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Species Chloealtis abdominalis

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History of insects
By Rasnitsyn A.P., Quicke D.L., eds
Kluwer Academic Publisher Dordrecht, xii + 517 pp., 2002
Full text of selected chapters available here

A compendium of the biographical literature on deceased entomologists
By P. Gilbert
British Museum (Natural History). 455 pp., 1977
i have a pdf copy

Keys to the insects of the European part of the USSR. Vol. I: Apterygota, Palaeoptera, Hemimetabola
By Bei-Bienko G.Y., ed.
Leningrad: Zool. Inst. 935 pp., 1964
Taxonomy outdated; otherwise, a sound source with lots of useful info.
English version: Keys to the insects of the European USSR. (Keys to the fauna of the USSR no. 84) Jerusalem: Israel Program for Scientific Translations, 1967. 1214 pp.

The principal cactus insects of the United States.
By Hunter et al.
USDA Bureau of Entomology Bulletin. 71 pp., 1912
Full Text

Hunter, W.D., F.C. Pratt, J.D. Mitchell. 1912. The principal cactus insects of the United States. USDA Bureau of Entomology Bulletin 113: 1-71.

Aquatic insects and oligochaetes of North and South Carolina
By A.R. Brigham, W.U. Brigham, A. Gnilka
Midwest Aquatic Enterprises, Mahomet, IL. 837 p., 1982

Manual for identification of quarantine and other important pests of raw materials, stored products, and seed
By Mordkovich Ya.B., Sokolov E.A.
Kolos, Moscow, 384 pp., 1999
Full text
[In Russian; original title: Spravochnik-opredelitel' karantinnykh i drugikh opasnykh vreditelei syr'ya, produktov zapasa i posevnogo materiala]

The title is rather deceptive, as the illustrated keys cover only two insect orders (no mites, etc.), i.e. 400+ beetle species and ~160 spp. of lepidopteran larvae associated with stored products and seed worldwide, incl. many obscure species of no commercial relevance at all. Despite the outdated taxonomy, the book is helpful in providing valuable illustrations borrowed from authoritative sources, distribution and habitat/product data not found online elsewhere, and info on many beetle spp.

Western Forest Insects
By Furniss, R.L. and Carolin, V.M. 1977.
U.S.D.A. Forest Service Misc. Publ. 1339, 1977
Full Text

Furniss, R.L. and Carolin, V.M. 1977. Western forest insects. U.S.D.A. Forest Service Misc. Publ. 1339, 654 pp.

Authors: Robert Livingston Furniss, Valentine M. Carolin, Frederick Paul Keen

Preface

This manual concerns itself with insects and related organisms in forests and woodlands of North America, west of the 100th Meridian and north of Mexico. ("Eastern Forest Insects," by Whiteford L. Baker (1972) covers the area east of the 100th Meridian.) The intended primary users are practicing foresters and others responsible for preventing or minimizing insect-caused damage to forests and wood products. Thus, major purposes of the manual are to facilitate recognition of insects and their damage and to provide needed information for determining a course of action. The manual should also be useful to students of forestry and entomology, professional entomologists, extension specialists, forestry technicians, forest owners, forest recreationists, teachers, and others.

Insects of Ojibway Prairie, a southern Ontario tallgrass prairie
By Paiero S.M., Marshall S.A., Pratt P.D., Buck M.
Shorthouse J.D., Floate K.D. (Eds.) Arthropods of Canadian Grasslands, Vol. 1: 199-225, 2010

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