Bibliography of the Txodoidea hoe hub 



Hoehr, F. (VII. 1893), Further concerning the new chicken plague in Texas. Insect 

 Life, v. 348. 



Hoeven, J. von der (1850), Natwgeschichte (/<•>• ir/rbellosen Thiere. (Brief Latin 

 description of ticks. Mentions that only the females of riemus attach them- 

 selves to host. Argas included under Gamasei. Cit. Pagenstecher, 1861, p. 14.) 



Holland, W. J. (TV. 1898), Concerning Ticks. Canadian Entomologist. London, 

 Ontario, xxx. 96, 97. 



Hooker, Sir J. (1854), Himalaya Journal. (Cited by Michael, 1892, p. 204, re 

 colour-changes in Ixodidae.) 



Hooker, W. A. (1908a), Life-history, habits and methods of study of the Txodoidea. 

 Journ. Econ. Entomol, I. 34-51. (Good original observations.) 



(1908b), A review of the present knowledge of the role of ticks in the 



transmission of disease. Journ. Econ. Entomol., i. 65-73. (A useful digest 

 of some recent work.) 



(1909 a), Some Host Relations of Ticks. Journ. Econ. Entomol., n. 251-2.">7. 



(1909 b), Note on an extra nymphal moult of Argas miniatus. Proc. Entomol. 



Soc. Washington, xi. 109-110. 



(XII. 1909), The geographical. distribution of American Ticks. Journ. Econ. 



Entomol, II. 403-428. 



see Hunter. 



Howard, C. W. (17. VI. 1908), A note on the distribution and hosts of Ixodes 

 pilosus howardi Nn. Trans. Roy. Soc. 8. Africa, I. 126 (published vii. 1909). 



(VII. 1908), A list of the Ticks of South Africa, with Descriptions and Keys 



to all the forms known. Annals of the Transvaal Museum, I. 73-172, 14 PI. 



(VIII. 1909), A new species of ffaemaphysalis from South Africa. Ann. 



Transvaal Museum, i. 219-223, PI. XXXIV (10 figs.). Reprint, (ffaema- 

 physalis africana C. W. Howard, August 1909 = ffaemaphysalis hoodi War- 

 burton and Nuttall, June, 1909. The author describes the $ , $ , o and L and 

 illustrates them in the plate.) 



(VIII. 1909), Note on the copulation of ticks. Ann. Transvaal Mus. i. 225. 



Reprint, 1 p. (Records finding Rhipkephalus ecinvtus Nn. : an unfed female 

 and male supposedly copulating. No particulars as to position of male mouth- 

 parts etc. ) 



Howard, L. 0. (VII. 1895), Note on the chicken tick. Insect Life, vn. pp. 417, 418. 



(1907), A chalcidoid parasite (Ixodiphagus texanus gen. et sp. n.) of a tick 



(Haemaphysalis leporis-palustris). Entomol. News, Philadelphia, xvni. 375- 

 378, PI. 



(1908), Another chalcidoid parasite of a tick. Canad. Entomol., Toronto, XL. 



110-115, PI. V. 



(1909), Economic loss to the people of the United States through insects 



that carry disease. U. S. DepH Agric, Bur. of Entomol, Bull., No. 78, 40 pp. 

 (Incidental mention of ticks on p. 7.) 



see Eiley and Howard. 



Hubbard, H. G. (1894), The insect guests of the Florida land tortoise, Gopherus 

 (Xerobates) polyphernus. U. S. DepH Agric, vi. 306. (Ornithodorus americanus 

 Marx (Ms.) in the burrows and on tortoise— Amblyomma tuberculatum Marx 

 n.sp. on the tortoise.) 



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