418 ENTOZOA. 



30. Musca carnaria. Six cases. Roulin ; Cloquet ; Brera ; Walil- 



bom ; Cheyne ; Bateman. England ; ? Ireland ; Sweden. 



31. Musca cibaria (?). Two cases. Good and White. England. 



32. Musca vomitoria. One case. Thomson. Ireland. 



33. Musca larvarum. One case. Pickells. Ireland. 



34. Musca Coisar (?). One case. Thomson. Ireland. 



35. Musca (larvEe of various species). Nineteen other cases. 



Thomson ; Wohlfart ; Latham ; Mangles ; Brooks ; Ruys- 

 chius and Yalisneri; Jennings; Sells; Leuwenhoek ; Azara; 

 Lempriere ; Wahlbom ; Tulpius ; Pickells ; Chichester. 

 Ireland ; England ; Scotland ; France ; Sweden ; Jamaica ; 

 Paraguay. 



36. Musca nigra. One case. Wahlbom. Sweden. 



37. Mophilus pendulus. Five cases. Bonnet ; Kirby ; Acrel ; 



Ohhelius ; Ziegler. England ; Sweden ; Italy ; Switzer- 

 land. 



38. Stratyomis ? One case (larvse). F. W. Hope. Eng- 



land. 



39. ? Tiimla (larv^). One case. Kirby. England. 



40. CEstrus liominus. Five cases. Howship and Gill; Treherne 



and Howship; Linneus (jun.) and Gmelin; Olivier; 

 Rudolphi. South America; Surinam; Maraquita and 

 Columbia ; ? Prussia. 



41. (Estrus hovis. One case. Clark. ? England. 



42. CEdrus Guildingii. One case. Guilding. Trinidad. 



43. (2/6-^rits (larvee of various species). Thirteen cases. Heysham ; 



Chichester ; Say and Brick ; Houhn ; Yallot ; Arture ; 

 Guerin and Guinon ; Goudout ; Metax ; Chft. England ; 

 America ; South America ; Philadelphia ; Demerara ; Mara- 

 quita and Columbia ; Peru ; Cayenne ; Martinique. 



The above list certainly comprises a formidable array of insects 

 and their larvae, said to have taken up their residence in the human 

 body. Most of these parasites are recorded as having been pro- 



