﻿IX, B. 5 Walked' and Barber: Malaria in the Philippines 439 



Stanton, A. T. The anopheles mosquitoes of Malaya and their larvje, with 

 some notes on malaria-carrying species. 12th Annual Report Inst. Med. 

 Research, Kuala Lumpur, Federated Malay States (1912), 51-63. 



Stephens, J. W. W., and Christophers, S. R. The practical study of ma- 

 laria and other blood parasites. 3d ed. (1906) . Constable and Co. Ltd., 

 10 Orange St., Leicester Sq., London, W. C. 



Strong, R. P. Phil. Journ. Sci., Sec. B (1910), 5, 344. 



Theobau), T. D. a monograph of the Culicidae (1903), 3. 



Thomson, D. The destruction of the crescents: conclusions regarding the 

 prevention of malaria by the administration of quinine. Ann. Trop. 

 Med. & Parasit. (1912), 6, 223-230. 



De Vogel, W. T. Myzomyia rossii as a malaria-carrier. Phil. Journ. Sci., 

 Sec. B (1910), 5, 277-283. 



Note. — Specimens of Anopheles febrifer were sent to Dr. C. S. Ludlow 

 at the Army Medical Museum, Washington, D. C. Doctor Ludlow kindly 

 examined the specimens and reported by letter dated December 1, 1914, 

 that the species is Myzomyia christophersi Theobold and is the same mos- 

 quito as that which she has reported from the Philippines under the name 

 of M. funesta Giles. (See Ludlow, Disease-bearing mosquitoes of North 

 and Central America, the West Indies, and the Philippine Islands. Bull. 

 No. 4. War Department. Office of the Surgeon General. November, 1913. 

 p. 36.) As Doctor Ludlow states in this footnote, "What the proper name 

 for this species is, seems a little clouded." Myzomyia christophersi {=iM. 

 listoni?) is a well known malaria carrier in the foothills of the Himalayas 

 in India. 



