[404] “Ricerche sui Flebotomi,” Mem. della Soc. ital. della Scienze, 1907, ser. 3, xiv, pp. 353–394.
[405] “Indian Sand-flies,” Ind. Med. Cong., 1909, sec. III, pp. 239–242.
[406] Newstead: Bull. Ent. Res., 1912, iii, pp. 361–367.
[407] Rec. Ind. Mus., v, pt. 3, Nos. 13 and 14.
[408] Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz, 1912, iv, fasc. I, pp. 84–95.
[409] Theobald, “First Report Economic Zoology,” Brit. Mus. (Nat. Hist.), p. 55.
[410] Hagen, Proc. Bost. Soc., N.H., xx, p. 107.
[411] “Larvæ of a Musca, probably M. corvina, were passed in numbers per rectum by a child in Liverpool with Homalomyia larvæ,”—“Second Report Economic Zoology,” Theobald, 1903, p. 16.
[412] [The correct name for this fly is Wohlfahrtia magnifica, Schiner.—F. V. T.]
[413] [The following are known to cause myiasis in man in Africa: Cordylobia anthropophaga, Grünb.; Auchmeromyia luteola, Fabr.; A. rodhani, Gedoelst; Oestrus ovis, Linn.; and Anthomyia desjardensii, Macq. The anthropophaga, Blanchard, and the depressa, Walker, referred to here are Grünberg’s anthropophaga.—F. V. T.]