HEMIPTERA 



Family Aradid^. 



Broad, very fiat bugs, with four segments in the antenna and three in the 

 proboscis. No cuneus. Tarsus two segments. 



Dysodius hivaius Fabricius is the ' Pito ' bug of South American houses, 

 which bites severely. 



REFERENCES. 



The older literature can be found in Denny (1842), ' Monographia Anopluro- 

 rum Britanniae.' London. 



Hemiptera. 



BuRMEiSTER. Khyncota. 



Distant. Fauna of British India, vols. i. and ii. 

 EvERSMANN (1841). Bull. Soc. Imp. d. Natur. Moscou, p. 351. 

 FiEBER. Die Europaischen Hemiptera. 



Howard and Marlatt (1896). U.S. Department of Agriculture. Bur. 



Ent., Bull. No. 4 (New Series). 

 Jenyns (1893). Annals and Magazine of Natural History, vol. iii., p. 241. 

 Landois (1869). Zeits. f. w. Zoologie, xviii., 1868; xix. 

 Patton (1907). Scientific Memoirs, India, No. 31. 

 SiGNORET (1852). Ann. Soc. Ent. de France, x. 539. 

 SouTHALL. A Treatise of Bugges. 



Reduviidae. 



Chagas (1909). Bulletin de la Societe de Pathologic Exotique. 

 Darwin (1888). Voyage of the Beagle, p. 330. 



Darwin (1898). U.S. Department of Agriculture, B. Entomology, Bull. 18 

 (New Series). 



Darwin (1900). U.S. Department of Agriculture, B. Entomology, Bull. 

 No. 22. 



Howard and Marlatt (1896). Household Insects. U.S. Department of 



Agriculture, Bureau Ent., No, 4 (New Series). 

 King (1900). U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau Entomolog3^ Bull. 



No. 22. 



Theobald (1903). First Report Economic Zoology. 

 Well .MAN (190O). Journal of Tropical Medicine, ix. 373. 



