In the present paper, descriptions are given of five new genera and fifteen new species of Illinois Thysanoptera. For much of the material upon which these descriptions are based. I am indebted to several of my friends and associates, among whom may be mentioned Charles A. Hart, Robert D. and Hugh Glasgow, John J. Davis, Lindley M. Smith, Henry E. Ewing, James Zetek, Frank C. Gates, and George H. Coons.published or submitted for publicationis peer reviewe
This paper, describing new species of caddis flies from Illinois and other localities in North Amer...
...the issue of a series of publications has been undertaken, which it is intended to devote especia...
For some ten years the Iowa Insect Survey has been collecting specimens and data from all parts of t...
THE list of Miridae of Illinois now stands at 330 species. It is apparent, however, that species k...
In a previous paper, Article 6 of Volume X of this Bulletin, I indicated that despite the fact that ...
This article is presented to make our tiny thrips better known—to show what thrips really are, to ...
The ever-increasing requests by technical workers in the field of entomology for information concern...
In 1927 T. H. Frison published a list of all the insect types in the collections of the Illinois Nat...
This guide treats all species known to have been found and those likely to be found in Illinois and ...
In the course of my work of identifying and arranging the Diptera in the collection of the State Lab...
THE caddis flies, or Trichoptera, are for the most part medium-sized to small insects resembling m...
THE list of Miridae of Illinois now stands at 330 species. It is apparent, however, that species k...
This paper is a partial descriptive catalogue of the leech fauna of Illinois. It is founded on colle...
The records given herein supplement those in a previous paper (Bul. Ill. Sate Nat. Hist. Survey, Vol...
MOSQUITOES are midgelike insects of various sizes, some of them minute, some of them nearly a half...
This paper, describing new species of caddis flies from Illinois and other localities in North Amer...
...the issue of a series of publications has been undertaken, which it is intended to devote especia...
For some ten years the Iowa Insect Survey has been collecting specimens and data from all parts of t...
THE list of Miridae of Illinois now stands at 330 species. It is apparent, however, that species k...
In a previous paper, Article 6 of Volume X of this Bulletin, I indicated that despite the fact that ...
This article is presented to make our tiny thrips better known—to show what thrips really are, to ...
The ever-increasing requests by technical workers in the field of entomology for information concern...
In 1927 T. H. Frison published a list of all the insect types in the collections of the Illinois Nat...
This guide treats all species known to have been found and those likely to be found in Illinois and ...
In the course of my work of identifying and arranging the Diptera in the collection of the State Lab...
THE caddis flies, or Trichoptera, are for the most part medium-sized to small insects resembling m...
THE list of Miridae of Illinois now stands at 330 species. It is apparent, however, that species k...
This paper is a partial descriptive catalogue of the leech fauna of Illinois. It is founded on colle...
The records given herein supplement those in a previous paper (Bul. Ill. Sate Nat. Hist. Survey, Vol...
MOSQUITOES are midgelike insects of various sizes, some of them minute, some of them nearly a half...
This paper, describing new species of caddis flies from Illinois and other localities in North Amer...
...the issue of a series of publications has been undertaken, which it is intended to devote especia...
For some ten years the Iowa Insect Survey has been collecting specimens and data from all parts of t...