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Zoological Catalogue Volume 30.1: Dipetra; Mematocera


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Zoological Catalogue Volume 30.1: Dipetra; Mematocera

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780643064898

Publisher:

CSIRO Publishing

Imprint:

CSIRO Publishing

Publication Date:

1st June 1999

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Public health and preventive medicine

Dewey:

591.994

Physical Properties

Number of Pages:

627

Description

Volume 30.1. Diptera: Nematocera covers the Australian representatives of the many, and often very important, dipteran families grouped under the suborder Nematocera. It catalogues 23 families, 44 subfamilies, 61 tribes, over 300 genera, 199 sub genera, some 2400 species, and nearly 3000 species available names. Coverage includes Mosquitoes (Culicidae), Biting midges and Sandflies (Ceratopogonidae and phlebotomine Psychodidae), and Blackflies (Simuliidae) which are all of critical importance to public health. These insects are vectors of diseases such as malaria and arbo-viruses including Ross River virus, Dengue Fever, while others are vectors of canine heartworm and myxomatosis. Researchers involved in river health programmes can check baseline taxonomic, distributional and ecological data on important taxa, such as Chironomidae, Tipulidae and Chaoboridae. Biogeographers will welcome the distributional and ecological information. This 'Yellow Pages' documentation of Australia's Nematocera has significance beyond Australia for public health workers, agriculturalists, environment and conservation managers, and biogeographers.

Reviews

"This book will be a valuable resource for scientists interested in the Australian fauna . . . should be useful to many non-systematists. . .this book should serve a broader audience, including ecologists and resource managers." -- Gregory W. Courtney (Systematic Entomology v.25, 2000)

"The medical and ecological importance of this great assemblage cannot be overestimated, as it contains three families of biting flies . . . and five families whose sheer abundance reflects their importance in freshwater and terrestrial food webs. ... As is appropriate for taxonomic catalogs, Bugledich provides a conservative systematic treatment and the 23 Australian families are listed alphabetically, thereby avoiding the current controversies of superfamily groupings. ... This volume is essential for anyone working with Australian Nematocera." -- Daniel J. Bickel, Australian Museum (The Quarterly Review of Biology v.75 September 2000)

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