210 



Insects and Disease 



fected animals and in allowing supposedly infected flies to 

 feed on various animals. 

 Now, F. G. The Trypanosomes of Tsetse-flies. Jour. Infec. 

 Dis., Ill, 1906, pp. 394-411. Notes on the various species. 



TRYPANOSOMES AND TRYPANOSOMIASIS 



Bruce, David. Trypanosomiasis. Osier's Mod. Med., Vol. I, 



1907, p. 460. A discussion of Trypanosoma lewisi, evansi, 

 brucei, gambiensi, and the diseases caused by them. 



Dutton, J. E., Todd, J. L., and Harrington, J. W. B. 

 Trypanosome Transmission Experiments. Am. Trop. Med. 

 & Parasit., Vol. I, No. 2, June 15, 1907, pp. 201-229. Sec- 

 tions on attempts to transmit trypanosomes by tsetse-flies; 

 by other blood-sucking Arthropods, etc., conclude that try- 

 panosomes may be mechanically transmitted by the bite of 

 blood-sucking Arthropods. 



Hooker, W. A. Descriptions of Certain Trypanosomes, and 

 Review of the Present Knowledge of the Role of Ticks in the 

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1908, pp. 65-76. Good review, tables and literature. 

 Minchin, E. A. Investigations on the Development of Try- 

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Musgrove, W. E., and Clegg, M. T. Trypanosomes and 

 Trypanosomiasis, with Special Reference to Surra in the Philip- 

 pine Islands. Biological Lab., Bull. No. 5, Manila, 1903. Dis- 

 cuss flies, fleas, mosquitoes, lice and ticks as possible dissemi- 

 nators of the disease. 



Now, T. G., McNeal, M. J., and Torry, H. M. The Try- 

 panosomes of Mosquitoes and Other Insects. Jour. Infec. 

 Diseases, IV, 1907, pp. 223-276. These parasites often found 

 in mosquitoes and other insects. Bibliography. 



Nuttall, G. H. F. The Transmission of Trypanosoma lewisi 



