Recent Agricvltuml Publications. 
39 
III. Parasites of the Serous Membranes (10 pages). 
IV. Parasites of the Respiratory Apparatus (61 pages), includ- 
ing the nasal cavities and larynx, the windpipe, bronchi and lungs. 
Husk or hoose in calves and lambs (strongles, Fig. 4). Red-worm or 
forked -worm in pheasants. 
V. Parasites of the Circulatory Apparatus (32 pages). In- 
fusoria and thread-worms in the blood of the horse. Blood parasites 
of ruminants, rodents, dogs, and birds. 
VI. Parasites of the Muscles, Connective Tissue and Bones (76 
Fig. 3.— Harvest Bug, the larva of Tromhitlium holosericeiim 
(Fig. 2), seen from below ; magnified 100 diameters. —Railliet. 
[“The Harvest Bugs attack the small Mammalia by pre- 
ference, such as moles and hares, which are sometimes literally 
covered with them ; and man is often invaded bj' them in the 
autumn, the insects creeping rapidly' along the limbs, and fi.xing 
themselves on any part of the body, especially those parts which 
are clothed. Their imnctures are accompanied by insupportable 
itching.”— Page 107.] 
A 
FKi. 4.— 
Strangle of 
the shcei), 
Stronyi/lus fll- 
arifi. Bull. ; 
natural size. 
A, male ; B, 
female. 
pages). Various bladder-worms and thread- worms. Measles of the 
pig, dog, and ox. Trichinosis (Fig. 1). 
VII. Parasites of the Nerve Centres and Organs of Sense (35 
pages). Hydatido-cephalus, or “ gid.” Parasites of tlie ear and eye. 
VIII. Parasites of the Genito-urinary Organs (25 pages). 
As an example of the kind of infoi’mation furnished by Neumann, 
the following details concerning a malady well known to flock- 
masters are derived from various parts of the volume. 
D D 2 
