Article contents
Observations on Glossina fuscipleuris and other Tsetses in the Oyani Valley, Kenya Colony
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 July 2009
Extract
The Oyani Valley is in the South Kavirondo native reserve of Kenya Colony. The river from which the valley takes its name rises in the Kilgorris groups of hills in and near the south-west corner of the Masai Reserve. The Oyani enters South Kavirondo at a point about 1°0' South by 30°35' East; it flows in a general north-westerly direction through the Kanyamkago location and joins the Kuja River about eighteen miles above the junction of the Kuja and the Gori Rivers.
- Type
- Original Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1939
References
Austen, E. E. & Hegh, E. (1922). Tsetse-flies. Their Characteristics, Distribution and Bionomics, etc.—p. 30.Google Scholar
Harris, R. H. T. P. (1930). Report on the bionomics of the Tsetse-fiy (G. pallidipes Aust.).—Pietermaritzburg.Google Scholar
Lewis, E. A. (1937). Tsetse-flies in the Ol Orokuti area of the Masai Reserve, Kenya Colony.—Bull. Ent. Res. 28, pp. 395–402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nash, T. A. M. (1933). The ecology of Glossina morsitans, Westw., and two possible methods for its destruction.—Bull. Ent. Res., 24, pp. 107–195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- 2
- Cited by