. Entomology for medical officers. Insect pests; Insects as carriers of disease. Fig. 58.—Head of Stomoxys. Fig. 69.—Wing of Stomoxys. antennal bristle, and by the gentle curve of the 4th longi- tudinal vein (Fig. 59). They not infrequently come into houses and bite man, but their usual victims are domestic animals, and their ordinary haunts are stables, farmyards, and pastures. Stomoxys calcitrans, L., the type of the genus, is said by Austen to occur throughout the greater part of the world. To casual view it looks like a house-fly, but it has six or seven. Please note that these images are


. Entomology for medical officers. Insect pests; Insects as carriers of disease. Fig. 58.—Head of Stomoxys. Fig. 69.—Wing of Stomoxys. antennal bristle, and by the gentle curve of the 4th longi- tudinal vein (Fig. 59). They not infrequently come into houses and bite man, but their usual victims are domestic animals, and their ordinary haunts are stables, farmyards, and pastures. Stomoxys calcitrans, L., the type of the genus, is said by Austen to occur throughout the greater part of the world. To casual view it looks like a house-fly, but it has six or seven. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Alcock, A. (Alfred), 1859-1933. London, Gurney & Jackson


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