no. 3 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TERMITES 1955-60: SUBJECTS — SNYDER 



37 



PREDATORS 



Anonymous, 1957c, p. 20. (U.S., Washington, 

 D.C., Zoo, damage to photo file by ter- 

 mites, control by Tamandua.) 



Beier, M., 1930, pp. 44-48. (West Africa, 

 pseudoscorpions, Pilanus pilatus and pili- 

 jer in termite nests.) 



Brackbill, H., 1955, pp. 260-261, 282. (U.S., 

 birds and termites, flying, species of Re- 

 ticulitermes.) 



Calaby, J. H., 1956a, pp. 93-96. (West Aus- 

 tralia, food habits of Myobatrachus 

 gouldi, white anteater.) 

 i960, pp. 79-80. (W. Australia, desert frogs 



feeding on termites.) 

 1960a, pp. 143-146. (SW. Australia, mar- 

 supial "numbat" {Myrmecobius) eats 

 Coptotermes acinacijormis , lives in hol- 

 low eucalyptus logs — small banded ant- 

 eater.) 

 1960b, pp. 183-207. (SW. Australia, mar- 

 supial numbat {Myrmecobius f. fascia- 

 tus) feeds on termites and ants.) 



Chamberlin, R. V., 1925, pp. 35-44. (Canal 

 Zone, Panama, Barro Colorado Island, 

 chilopods (centipedes) found with ter- 

 mites: Cryptops zetekj with Mirotermes 

 panamaensis, Cryptops sp. with Obtusi- 

 termes biformis, Physida nuda with Leu- 

 cotermes tenuis, Cupipes ungulatus with 

 Eutermes sp., Orphnaeus brevilabiatus 

 with Nasutitermes columbicus and Ano- 

 plotermes parvus, probably all predators.) 

 1926, p. 10. (Canal Zone, Panama, centi- 

 pede S. {Schendylotyn) integer Chamber- 

 lin in nest of Anoplotermes gracilis 

 Snyder.) 

 1944, p. 187. (New Hebrides, centipede 

 Mecistocephalus consocius, n. sp., with 

 Kalotermes {Neotermes) sanctaecrucis.) 



De la Rue, E. A., Bourliere, F., and Har- 

 roy, J. P., 1957, pp. 147, 151. (Tropics, 

 in Africa ants Megaponera and Pallo- 

 thyreus; in savannas anteaters, aardvark 

 and pangolin.) 



Gregg, R. E., 1958, pp. 111-121. (Madagascar, 

 Metapone tnadagascarica and emersoni, 

 ants in rotten wood with termites.) 



Guido, A. S., and Ruffinelli, A., 1958, p. 919. 

 (Montevideo, predaceous wasp {Crypto- 

 cheilis sp.) paralyzes Nasutitermes.) 



Henry, T. R., 1958, pp. 21, 49. {Tamandua; 

 snakes Typhlopidae and Glauconidae 

 prey on termites, snakes eat eggs and 

 young.) 



Hunt, R., 1958, p. 58. (U.S., San Diego, Calif., 

 dermestids Trogoderma ornatum scaven- 

 gers on dead Kalotermes tninor.) 



Krantz, G. W., 1958, pp. 127-131. (U.S., Ore- 

 gon, Diplogynid mite Lobogyniella tra- 

 gardhi associated with Zootermopsis an- 

 gusticollis.) 



Main, A. R., and Calaby, J. H, 1957, pp. 222- 

 223. (NW. Australia, termites as food of 

 frogs.) 



Odhiambo, T. R., 1958, pp. 167-175. (Africa, 

 Uganda, hemipteron, reduviid {Acanthas- 

 pis petax) in mounds.) 



Roonwal, M. L., 1958a, pp. 77-100. (India, 

 rats in Assam, anteaters, lizards, birds.) 



Skaife, S. H, 1955, pp. 1-134. (South Africa, 

 Amitermes atlanticus, at time of swarm 

 few survive predators, in nests red and 

 white mites, solpugid.) 



Spencer, G. J., 1957, p. 13. (British Colum- 

 bia, Zootermopsis angusticollis winged 

 eaten by Bonaparte's gulls.) 



Von Porat, C. O*., 1894, p. 25. (Cameroon, 

 centipede in tunnels termite hills.) 



Weidner, H., 1955a, pp. 201-207. (Africa, 

 Angola, struggle between soldier Pseu- 

 dacanthotermes militaris and soldier of a 

 forest ant Dorylus {Typhlopone) fulvus 

 dentifrons.) 

 1957, p. 109. (Germany, Hamburg, carabid 

 larvae as enemy of termites, Reticuli- 

 termes flavipes preyed on by Harpalus 

 aeneus and Ptcrostichus vulgaris?) 



Werner, F., 1935, p. 470. (Africa, Portuguese 

 Guinea, whipless whipscorpion Para- 

 charon caecus in termite nest.) 



PROTOZOA 



Ansari, M. A. R., 1955, p. 62. (Pakistan, La- 

 hore, Mastigophora: Retortamonidae, Re- 

 tortamonas termitis, Amitermes beau- 

 monti, Panama.) 



Chakravarty, M. M., and Banerjee, A. K., 

 1956, pp. 35-44. (India, holomastigotid 

 and trichonymphid flagellates from an In- 

 dian Heterotermes.) 



Cleveland, L. R., 1955, pp. 511-542. (U.S., 

 hormone-induced sexual cycles of flagel- 

 lates, unusual behavior of gametes and 

 centrioles of Barbulanympha.) 

 1958, pp. 47-62. (U.S., factual analysis of 

 chromosomal movement in Barbulanym- 

 pha, depends on number and position of 

 poles.) 



