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Superfamily Phryganeoidea
Biological Control of Weeds in Australia By Cullen et al. (eds). 2012. CSIRO Publishing. 648 Pp. CSIRO Publishing, 2012
Preview
Jim Cullen, Mic Julien, Rachel McFadyen. (Editors). 2012. Biological Control of Weeds in Australia. CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria, Australia. 648 Pp.
Publisher's notes:
Biological control of weeds has been practiced for over 100 years and Australia has been a leader in this weed management technique.
This book reviews biological control of weeds in Australia to 2011, covering over 90 weed species and a multitude of biological control agents and potential agents.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 18 November, 2012 - 4:11am |
Immigrant phytophagous insects on woody plants in the United States and Canada: an annotated list By Mattson W.J., Niemela P., Millers I., Inguanzo Y. General Tech. Report NC-169. St. Paul: USDA Forest Service, North Central Forest Exp.Sta., 1994
Contributed by v belov on 15 June, 2012 - 1:04am |
Insects associated with woody ornamental plants [of Texas]. By Burke et al. 1994. Agrilife E-publication., 1994
Full Text - Agrilife E-publication
Burke, H.R., J.A. Jackman, and M. Rose. 1994. Insects associated with woody ornamental plants. EEE - 00019. Texas Agricultural Extension Service and Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, College Station. 168 pp.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 26 April, 2012 - 12:01pm |
Check-list of the insects of Connecticut By Britton, W. E. 1920 Connecticut geological and natural history survey, Hartford., 1920
Full Text
Britton, W.E. 1920. Check-list of the insects of Connecticut. Bulletin no. 31. Connecticut geological and natural history survey, Hartford. 397 pp.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 6 March, 2012 - 8:10pm |
Cone and seed insects of western forest trees By F.P. Keen USDA Tech. Bull. 1169: vi+168 pp., 1958
Contributed by v belov on 12 February, 2012 - 2:46am |
Agricultural insect pests of temperate regions and their control By Hill D.S. Cambridge Univ Press. 659 pp., 1987
has a cozy feel of a poetry anthology; reasonably informative.
a funny detail: the two world maps on p.23 showing “General geographical/biological subdivisions” and “Zoogeographical regions,” respectively, are provided in two different projections (Mercator and Miller, it seems)... what were they thinking?
Contributed by v belov on 12 February, 2012 - 12:11am |
Larvae of Insects By Alvah Peterson Edwards Brothers, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1948
Two Volume Set
Part I is subtitled "Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera"
Part II is subtitled "Coleoptera, Diptera, Neuroptera, Siphonaptera, Mecoptera, Trichoptera".
The publication year refers to the first edition. These volumes are primarily an identification guide with keys, drawings, descriptions, and bibliographies. Part I, though, contains some brief introductory material on equipment and methods for collecting, killing, dissecting, and preserving insect larvae that I found interesting.
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