Bibliography 



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on salt-marshes since 1904 practically eliminated the migratory 

 species, so that C. pipens, the house mosquito, is now the 

 problem. Life-history and methods of combating. 



Underwood, W. L. Mosquitoes and Suggestions for Their 

 Extermination. Pop. Sci. Mo., Vol. 63, 1903, pp. 453-466. 

 Life-history, habits and methods of control. 



Underwood, W. L. The Mosquito Nuisance and How to 

 Deal with It. Boston, 1903. 



First Antimosquito Convention, 1903. Pub., Brooklyn, 1904. 

 Contains articles on what railroads, government and laws 

 should do toward mosquito extermination; mosquito work in 

 Havana; how state appropriations should be used, etc. 



National Mosquito Extermination Society. Bulletin No. 1, 

 1904. Object of Society; brief sketches of Ross, Reed, and 

 others. Reprints of a few articles on mosquito extermination. 



American Mosquito Extermination Society. Year Book for 

 1904-05. N. Y., 1906. Containing reports of meetings and 

 discussions of various problems. Several interesting papers, 

 among them " Criminal Indictment of the Mosquito," F. W. 

 Moss. " Mosquito Work at Panama Canal," W. C. Sorgas. 

 " Diversities Among New York Mosquitoes," E. P. Felt. 

 " Mosquito Extermination in New Jersey," J. B. Smith. 

 " The Mosquito Question," Quitman Kohnke. 



Antimalarial Work in the Panama Canal Zone. Editorial in 

 Jour. Trop. Med. & Hyg., XI, Aug. 15, 1908, p. 251. Notes 

 on the success of the measures adopted there. 



MOSQUITOES AND DISEASE 



Doty, A. H. The Mosquito, Its Relation to Disease and Its 

 Extermination. New York State Journal of Medicine, May, 

 1908. 



Finlay, Chas. Mosquitoes Considered as Transmitters of 

 Yellow Fever and Malaria. Med. Record, May 27, 1899, 



