Cornell University Library Digital Collections
Volume 29, Number 1: Annals of the Entomological Society of America
- Title:
- Volume 29, Number 1: Annals of the Entomological Society of America
- Collection:
- Core Historical Literature of Agriculture
- Date:
- 1936
- Issue Date:
- March, 1936
- Identifier:
- chla5077679_4197_001
- Catalog Record:
- 5077679
- Subject:
- Entomology
Periodicals
- Language:
- English
- Extent:
- 224 300dpi JPEG page images
- Notes:
- Digitization funded by Cornell University Class of 1956. Title selected from the series Literature of the agricultural sciences for the Core historical literature of agriculture.
- Publisher:
- Entomological Society of America
- Publication Place:
- Lanham, Md.
- Publication Date:
- 1936
- Format:
- Issue
Articles
-
Officers of the Entomological Scoiety of America
-
The Metasternal Glands of the Ant, Myrmica rubra, with Special Reference to the Golgi Bodies and the Intracellular Canaliculi
-
Nearctic Spiders of the Genus Wubana
-
The Ancestry and Wing Venation of the Hymenoptera
-
On the Total Hemolymph (Blood) Cell Counts of Insects, II. Neuroptera, Coleoptera, Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera
-
A Biometrical Study of Two Morphologically Similar Species of Trichogramma
-
Epigomphus crepidus, a New Dragonfly (Odonata: Gomphidae) from Nayarit, Mexico, with Notes on the Genus
-
Variation and Atrophy of Flying Wings of Some Carabid Beetles (Coleoptera)
-
Proceedings of the Thirtieth Annual Meeting
-
Book Notices
-
List of Members
-
The Early Embryological Development of the Parthenogenetic Alfalfa Snout Beetle, Brachyrhinus ligustici L.
-
Alimentary Canal and Malpighian Tubules of Ceratomegilla fascilabris (Muls.) (Cpccinellidae, Coleoptera)
-
New Species and Records of Nearctic Mutillid Wasps of the Genus Dasymutilla (Hymenoptera)
-
Some Erythrpneura of the Obliqua Group from Decatur, Georgia (Hptnoptera, Cicadellidae)
-
A Histological Study of the Eye and Brain of a One-Eyed Bee
-
New Genu--Forcipata--and Nine New Species of Typhlocybine Leafhoppers Closely Allied to Dikraneura (Cicadellidae: Homoptera)
-
The Rapid Spread of an European Staphylinid in North America (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae)