SUBJECT HEADINGS 

 (For complete citations see List of Authors and Titles beginning on page 72.) 



BACTERIA 



Boyer, P., 1955, pp. 569-571. (France, pre- 

 liminary studies of soil and bacteria of 

 termitaria.) 



Grasse, P. P., 1959a, pp. 385-389. (Africa, di- 

 gestion cellulose by bacteria in posterior 

 intestine for fungus-growing Macro- 

 termitinae.) 



Ionescu, M. A., 1959, pp. 114-115. (Rumania, 

 Reticulitermes lucifugus. Schizophytes: 

 Spirochaeta termitis, S. tninei, and S. hilli, 

 Fusiformis termitidis, F. hilli.) 



Pochon, J., Barjac, H. de, and Roche, A., 

 1958, pp. 352-355. (Africa, bacteria princi- 



pal agents in fermentation cellulose for 

 fungus-growing Sphaerotermes sphaero- 

 thorax, Ruminococcus , same group as in 

 paunch of ruminants.) 



Sebald, M., and Mellis, Y. de, 1958, pp. 357- 

 360. (France, Spherophorus n. sp., a 

 sulphite-reducing bacterium from in- 

 testine French termite injected in vein 

 rabbit, toxic or allergenic, not infectious.) 



Toumanoff, C, and Toumanoff, T. C, 1959, 

 pp. 216-218. (France, epizootic due to 

 Serratia marcescens, "Reticulotermes san- 

 tonnevsis.") 



BEHAVIOR 



Autuori, 1956, pp. 561-575. (Instinct in the 

 behavior of animals and man.) 



Desneux, J., 1959, pp. 286-292. (Africa, vestig- 

 ial behavior some species Apicotermes.) 



Emerson, A. E., 1956, pp. 248-258. (Regenera- 

 tion behavior and social homeostasis.) 

 1958a, in Roe and Simpson (Ed.), 1958, 

 pp. 311-355. (Intraspecies group system 

 prime unit, group unit of natural selec- 

 tion leading to adaptive evolution, be- 

 havior emphasized in group integration, 

 social behavior in insects genetically de- 

 termined, in man culturally.) 



Grasse, P. P., 1959, pp. 41-83. (French Equa- 

 torial Africa, behavior workers Cubi- 

 termes sp. and Bcllicositermes natalensis 

 rebuilding nest, masons do not constitute 

 a working team, in beginning individual 

 tasks are uncoordinated, when earth 

 pellets achieve a certain density consti- 

 tute a new stimulus become starting point 

 of pillars and blades. Stimulation workers 

 by performances inducing adaptable re- 



sponses named stigmergy. Determining 

 stimuli olfactory.) 



Schmidt, R. S., 1955, pp. 244-356. (Apico- 

 termes nests important etiological ma- 

 terial.) 

 1955a, pp. 157-181. (Evolution of nest-build- 

 ing behavior in Apicotermes.) 

 1958, pp. 76-94. (Most primitive Apico- 

 termes nests lack wall perforations, sha- 

 green, internal arrangment cellular.) 



Verron, H., 1958, pp. 309-314. (France, Calo- 

 termes fiavicollis attraction produced by 

 last instar nymphs on larvae, nymphs 

 with short wing pads, and neoteinics in- 

 creases regularly with the importance of 

 crowding. Last instar nymphs show less 

 response than larvae, soldiers exhibit the 

 highest threshold of response.) 



Williams, R. M. C, 1959, pp. 203-218. 

 (Africa, East Uganda, flight periods Cubi- 

 termes ugandensis and C. testaceus, wing 

 shedding, calling attitude, tropisms, 

 colony formation.) 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Esaki, T., Bryan, E. H., Jr., and Gressitt, 

 J. L., 1955, pp. 1-68. (Bibliography, in- 

 sects Micronesia, includes list Japanese 

 publications cited.) 



Frings, M., and Frings, H., i960, p. 101. 



(Sound production and sound reception 

 by termites.) 

 Snyder, T. E., 1956, pp. 1-305. (Annotated, 

 subject-heading bibliography 1350 B.C. to 

 A.D. 1954, world, 3,624 references.) 



