Key-catalogue of insects of importance in public health / by C.W. Stiles and Albert Hassall.
- Charles Wardell Stiles
- Date:
- [1928]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Key-catalogue of insects of importance in public health / by C.W. Stiles and Albert Hassall. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![e Emendation of name originally printed with some other spelling. Etd. or etd. Erroneous type designation, including pseudotype.3 h Homonym, hence dead name; see also d. i Name or systematic position is sub judice for this species or other unit quoted. 1 Name used in a broad taxonomic sense (sensu lato), as of earlier authors, especially prior to 1870. m Obvious misprint; see d. Mt. or mt. Type by monotypy; i. e., only one definite species was cited at time of original publication of generic name. Same as haplotype, monogenotype, monobasic. Art. 30c. 0 No opinion expressed here. < [nv] Not verified. ° Objective (absolute) synonym, as in case of renaming a genus or species, or the genus has the same type species as an earlier named genus. p Polynomial name, hence dead name; see d. r Name used in restricted taxonomic sense (sensu restricto), as of later authors, especially since 1900. 8 Subjective synonym, generally admitted as such or at least by some authors, seu Or. So. or so. Synonym of. 4 Type species of genus, or type locality, or type host. Tat. or tat. Type by absolute tautonymy. Art. 30d (International Rules). Tod. or tod. Type by original designation.4 Same as orthotype, autogeno¬ type. Art. 30a. Tpd. or tpd. Type by present designation. Art. 30g. Tsd. or tsd. Type by subsequent designation. Same as logotype, idiogeno- type. Art. 30g. v Valid name under International Rules. Homo sapiens Linn., 1758a. World-wide.—Man; rHomme; der Mensch; FUomo; el Hombre. Public-health relations of insects.—For purposes of ready reference, the various insects cited in this Key-Catalogue are here cross- referenced in respect to their alleged, experimental, known, and speculative relations to various aspects of public health, alphabetically as follows: A, biting insects; B, on cadavers or in graves; C, control of public- health pests; D, dermatology (lesions, dermatitis, eruptions, exan¬ thema, parasites, urticaria); E, edible (food, drink); F, excreta; G, food and drink; H, jurisprudence; I, laity (fear, superstition); J, parasites and pseudoparasites (abdomen, ear, external, eye, head, 3Lindholm, 1925, Zool. Anz., v. 63,161, distinguishes— Genotypi falsi, to include— Paragenotype, erroneous type by subsequent designation; Plesiogenotype, ditto under Art. 30e y (International Rules of Zoological Nomenclature); i. e., species which the author of the genus doubtfully referred to it; Pseudogenotype, ditto under Art. 30e a; i. e., species which were not included under the generic name at the time of its original publication. Diatype is used by some authors to signify type of a genus substituted for a homonym. Apogenotype is used by some authors to signify tjqpe by renaming, including diatype.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b3135743x_0012.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)