Dark Banquet - Bill Schutt [101]
Currently, scientists recognize around Usinger, Monograph of Cimicidae, 1.
Reflecting their worldwide distribution Ibid, 4–5.
Besides “red coats” and “heavy dragoons” Cummings, The Bed-Bug: Its Habits and Life History and How to Deal With It, 3.
Harkening back to the enormous Ibid., 12.
Speaking of bugs, the English word Usinger, Monograph of Cimicidae, 5.
Fortunately, in some states New York State, Department of State, Division of Licensing Services, “Manufacture, Repairer-Renovator or Rebuilder of New and/or Used Bedding and/or Retailer/Wholesaler of Used Bedding Application,” http://www.dos.state.ny.us/lcns/instructions/1427ins.htm.
8: OF MITES AND MEN
During World War II Tyler A. Woolley, Acarology: Mites and Human Welfare (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1988), 444.
With no specific treatment available D. J. Kelly, A. L. Richards, J. Temenak, D. Strickman, and G. A. Dasch. “The Past and Present Threat of Rickettsial Diseases to Military Medicine and International Public Health,” Clinical Infectious Disease 34, Suppl. 4 (2002): S145–69.
All along the Papuan coast Emory C. Cushing, History of Entomology in World War II (Pub. 4294). (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, 1957), 80–81.
Eventually, antibiotics like tetracycline, doxycycline, and chloramphenicol George Watt and David Walker. “Scrub Typhus,” in Tropical Infectious Diseases: Principles, Pathogens, and Practice, vol. 1, ed. Richard Guerrant, David H. Walker, and Peter Weller, 592–97. (Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone, 1999).
In parts of northern Thailand George Watt, C. Chouriyagune, R. Ruangweerayud, P. Watcharapichat, D. Phulsuksombati, K. Jongsakul, et al., “Scrub Typhus Infections Poorly Responsive to Antibiotics in Northern Thailand,” Lancet, 348 (1996): 86–89.
The basic premise, proposed by Gavin de Beer, Embryology and Evolution (Oxford, England: Clarendon Press, 1930).
and reinvigorated by Stephen Stephen Jay Gould, Ontogeny and Phylogeny (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1977), 4.
Among the acarids, perhaps the strangest Timothy G. Myles, “Observations on Mites (Acari) Associated with the Eastern Subterranean Termites, Reticulitermes flavipes (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae),” Sociobiology 39, no. 2 (2002): 277–80.
In perhaps the strangest case of phoresy R. K. Colwell, “Effects of Nectar Consumption by the Hummingbird Flower Mite Proctolaelaps kirmsei on Nectar Availability in Hamelia patens,” Biotropica 27 (1995): 206–17.
Acarologist Tyler Woolley Woolley, Acarology: Mites and Human Welfare, 3.
According to entomologists R. Chapman and H. Shepard Arnold Mallis, Handbook of Pest Control, 2d ed. (New York: MacNair-Dorland Co., 1954), 863.
And in a quote that immediately reminded R. N. Chapman and H. H. Shepard, “Insects Infesting Stored Food Products,” University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station Technical Bulletin 198 (1932).
For example, approximately 140 William Olkowski, Sheila Daar, and Helga Olkowski. Common-Sense Pest Control (Newtown, Ct.: Taunton Press, 1991), 159.
Scabies is a condition that produces Ibid., 164–66.
Scabies is a disease of herding John H. Stokes, “Scabies Among the Well-to-Do,” Journal of the American Medical Association 106 (1936): 675.
Varroa can be considered an invertebrate vampire Gwilym O. Evans, Principles of Acarology (Wallingford, UK: CAB International, 1992), 173–74.
In a pilot study published by the International Association Wolfgang Harst, Jochen Kuhn, and Hermann Stever, “Can Electromagnetic Exposure Cause a Change in Behavior? Acta Systemica—IIAS International Journal 6, no. 1 (2005): 1–6.
A number of researchers have B. V. Ball and M. F. Allen, “The Prevalence of Pathogens in the Honeybee (Apis mellifera) Colonies Infected with the Parasitic Mite Varroa jacobsoni, Annals of Applied Biology 113 (1988): 337–44.
These viruses are thought J. R. de Miranda, M. Drebot, S. Tyler, M. Shen, C. E. Cameron, D. B. Stoltz, et al., “Complete Nucleotide Sequence of Kashmir Bee Virus and Comparison with Acute Bee Paralysis Virus, Journal of