no. 3 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TERMITES IQ55-60: SUBJECTS — SNYDER 



II 



Bender, A. H., 1959, p. 68. (U.S., clean-up 

 equipment — brushes, rags, trash cans, 

 vacuum cleaner and drill combination.) 



Boettger, C. R., 1957, pp. 105-121. (Protec- 

 tion of construction timber.) 



Bowser, C. A., 1955, pp. 9-10, 12. (Federal 

 Housing requirements.) 



Brehm, W. L., et al., 1955, pp. 44, 46-48, 50. 

 (Equipment care and maintenance.) 



Brickey, P. M., 1957, pp. 33, 36. (Prices 

 must be adjusted.) 



Briegleb, P. H., 1954, pp. 73-76. (Resistant 

 wire, soil poisons.) 



Brinkman, G., 1956, pp. 199-202. 



Buswell, W. S., Jr., 1955, p. 44. (In roof.) 



Butts, W. L., 1959, p. 32. (Chemical disper- 

 sion in concrete blocks.) 



Capinpin, R. I., 1955, pp. 170-172. (Philip- 

 pines, termite-proofing foundations.) 



Casimir, M., 1957, pp. 67-68. (Australia, detec- 

 tion and control.) 



Ceylon Coconut Research Institute, 1958, 

 pp. 1-2. (Ceylon, paradichlorobenzene in 

 planting holes.) 



Chaaraoui, A. M., and Chahouan, A. A. M., 

 1955, pp. 286-297. (Egypt.) 



Chatterji, S., Sarup, P., and Chopra, S. C, 

 1958, pp. 399-405. (India, dieldrin, DDT, 

 and BHC mixture (50:50) superior to 

 DDT and toxaphene mixture (50:50), 5, 

 10, 15, and 20 lb. to acre applied to soil 

 once before planting.) 

 i960, p. 108. (India, control termites attack- 

 ing wheat by insecticides.) 



Clements, W. B., 1955, p. 32. (U.S., Florida.) 



Coaton, W. G. H., 1958, pp. 1-112. (South 

 Africa, hodotermitid harvester termites, 

 poison baits — sodium fluosilicate grassveld 

 reclamation, arresting soil erosion.) 



Das, G. M., 1959, pp. 493-498 (p. 8, reprint). 

 (NE. India, Microcerotermes sp. live wood 

 eater, dieldrin as soil poison, use leads to 

 injury by other insects.) 



Davis, J. J., 1955, pp. 1-3. (Prevention and 

 control, U.S.) 



Davletshina, A. G., and Bogolyubova, A. S., 

 1960a. (U.S.S.R., Anacanthotermes tur- 

 \estanicus , results of experiments on con- 

 trol in Golodnaya Steppe.) 



Dickinson, L. E., 1961, pp. 40-43. (General: 

 Taiwan, damage to underground cable, 

 control coat with pentachlorophenol. 

 Australia, use of vaseline-based serving 

 containing arsenic applied to outside lead 

 sheathing, also attack on plastic sheathed 

 cable. Panama, cables employing jute 

 fillers attacked. Hawaii, termites eat 

 through synthetic rubber, polyethylene or 



neoprene insulation, control blow penta- 

 chlorophenol or chlordane into ducts. 

 Cuba, synthetic insulation type cable re- 

 placed. Congo, termite hills too close to 

 lines must be removed.) 



Diller, J. D., 1958, pp. 1-3. (U.S., in crawl- 

 space houses, on basis cost and perform- 

 ance for 9 to 10 years, most desirable 

 moisture-barrier ground cover two layers 

 asphalt-saturated felt. Installed cost $24 

 for coverage 1,000 sq. ft. area. Where 

 much physical wear, 45-lb. roll roofing, 

 or heavier grade asphalt-saturated felt 

 more durable.) 



Dillon, R. M., (Ed.), 1956, pp. 1-60. (Pro- 

 tection against decay and termites in resi- 

 dential construction for FHA-concrete 

 or masonry capped foundations, shields, 

 treated wood, or soil poisons.) 

 1958, pp. 1-33. (Vapor-barriers not recom- 

 mended; all structural lumber must be 

 treated.) 



Doering, K. W., 1958, pp. 46, 48, 50. (How 

 termites affect approval of Veterans Ad- 

 ministration home loans.) 



Ebeling, W., 1959a, pp. 24-25, 46-47. (U.S., 

 California, how to prevent termites from 

 ruining your house, danger in doing 

 control work yourself, licensed operators 

 and trade associations have raised stand- 

 ards, structural alterations, insecticides, 

 treated wood, poison dusts, wood pres- 

 ervation, fumigation, silica aerogel, for 

 control drywood termites.) 



Ebeling, W., and Pence, R. J., 1956, pp. 46, 

 50, 52, 54, 55, 56-57, 58, 62, 64. (U.C.L.A. 

 entomologists evaluate research data on 

 control Kalotermes and Reticulitermes.) 

 1958a, pp. 1-16. (Prevention and control 

 western subterranean termite.) 



Ebeling, W., Pence, R. J., and Wagner, R. E., 

 1958, pp. 50, 52. (Period for 50% paraly- 

 sis: lindane outstanding; period for 50% 

 mortality; pentachlorophenol, dilution 

 affects results— subterranean termites. 

 Drywood termites can be prevented from 

 reinfesting buildings by dusting timbers 

 with inert dusts which remove lipids of 

 epicuticle causing rapid desiccation.) 



Ebeling, W., and Wagner, R. E., 1959, pp. 

 40, 42, 44-46. (U.S., California, control 

 drywood termites. Woodtreat-TC, to kill 

 and aerogels to prevent attack.) 

 1959a, pp. 5-8. (Same as 1959.) 

 1959b, pp. 190-207. (U.S., California, dry- 

 wood termites more susceptible to sorp- 

 tive than to abrasive dusts, remove lipoid 

 protective layer covering epicuticle caus- 



