. The practical study of malaria and other blood parasites. Malaria; Mosquitoes; Trypanosoma; Blood. Xll (d) Genus Cephalomyia, , C. maculata. In the camel. (e) Genus Cephenomyia, , C. rufibarbis. In red deer. Scotland, (/) Genus Dermatobia, , D. cyaniventris. Larva is the ' ver macaque' (America), producing myiasis in man and cattle. (g) Genus Ochromyia, , 0. anthropophaga. Larva is the ' ver de Cayor ' (Senegal), producing myiasis in man. Myiasis is common in Africa and in the tropics, but the larvae, have been identified in but few instances as yet. The fourth group, the Pup


. The practical study of malaria and other blood parasites. Malaria; Mosquitoes; Trypanosoma; Blood. Xll (d) Genus Cephalomyia, , C. maculata. In the camel. (e) Genus Cephenomyia, , C. rufibarbis. In red deer. Scotland, (/) Genus Dermatobia, , D. cyaniventris. Larva is the ' ver macaque' (America), producing myiasis in man and cattle. (g) Genus Ochromyia, , 0. anthropophaga. Larva is the ' ver de Cayor ' (Senegal), producing myiasis in man. Myiasis is common in Africa and in the tropics, but the larvae, have been identified in but few instances as yet. The fourth group, the Pupipara (to which Glossina also belongs, from the point of view of its life history), comprises : I.—Hippoboscidae (spider flies). They run rapidly over the body, hiding in hair or feathers. Head circular. No distinct neck. Clypeus distinct, separated from the head by a curved suture. Antennae lie in cavities in its anterior angle. Antennae : one segment with or without a style (arista). Palpi absent. , Abdomen leathery, capable of much distension in 9 • Tarsi: fifth segment longest, with two or three claws. Empodia {between the claws) distinct. Wings large, or mere strips, or ^^^ Fig. g8. Hippobosca Rufipes, left x 2—right, natural size {After Theiler) (a) Genus Hippobosca. Wings large, obtuse. No ocelli ; arista nude ; legs long and extended. Claws bidentate. H. equini. Runs rapidly over the body ; is the [New] forest fly of England. H, camelina. Attacks camels in Egypt. H. rufipes transmits Trypanosoma theileri (?).. 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 Stephens, John William Watson, 1865-; Christophers, S. R. (Samuel Rickard), 1873-; Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. London, Pub. for the Univ. Press of Liverpool by Williams & Norgate


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