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         Entomology:     more books (100)
  1. Livestock Entomology
  2. Review of the Haleakalae Species Group of Hawaiian Drosophila (Diptera: Drosophilidae) (Bishop Museum Bulletins in Entomology 9) by D. Elmo Hardy, K. Y. Kaneshiro, et all 2001-10
  3. Outlines of economic entomology. Designed as a textbook for school and colleges, and as a reference-book for farmers and gardeners by Noble Murray Eberhart, 2010-06-25
  4. Subtropical entomology by Walter Ebeling, 1950
  5. A history of Chinese entomology by Yao Chou, 1990
  6. Entomology for beginners: for the use of young folks, fruit-growers, farmers, and gardeners by A S. 1839-1905 Packard, 2010-08-30
  7. Rice Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering: Biotechnology of Food Crops (Memoirs on Entomology, International) by Paul Christou, 1994-09-27
  8. Entomology, with Special Reference to Its Ecological Aspects by Justus Watson Folsom, 2010-03-16
  9. From Arsenic to Ddt: A History of Entomology in Western Canada by Paul W. Riegert, 1982-01
  10. Entomology for beginners; for the use of young folks, fruitgrowers, farmers, and gardeners; by A S. 1839-1905 Packard, 2010-05-13
  11. Economic Entomology in the Tropics by K.P. Lamb, 1974-05-31
  12. You and entomology by John Strayer, 1988
  13. Insects and man: an account of the more important harmful and beneficial insects, their habits and life-histories, being an introduction to economic entomology for students and general readers by Charles Aubrey Ealand, 1915-01-01
  14. A textbook of agricultural entomology by Kenneth Manley Smith, 1951

121. Integrated Crop Management
Detailed, researchbased articles for better management decisions produced weekly from spring to fall by Iowa State University's entomology Department.
http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/icm/
Detailed, research-based articles for better management decisions produced weekly from spring to fall. Subscribe now to the full-color print version! IC-492(9) May 31, 2004 In this issue:
Hail injury to corn and soybean
Floods and hail! Corn replant decisions in 2004 How to evaluate your corn stands. Soybean replant decisions in 2004 Many soybean fields may need replanting. Wheat scab prediction model available to growers Wet weather can threaten wheat crops. Update to delayed herbicide options for emerged corn Define receives EPA registration. Wet weather, stressed corn, and herbicide applications Should you spray postemergence herbicide? Weed control options in late corn Includes table of application restrictions. Degree Days For alfalfa weevil, black cutworm, and other pest predictions. Previous Issue Announcements Crop Production Insects and Mites ... Weed Management Yes, we have an RSS feed Some of the articles contain pesticide recommendations that are subject to change at any time. The recommendations provided in these materials should be used only as a guide. It is always the pesticide applicator's responsibility, by law, to read and follow all current label directions for the specific pesticide being used. Due to constantly changing labels and product registration, some of the recommendations given in these writings may no longer be legal by the time you read them. If any information in these recommendations disagrees with the label, the recommendation must be disregarded. No endorsement is intended for products mentioned, nor is criticism meant for products not mentioned. The article's author, Iowa State University and Iowa State University Extension assume no liability resulting from the use of these recommendations.

122. Entomology Home
Due to the dissolution of the Department of entomology, the formal departmentalweb site is shut down permanently. Links to personal
http://www.ent.orst.edu/entomology/
Due to the dissolution of the Department of Entomology, the formal departmental web site is shut down permanently. Links to personal or project web sites are still available via the old frontpage

123. Ecological Entomology Aims & Scope
Ecological entomology journal information, contents lists and abstractson the Blackwell Publishing website. Ecological entomology.
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=0307-6946&site=1

124. Compendium Index
Systematic and alphabetic list with detailed information on all the insect orders. From John R. Meyer's North Carolina State University entomology class site.
http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/course/ent425/compendium/
INDEX
TO THE COMPENDIUM
OF HEXAPOD CLASSES AND ORDERS
Return to ENT 425 Home Page
Phylogenetic Listing
Alphabetical Listing
Arthropoda
Class Protura (Coneheads)
Class Diplura
Class Collembola (Springtails)
Class Insecta
Ametabola
Order Archeognatha (Bristletails)
Order Thysanura (Silverfish, Firebrats)
Hemimetabola
Order Ephemeroptera (Mayflies)
Order Odonata (Dragonflies, Damselflies)
Order Plecoptera (Stoneflies)
Order Embioptera (Webspinners)
Order Orthoptera (Grasshoppers, Crickets)
Order Grylloblattodea (Rockcrawlers)
Order Mantophasmatodea (Gladiators)
Order Dermaptera (Earwigs)
Order Blattodea (Cockroaches)
Order Isoptera (Termites)
Order Mantodea (Praying Mantids)
Order Phasmatodea (Walkingsticks)
Order Zoraptera
Order Hemiptera
Suborder Heteroptera (True Bugs)
Suborder Homoptera (Aphids, Cicadas, Leafhoppers, et. al.
Order Thysanoptera (Thrips)
Order Psocoptera (Booklice, Barklice)
Order Phthiraptera (Lice)
Holometabola
Order Neuroptera (Lacewings)
Order Coleoptera (Beetles)
Order Strepsiptera (Twisted-wing Parasites)
Order Hymenoptera (Ants, Wasps, Bees)
Order Mecoptera (Scorpionflies)
Order Trichoptera (Caddisflies)
Order Lepidoptera (Moths, Butterflies)

125. Australian Journal Of Entomology Aims & Scope
Australian Journal of entomology journal information, contents lists and abstractson the Blackwell Publishing website. Australian Journal of entomology.
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=1326-6756&site=1

126. Untitled
Free software for (1)house fly management in confined animal production systems, (2)poultry pest diagnosis and management, and (3)livestock pest diagnosis and management.
http://ipmwww.ncsu.edu/vetent/expert.html
All documents have been moved to one of 2 new domains. Please replace "ipmwww" with simply "ipm" in the web address. If that doesn't work, replace "ipmwww.ncsu.edu/" with cipm.ncsu.edu/ent/".
If all else fails, please email cipm@ncsu.edu for the correct URL. Sorry for any inconvenience.
Some of the needed new links are listed below:
  • NSF Center for Integrated Pest Management Biological Control Virtual Information Center
  • Cotton Insects SERA-IEG-23
  • EPA Worker Protection Standard for Agricultural Pesticides: How to Comply, What Employers Need to Know ...
  • Veterinary Entomology Expert Systems
  • 127. Welcome To Entomology At Cornell University
    Welcome to Cornell University s Department of entomology at Ithaca. Welcometo the Cornell University Department of entomology in Ithaca, NY.
    http://www.entomology.cornell.edu/
    A Department of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University Faculty and Academic Staff Graduate Program Undergraduate Program ... Contact Us W elcome to the Cornell University Department of Entomology in Ithaca, NY. I n 1874 John Henry Comstock founded our Department of Entomology, the first department of its kind in the U.S.A. Comstock assembled a group of fine scholars including Bradley, Forbes, Johannsen, Matheson, Needham, and Slingerland. Their influence is still evident in the Department's Comstock Memorial Library, which is among America's foremost collections of entomological literature, and in the Department's insect collection, which houses approximately six million specimens including many designated as types. C W e currently have 16 faculty, three joint appointees and 12 adjunct professors. The major research areas within the Department are morphology and systematics, pest management (especially of forage, greenhouse, vegetable and livestock insects), biological control, ecology, evolutionary biology and behavior, sociobiology, medical and veterinary entomology, pathology, apiculture, toxicology and physiology. T he Department's teaching program offers training for undergraduate and graduate students. Our Field of Entomology has 48 graduate students, and it consistently ranks as one of the strongest graduate programs in the U.S.A. Undergraduate majors number approximately 20.

    128. Beekeeping, Honey Bees And Apiculture - University Of Nebraska Extension
    Archive of the quarterly Bee Tidings newsletter.
    http://entomology.unl.edu/beekpg/
    University of
    Nebraska Department
    of Entomology Updated March 15, 2004 ARDC Education Center and Apiculture Laboratory Directions to the ARDC Education Center and Apiculture Laboratory Beekeeping Training Opportunities for 2004
    Value-Added Products Workshop 2004 Program
    (PDF file, 1.2 MB) State Fair Activities Bee Culture at the Nebraska State Fair
    Award-Winning Honey Recipes at the 1999 State Fair
    Activities in 4-H 4-H Beekeeping Essay Contest 2004 Announcement and Rules
    4-H Beekeeping Essay Contest Winners, 2003
    Nebraska Beekeepers Association Nebraska Beekeepers Association Home Page
    Nebraska Beekeepers Association Foundation Account
    American Association of Professional Apiculturists AAPA Home Page Sites of Interest to Beekeepers Web Links to the World: Beekeeping Bee Tidings Newsletter YEAR/NO. JUN SEP DEC APR ... MAR Education About Honey Bees Honey Bee Trading Cards Honey Bee Swarms
    UNL Home Page University of Nebraska Cooperative Extension educational programs abide with the non-discrimination policies of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and the United States Department of Agriculture.
    IANR Home Page Nebraska EntWeb Specialty Home Pages

    129. Welcome To The CU Museum
    Five exhibition halls feature collections representing the disciplines of anthropology, botany, entomology, geology and zoology. Includes special events, educational programs, guided tours, hours, free admission and directions. Located in Boulder.
    http://cumuseum.colorado.edu/
    With more than four million artifacts and specimens, the CU Museum houses one of the most extensive and respected natural history collections in the Rocky Mountain and Plains regions, making it one of the top university natural science museums in the country. Moth Matters: With Images by Joseph Scheer
    Did you know that silk is produced by moths and not by butterflies? Did you know that moths are the 'motors' of Mexican jumping beans? Visit this exhibit and you will never see moths the same way again! Three Cultures of Master Weaving
    In conjunction with the publication of the book Blanket Weaving in the Southwest , this exhibit will feature a selection of southwestern textiles from the Museum's famous textile collection. Seeing the Light: Photography by Clyde Butcher
    Master photographer Clyde Butcher's black and white photography captures the beauty of Florida's most remote wild landscapes. The incredible beauty of his photographs encourage a closer relationship with nature. Here are a couple of things that are going on in the Museum. For a list of our recent news items, please see our Museum News page.

    130. European Journal Of Entomology
    European Journal of entomology. European Journal of entomology Homepage. The journalis abstracted and/or indexed in Current Contents; entomology Abstracts;
    http://www.eje.cz/
    European Journal of Entomology
    European Journal of Entomology - Homepage Home About the Journal Content Subscription ... Editorial Board E uropean J ournal of E ntomology (EJE) is an international journal covering the whole field of general, experimental, systematic and applied entomology. The language of publication is English. The manuscripts are reviewed by at least two independent referees. Last published issue :
    Mar 25th, 2004 The journal is abstracted and/or indexed in EJE is published quarterly by the Institute of Entomology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, and by the Czech Entomological Society. European Journal of Entomology c/o Institute of Entomology
    Czech Academy of Sciences
    Branisovska 31
    370 05 Ceske Budejovice CZECH REPUBLIC
    Phone: (+420) 387775213, 387775214
    Fax: (+420) 385310354
    E-mail: eje@eje.cz

    webmaster
    Webdesign by Scisoft

    131. Praying Mantids
    Lists information about mantids such as species, reproduction, and the body structure.
    http://www.uky.edu/Agriculture/Entomology/entfacts/trees/ef418.htm
    University of Kentucky Entomology EntFacts
    Information Sheets
    PRAYING MANTIDS
    By Gary Watkins, Entomology Student, and Ric Bessin, Extension Entomologist University of Kentucky Department of Entomology
    Although many refer to a member of this group as a ‘praying mantis,' mantis refers to the genus Mantis. Only some praying mantids belong to the genus Mantis. Mantid refers to the entire group. Mantids are very efficient and deadly predators that capture and eat a wide variety of insects and other small prey. They have a "neck" that allows the head to rotate 180 degrees while waiting for a meal to wander by. Camouflage coloration allows mantids to blend in with the background as they sit on twigs and stems waiting to ambush prey. The two front legs of the mantids are highly specialized. When hunting mantids assume a "praying" position, folding the legs under their head. They use the front legs to strike out and capture their prey. Long sharp spines on the upper insides of these legs allow them to hold to on their prey. The impaled prey is held firmly in place while being eaten. The spines fit into a groove on the lower parts of the leg when not in use. There are three species of mantids in Kentucky, the European mantid (

    132. OSU Department Of Entomology
    DEPARTMENT OF entomology. 318 West 12th Avenue insects in our society.The Department of Zoology and entomology dates from 1891.
    http://iris.biosci.ohio-state.edu/osuent/
    ACADEMICS
    GENERAL
    INFORMATION
    LINKS
    OSU Home
    DEPARTMENT OF ENTOMOLOGY
    318 West 12th Avenue
    Aronoff Laboratories
    Columbus, OH 43210
    Phone: (614) 292-8209
    Buckeye ( Junonia coenia
    Insects and related terrestrial arthropods comprise over 80% of the life forms on earth. The Class Insecta alone is suspected of containing between one and five million species at a minimum. Biological studies on most of these are sorely lacking, and very probably fewer than half the extant species have been named and described. Insects, by virtue of their small size and rapid reproductive capability, are major competitors with humans for resources. These same characteristics, together with ease of handling and breeding, make them ideal organisms for the elucidation of basic biological principles. Insects are also extensively involved in the spread of many pathogenic microorganisms that impact plants and animals, including humans. The Department of Entomology at The Ohio State University is the only academic and research center for entomology in the state of Ohio, and exists as a necessary response to the central place occupied by insects in our society. The Department of Zoology and Entomology dates from 1891. The first Ph.D. in Entomology was awarded in 1904; as of Spring Commencement 2002, 418 Ph.D. and 561 M.S. degrees had been granted in Entomology. Close cooperation between entomologists at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center in Wooster and those on the Columbus campus began in 1947, and the two units thereafter evolved into a single administrative unit. The former Department of Zoology and Entomology became two separate departments within the College of Biological Sciences in 1967. Formal merger of OARDC and The Ohio State University occurred in 1982, though the Department of Entomology has functioned as a unit since its inception.

    133. NMNH Entomology
    Department of entomology National Museum of Natural History, SmithsonianInstitution. This site has moved to http//entomology.si.edu.
    http://nmnhwww.si.edu/departments/entom.html
    Department of Entomology
    National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution
    This site has moved to:

    http://entomology.si.edu

    Smithsonian Natural History Web Home Page

    134. Allexperts Entomology (Study Of Bugs) Q&A
    Entomologists available to answer questions about insects.
    http://www.allexperts.com/getExpert.asp?Category=665

    135. University Of Florida Entomology And Nematology Department
    University Florida entomology Nematology Department has large graduate undergraduateenrollment, extension services, extensive entomology curriculum
    http://entnemdept.ifas.ufl.edu/
    Welcome to the University of Florida
    Entomology and Nematology Department!

    136. UC Davis Bohart Museum Of Entomology
    Speciesspecific information sheets and other resources from the Bohart Museum of entomology at UC-Davis.
    http://bohart.ucdavis.edu/insects.asp
    Random Insect Facts!
    Fact No. 30:

    The Anopheles mosquito is responsible for about 270 million cases of malaria and causes approximately 2 million deaths annually.
    View All
    Insect Information
    Insect and Arachnid Information Sheets:
    at-a-glance resource sheets about common insects and arachnids, some of which are now available on the web, all of which can be ordered from the Bohart Museum Society. Insect Key of Commonly Found Arthropods : Use this interactive on-line key to identify a bug you've found.
    Insect Key of Bees and Wasps:
    Use this key (PDF document) to identify bees and wasps found in California.
    Insect Key of Thrips:
    Use this on-line key to identify thrips (Order Thysanoptera) associated with flower crops of North America. This is an interactive PDF file created by Cheryle O'Donnell, a Graduate Research Assistant in the Department of Entomology at UC Davis. Warning: this is a VERY LARGE file that may take several minutes to download if you have a slow internet connection.
    Delusional Parasitosis:
    part of the Center for Biosystematics website, this article explains possible causes and treatment for the feeling of insects under the skin.

    137. Midwest Biological Control News
    Discusses the use of insects to control crop, garden, and home pests. Includes an index and archived back issues.
    http://www.entomology.wisc.edu/mbcn/mbcn.html
    Biological Control News is no longer being published.
    All back issues are available on this website.
    Back Issues About This Newsletter Index Other Biological Control Sites This website is maintained by the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Entomology
    Webpage last updated APril 8, 2004.
    URL is http://www.entomology.wisc.edu/mbcn/mbcn.html.

    138. Neotropical Entomology - Home Page
    Publication of the Sociedade Entomol?ica do Brasil Mission To publish resultsof original research on the several specialties of entomology, like bionomics
    http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php/script_sci_serial/pid_1519-566X/lng_en/nrm_iso

    português

    español

    Updated on
    March 10, 2004
    Print ISSN Publication of the
    Sociedade Entomológica do Brasil
    Mission
    To publish results of original research on the several specialties of entomology, like: bionomics, systematics, morphology, physiology, behavior, ecology, biological control, crop protection and on acarology. Extensive reviews or articles concerning current issues in entomology presented in a thought-provoking form are published in the Forum Section, by invitation.
    Former Title:
    Anais Da Sociedade Entomologica Do Brasil 2004  Sociedade Entomológica do Brasil IAPAR - Área de Proteção de Plantas Caixa Postal 481 Londrina PR Brazil Tel. +55 43 342-3987 / +55 43 376-2262 neotropical@sercomtel.com.br

    139. The Beekeeping Book FAQ
    A short list of beekeeping and beekeeping related books. Contributions from sci.agriculture.beekeeping, beel and from real life.
    http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/academic/agriculture/entomology/beekeeping/faqs/bookf
    The Beekeeping Book Faq A short list of beekeeping and beekeeping related books. Contributions from sci.agriculture.beekeeping, bee-l and from real life. Contributors names are not includedif you want to know who suggested what book, e-mail me and I'll dig up the original e-mail I received. The books are listed by topic. This FAQ to be archived at The Internet Apiculture and Beekeeping Archive , posted to sci.agriculture.beekeeping and mailed to bee-l. Requests, comments, and queries can be sent to: adamf@metalab.unc.edu adamf@metalab.unc.edu

    140. CAS Entomology
    Welcome to the Department of entomology web site. These web pages havebeen created to provide more information about the departmental
    http://www.calacademy.org/research/entomology/
    Welcome to the Department of Entomology web site. These web pages have been created to provide more information about the departmental staff, collections, and on-line resources. As you search through these pages we hope that you will sense some of the same excitement that we experience working with these colorful and fascinating creatures. Research Division Anthropology Aquatic Biology Botany ... Natural History Museum

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