Cambridge Entomological Club, 1874
PSYCHE

A Journal of Entomology

founded in 1874 by the Cambridge Entomological Club
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This is the CEC archive of Psyche through 2000. Psyche is now published by Hindawi Publishing.

C. A. Frost.
Anatrichis minuta Dej.
Psyche 36(3):282, 1929.

This article at Hindawi Publishing: https://doi.org/10.1155/1929/35939
CEC's scan of this article: http://psyche.entclub.org/pdf/36/36-282.pdf, 76K
This landing page: http://psyche.entclub.org/36/36-282.html


The following unprocessed text is extracted automatically from the PDF file, and is likely to be both incomplete and full of errors. Please consult the PDF file for the complete article.

282 Psyche [September
Salt, George 1927 Notes on the Strepsiptera and their hymenopterous hosts. Psyche 34 (5) : 182-192. Saunders, S. S. 1853 Notices of some new species of strep- sipterous insects from Albania, with further observa- tions on the habits, transformations, and sexual econo- my of these parasites. Trans. Ent. Soc. London (2) 2 (4/5) : 125-144, 2 pi.
Saunders, S. S. 1872 Stylopidarum, ordinem Strepsiptero- rum Kirbii constituentium, mihi tamen potius Coleop- terorum Familise, Rhipiphoridis Meloidisque propinquse, Monographia. Trans. Ent. Soc. London 1872: 1-48, 287- 288, 1 pi.
Schrader, Sally Hughes 1924 Reproductionin Acroschismus wheeleri Pierce. Jour. Morph. Physiology 39 (1) : 157-197, 4 pi.
Smith, Frederick 1859 A contribution to the history of Stylops, with an enumeration of such species of exotic Hymenoptera as have been found to be attacked by those parasites. Trans. Ent. Soc. London (2) 5 (3) : 127-133.
Wheeler, W. M. 1910 The effects of parasitic and other kinds of castration in insects. Jour. Exp. Zoology 8: 377-438, 8 fig.
Zavattari, E. 1909 Di alcune larve di Strepsiptera. I1 Ruwen- zori, Relazioni Scientifiche 1 : 271-273. ANATRICHIS MINUTA DEJ. A single specimen was taken in Framingham, Mass., on May 10, 1908, and no more have been seen until September 15, 1929, when I found 5 speci- mens by treading about in the soft soil in a dried-up pond in Acton, Mass. On September 22, I again visited the place and took four more. They were hiding among the small grass-like plants and prostrate vegetation. There is but one record in the New York list of insects.
C. A. Frost, Framingham, Mass.
Pu&e X:282 I JIM). http //psyche enkliib ore/36/36-282 him1



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