) 

 Ajutolo, G. d' (1898), Nuovi casi di Argas refiexus parassita dell' uomo. Rend. 

 Accad. 1st. Bologna, n. 222-223. 



(1900), Argas reflexus parassita dell' uomo. Mem. Accad. Bologna, 8 pp., 



4 Figs., 4°. (Cit. Huber, bibl. 1910, p. 21.) 



Aldrovandi, U. (died 1605, publ. posth. 1638), de Insectis. Citations, translated 

 by us, from extracts of the Latin original in Pagenstecher, 1861, p. 4 : Lib. v. 

 pp. 559 et seq., cap. v. the author gives the names of the tick in different 

 countries: Hundlaus, Zecke, Holzbock (Germany); Hondtsluejis (Belgium); 

 Rezna, Garapato (Spain). He would explain the Italian word cecca as 

 derived from the gut ending blindly, thus reverting to the myth of Pliny. 

 P. 554: "one often notices that dogs, on leaving home, are free from Ticks 

 (ricinus), but on returning from the fields, where there is much thick, tall grass, 

 they are infested by both kinds, great and small." P. 561, Pliny praises the 

 blood, obtained from ticks, as a remedy for chronic ulcers. " If a fistula 

 succeeds to an old disease... the blood of a tick which an ox has nurtured" will 

 cure the condition. 



Allan, R. R. (1881), Septicemia from a Tick Wound. Lancet, n. 403. (Cit. Nuttall, 

 1899, p. 42.) 



Allen, W. E. (20. XII. 1905), Internal Morphology of the American Cattle Tick. 

 Studies from the Zool. Lab., University of Nebraska, No. 67, 4 PL, pp. 245-280 ; 

 also Trans. American Micr. Soc, xxvi. 245 et seq., 4 Pis. 



Almy (10. X. 1901), Nouveaux cas de piroplasmose canine. Bulletin de la Soc. 

 centr. de me'd. ve'te'r., pp. 375-380. 



see Nocard. 



n. 1. 1 1 



