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Species Baetisca berneri

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The Ephemeroptera of North Carolina: A biologist’s handbook with standard taxonomic effort levels. Version 3.3
By S.R. Beaty
North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources. 48 + 9 pp., 2011

Mayflies (Ephemeroptera) of North Carolina and South Carolina: An update
By M.L. Pescador, D.R. Lenat, M.D. Hubbard
Florida Entomologist 82(2): 316-332, 1999
Important and thorough work, listing over 200 spp. for the Carolinas -- but some taxonomy has become obsolete due to rapid advances in the study of mayflies. (Consult Mayfly Central(1) for taxonomy updates.)
Full text

Global diversity of mayflies (Ephemeroptera, Insecta) in freshwater
By Barber-James, H.M., Gattolliat, J.L., Sartori, M. & Hubbard, M.D.
Hydrobiologia, 595: 339–350, 2008

Review of parasitoid wasps and flies associated with Limacodidae in North America, with a key to genera
By Michael W. Gates, John T. Lill, Robert R. Kula, J,E. O'Hara, D.B. Wahl, D.R. Smith, J,B. Whitfield, S.M. Murphy, & T.M. Stoepler
Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, 114(1): 24-110, 2012
Full title: Review of parasitoid wasps and flies (Hymenoptera, Diptera) associated with Limacodidae (Lepidoptera) in North America, with a key to genera.

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Some results of the University of Kansas entomological expeditions to Galveston and Brownsville, Texas, in 1904 and 1905.
By Snow, F.H.
Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science, 20: 136-154., 1906
Full Text - BHL

Snow, F.H. (1906) Some results of the University of Kansas entomological expeditions to Galveston and Brownsville, Texas, in 1904 and 1905. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science, 20: 136-154.

The writer conducted two entomological expeditions to Texas for the museum of the University of Kansas in the years 1904 and 1905. Each of these expeditions had Brownsville, the extreme southern point of the state, as its objective point, but on account of the wretched connections with the one lone steamer between Galveston and our destination, as well as the limited time at our disposal, we spent the three weeks of our first stay, in May, at Galveston, but succeeded in reaching our original destination by rail in 1905, by the new Gulf Coast line.

An Introduction to the Aquatic Insects of North America
By Merritt RW, Cummins KW, Berg MB (Editors)
Kendall Hunt Publishing Company, 2019

Descriptions of New Species of North American Neuropteroid Insects
By Nathan Banks
Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 37(4): 335-360, 1911
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Includes: Perlidae (Plecoptera); Raphididae [sic] (Raphidioptera); Chrysopidae, Hemerobiidae, Mantispidae, Myrmeleontidae (Neuroptera); Panorpidae (Mecoptera); Limnephilidae, Rhyacophilidae, Sericostomatidae, Hydropsychidae (Trichoptera)

New Neuroptera and Trichoptera from the United States
By Nathan Banks
Psyche 50: 74-81, 1943

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