214 



Insects and Disease 



ticks may become important disease -carriers by changing their 



hosts as the normal host is exterminated, or for other reasons. 

 Banks, Nathan. A Revision of the Ixodoidea or Ticks of the 



United States. Tech. Series No. 15, Bull, of Bureau 0) Ento., 



U. S. Dept. Agric, 1908. Structure, life-history, classification, 



catalogue, bibliography. 

 Barber, C. A. The Tick Pest in the Tropics. Nature, 52, 



1895, pp. 197-200. Direct and indirect effects of ticks on 



their hosts. 



Christy, C. Ornithodoros moubata and Tick Fever in Man. 

 Brit. Med. Jour., Vol. II, 1903, p. 652. Relation of the tick 

 to Filaria perstans. 



Button, J. E., and Todd, J. L. The Nature of Human Tick 

 Fever in the Eastern Part of the Congo Free State with Notes 

 on the Distribution and Bionomics of the Tick. Liverpool 

 School of Tropical Medicine. Memoir, 17, Nov., 1905, pp. 1-18. 



Hooker, W. A. A Review of the Present Knowledge of the Role 

 of Ticks in the Transmission of Disease. Jour. Eco. Ento., 

 Vol. I, No. 1, 1908, p. 65. Review of the subject; table show- 

 ing zoological position of parasites transmitted by ticks. 

 Table showing zoological position of ticks. 



Hooker, W. A. Life-history, Habits and Methods of Study of 

 the Ixodoidea. Jour. Eco. Ento., Vol. I, No. 1, 1908, p. 34. 

 Notes on several species, especially M. annulatus. Host re- 

 lationship; adaptations as factors in host relationship; mating; 

 geographical distribution; methods of breeding, etc. 



Hooker, W. A. Some Host Relations of Ticks. Jour. Eco. 

 Ento., Vol. 2, No. 3, 1909, p. 251. Notes on ticks found on 

 various hosts. 



Hunter, W. D., and Hooker, W. A. Information Concern- 

 ing the North American Fever Tick with Notes on Other 

 Species. Bull. 72, Bureau 0} Ento., 1907. Life-history, host 

 relation, etc., of fever tick; classification and notes on other 

 species; bibliography divided into sections. 



