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KURCHATOV & POPOVA (1939). USSR. Ecology. Also noted that hatching larvae quickly disperse, loss of ability (of

which stage not stated) to feed after lengthy starvation, preference for dogs rather than cattle (in comparison with R. bursa) or mice or rabbits (in comparison with R. rossicus and R. turanicus).

DAUBNEY (1944). Kenya. Stresses need for study of rickettsiae in this species of tick.

PERV MAISKY (1950B). USSR. Male R. sanguineus can fertilize female R. bursa, which lay a large number of mostly fertile eggs afterwards. Mating between male R. bursa and female R. sanguineus does not result in fertile eggs. The progeny of male sanguineus - female bursa union were only females identical to R. bursa. These hybrid females, when fertilized by male R. sanguineus, gave rise to 27 gynandromorphs and 323 females (see also Pervomaisky 1954). This paper also reports Hyalomma gynandromorphs.

CVJETANOVIC et al (1953). Yugoslavia. An exceptionally interesting study of ticks including R. s. sanguineus as reservoirs in an epidemic of Q fever. See H. dromedarii, page 878.

PERVOMAISKY (1954). USSR. Study of variation in size and morphological characters; some reared material resembles R. turanicus while a proportion of the progeny of R. Turanicus resemble R. sanguineus. These two species mate readily and produce fertile offspring.

TENDEIRO (1955). Mozambique. Review of previous reports from colony.

SCHULZE (1955). Discussion of metabolic products.

RHIPICEPHALUS SIMPSONI

TENDEIRO (1955). Mozambique. Review of previous reports from colony.

RHIPICEPHALUS SIMUS SIMUS

DAUBNEY (1944). Kenya. Morphology and biology under study.

TENDEIRO (1955). Mozambique. Review of previous reports from colony.

PAGE 733. Distribution in the Sudan. Kenisa, on the border of Bahr El Ghazal and Upper Nile Province, is a part of the latter Province.

RHIPICEPHALUS SIMUS SENEGALENSIS

TENDEIRO (1955). Mozambique. Review of previous reports from colony.

PAGE 755. Distribution in the Sudan. Kenisa, on the border of Bahr El Ghazal and Upper Nile Province, is a part of the latter Province.

RHIPICEPHALUS SUPERTRITUS

RHIPICEPHALUS TRICUSPIS

TENDEIRO (1955). Mozambique. Review of previous reports of both species from colony.

BIBLIOGRAPHY*

A

ABSUDALLAM, M. & SARWAR, M. M. (1953) Trees as habitats of the fowl tick, Argas persicus (Oken). Bull. ent. Res.,

44(3):419-420.

ABRAMOV, I. V. (1949) On recurrent equine piroplasmosis. (In Russian). J. agric. Sci., Moscow, ser. g (Vet.), 26(7):18.

(1955) The duration of the preservation of the causal agent of piroplasmosis of horses (Piroplasma caballi) in the ticks Hyalomma plumbeum Panzer, 1795. (In Russian). Ibid, 32(3):42–46.

ABRAMOV, I. V., TSAPRUN, A. A. & LEBEDEV, E. M. (1950) Importance of ticks as transmitter of equine piroplasmosis. (In

Russian). J. agric. Sci., Moscow, ser. g (Vet.), 27(3): 12_14.

*This bibliography consists of 1,880 references. Abbreviations follow the World List of Scientific Periodicals, Third Edition, 1950, London. All references, unless otherwise noted, are in the writer's files at U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit Number Three, Cairo, in published or reprint form, or as photostats or printed photographs of the original. Thanks are due Miss Nellie Medzadour for assistance in obtaining literature. The United States Department of Agriculture Index Catalogue of Med... ical and Veterinary Zoology has been of inestimable assistance for bibliographic work, as have been Tropical Diseases Bulletin and Review of Applied Entomology. For obtaining literature, the services of the Armed Forces Medical Library, Library of Congress, United States Department of Agriculture, UNESCO, and the National Research Council of Egypt, have been utilized and are gratefully acknowledged.

ADERS, W. M. (1912) The blood sucking arthropods of Zanzibar harm ful to man or stock. Zanzibar Gov't. Leaflet No. 2, 13 pp.

(1914) Entomology in relation to public health and medicine. Med. sanit. Rep. Zanzibar (1913), pp. 76-82. (1917A) Idem. Ibid, (1916), pp. 47-49.

(1917B) Insects injurious to man and stock in
Zanzibar. Bull. ent. Res., 7(4):391–401.

ADLER, S. (1952) Les piroplasmoses chez les bovidés en Israel.
Bull. Off. int. Epiz. I, 38:570-574.

ADLER, S. & FELDMAN MUHSAM, B. (1946) The differentiation of
ticks of the genus Hyalomma in Palestine. (In Hebrew).
Refuah vet., 3(3):91–94.

(1948) A note on the genus

Hyalomma Koch in Palestine. Parasitology, 39(12):

95–101.

"AGRICOLA" (1946) Arsenic-resistant ticks. Furs' Wkly, Bloemfontein, 72:55. of Veterinary Services replies."

(Letter to editor).
(Also, "The Director
Same page).

AGRINSKY, N. (1937) On ticks as transmitters of equine nuttal liosis in Middle Asia. (In Russian, English summary). Acta Univ. Asiae med., &a(31), 9 pp.

ALCOCK, A. (1915) Report of the entomologist to the London School of Tropical Medicine......1914. Etc. From RAE, B, 3(9):129 (1915)7

ALEXANDER, R. A. (1931) Heartwater. The present state of our knowledge of the disease. 17th Rep. Dir. vet. Serv. S. Afr., pp. 89-150.

ALEXANDER, R. A. & NEITZ, W. O. (1933) The transmission of louping ill of sheep by ticks (Rhipicephalus appendiculatus). Vet. J., 89:320–323.

ALEXANDER, R. A. & NEITZ, W. O. (1935) The transmission of louping ill by ticks (Rhipicephalus appendiculatus). Onderstepoort J. vet. Sci., 5(1):15–33.

ALEXANDER, R. A., MASON, J. H. & NEITZ, W. O. (1939) Studies of the rickettsias of the typhus rocky-mountain-spotted fever group in South Africa. I. Isolation of strains. Onderstepoort J. vet. Sci., 13(1):19-23.

ALFEEV, N. I. (1948) New abnormalities in the female Hyalomma dromedarii Koch. (In Russian). Zool. Zh., 27(3): 257-259.

(1951) On the changeability of metamorphosis in
ixodid ticks. (In Russian). Rev. Ent. U.R.S.S.,
31(3-4):398403.

ALLEN, G. M. & LOVERIDGE, A. (1933) Reports on the scientific results of an expedition to the southwestern highlands of Tanganyika Territory. II. Mammals. Bull. Mus. comp. Zool. Harv., 75(2):47-140.

ALUIMOV, A. Y. (1935) Relapsing fever in Persia. (In Russian), pp. 54-67, in: Parasites, Vectors, and Venemous Animals. Rec. Trav. 25th Anniv. sci. Pavlovsky

1909-34, Moskow.

AMARAL LEAL, J. & SANT'ANNA, J. F. (1909) Ornithodorus moubata in Lourenço Marques. Arch. Med. Lisboa, 2:87-88. Not seen; year of issue 1898?7

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY (1954) Atlas of diseases. Plate 12. World distribution of rickettsial diseases_tick and mite vectors. (See also "erratum" sheet for above map). New

York.

(1955) Idem. Plate 16. World dis tribution of spirochetal diseases. 2. Relapsing fevers (louse-borne and tick-borne). New York.

ANASTOS, G. (1950) The scutate ticks, or Ixodidae, of Indonesia. Ent. amer., 30(1–4):1–144.

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