The Black Flies (Simuliidae) of North America. By Peter H  Adler, Douglas C  Currie, and , D Monty  Wood; Foreword by , Daniel H  Janzen; illustrated by , Ralph M  Idema and , Lawrence W  Zettler. Published by Cornell University Press, Ithaca (New York), in association with the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto (Canada). $99.95. xv + 941 p + 24 pl; ill.; indexes to names of black flies and to names of organisms other than black flies, subject index. ISBN: 0–8014–2498–4. 2004.

2005 ◽  
Vol 80 (3) ◽  
pp. 360-361
Author(s):  
Jerome A Hogsette, Jr.
Fragmentology ◽  
10.24446/dlll ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 73-139
Author(s):  
Scott Gwara

Using evidence drawn from S. de Ricci and W. J. Wilson’s Census of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the United States and Canada, American auction records, private library catalogues, public exhibition catalogues, and manuscript fragments surviving in American institutional libraries, this article documents nineteenth-century collections of medieval and Renaissance manuscript fragments in North America before ca. 1900. Surprisingly few fragments can be identified, and most of the private collections have disappeared. The manuscript constituents are found in multiple private libraries, two universities (New York University and Cornell University), and one Learned Society (Massachusetts Historical Society). The fragment collections reflect the collecting genres documented in England in the same period, including albums of discrete fragments, grangerized books, and individual miniatures or “cuttings” (sometimes framed). A distinction is drawn between undecorated text fragments and illuminated ones, explained by aesthetic and scholarly collecting motivations. An interest in text fragments, often from binding waste, can be documented from the 1880s.


1961 ◽  
Vol 93 (6) ◽  
pp. 419-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. Chillcott

The genus Roederioides was erected by Coquillett in 1901 for the single species juncta Coquillett, described from Saranac Inn, New York. The species has since been recorded only from Mt. Washington, New Hampshire. A second species has been described from the Madeiras by Frey. This paper describes five new species from North America and presents a revised description of the genus.The type of the genus, juncta, was collected in association with black flies, and recent collections have been made from black fly swarms. It is possible that juncta, and possibly other species of the genus, are predators of black flies, both as adults and as larvae.


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