Bibliography of the Ixodoidea CHU-COM 



Churchill, A. (1892 a), Ticks on dogs. (Abstract of letter.) Vet. Journ. and Ann. 



Compar. Pathol., London, xxxiv. 393. 

 Churchill, S. (1880 a), Note on Argas persicus. Proc. Entom. Soc. Lond., pp. xx-xxiii. 

 Claude, and Soulie - (1901 a), Contribution a l'etude de la piroplasmose bovine en 



Algerie. Bull. Soc. centr. de me'd. vet., Paris, lv. n.s. xix. 478-484. (Discussion, 



pp. 484, 485.) 

 Claus, C. (1876 and 1880), GrundzUge der Zoologie, 3rd ed. (1876), p. 574 ; also 4th 



ed. (1880), I. 652. (Contains no information worth noting and a mis-statement 



regarding mode of copulation in Ixodes.) 

 (1886 a), On the heart of the Gamasidae and its significance in the phylogenetic 



consideration of the Acarida and Arachnoidea, and the classification of the 



Arthropoda. Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., London, 5 s., xvn. 168-172, 1 Fig. 



(1887), Lehrbuch der Zoologie, 4te Aufl. Marburg and Leipzig : N. G. Elwert. 



[Pp. 470-474 give a brief description of chief features of Ixodes and reproduce 

 three figures from Pagenstecher (1860, 1861) : Ixodes ricinus, general internal 

 anatomy (Fig. 443); Argas, $ and £ sexual organs (Fig. 444); Ixodes, rostrum 

 (Fig. 450).] 



Clayton, W. D. (1897 a), Ticks and Texas fever. (Reviewed.) American Vet. Rev., 

 New York, xx. 727. (S. and H. bibl.) 



Cleland, J. B. (XI. 1909), A note on eosinophil cells in the exudate from tick bites 

 on a horse. Proc. Roy. Soc. Med., London, in. 42, 1 Fig. (Amblyomma 

 aegyptium [the author means Hyalomma aegyptium ; they were identified 

 by Nuttall] imported recently into W. Australia on camels from India, 

 ticks spreading, attack horses and cattle ; in horses attack tender parts 

 and produce " exudation of a slimy, bloody discharge." The author figures the 

 leucocytes in the wound discharges.) 



Cobb, J. 0. (1902), The so-called " spotted fever " of the Rocky Mountains. A new 

 disease in Bitter Root Valley, Mont. Pub. Health Rep., Wash., xvn. 1868-1870 

 [reviewed in Lancet, London, 1902, n. 840 ; also Med. Rec, N.Y., lxii. 540, 541 ; 

 also American Med., Philadelphia, iv. 365, as "Strange Disease induced by 

 Tick Bite " = 20 lines]. (It is only a report on the work of Wilson and Chowning, 

 q.v.) 



Cobbold, T. S. (1879), Parasites; a treatise on the Entozoa of man and animals, 

 including some account of the Ectozoa. Pp. xi + 508, figs. 85, London. 



(1882), Human parasites. A manual of reference to all the known species of 



Entozoa and Ectozoa which are found infesting man. 88 pp. London : Longmans, 

 Green and Co. (Brief mention of ticks on pp. 77, 78.) 



Coinde, J. P. (1860 a), Note sur les epizoes parasites de l'homme et des animaux 

 domestiques. Monit. d. sc. me'd. et pharm., Paris, 2 s., II. 995-997. (S. and H. 

 bibl.) 



Collins, W. see Hunt, S. 



Columella, Jun. Moderat. (about 60 B.C.), ed. Gesneri, 1781, H. lib. vi., cap. 2 

 (Latin citations in Pagenstecher, 1861, p. 3), writes of cattle which have been 

 purchased: "to pass the hand under the belly... that ticks, which principally 

 attack cows, may be removed." In lib. vil, cap. 13, p. Ill, referring to liquid 

 tar : "by this same medicament the ticks which are touched fall down, for they 

 must not be torn away, lest, as I have said before, they cause ulcers." 



Comte, C. see Nicolle. 



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