Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:29:44.145Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Notes on Some Siphonaptera from Canada1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

George P. Holland
Affiliation:
Systematic Entomology, Division of Entomology, Ottawa, Canada

Extract

In a previous paper on the Siphonaptera of Canada the writer (Holland, 1949b) summarized all available published and unpublished data up to December 31, 1946. One hundred and twenty-seven species and subspecies of fleas were recorded, of which 121 are believed to be endemic, and 6 introduced in historic times from the Palaearctic Region.

Studies since 1946 have drawn attention to the occurrence in Canada of a number of species not hitherto recorded. Some of these were new to science. The discoveries of some of the others could have been predicted with reasonable certainty, the species being known from areas immediately south of the International Boundary, on species of hosts known to occur in Canada. In other instances the captures occasioned some surprise, the Canadian records representing rather broad extensions of the known ranges. Some of this supplementary information has already been published (Holland, 1949a, 1950, 1951a, 1951b). In the present paper, seven additional species and subspecies are reported from Canada for the first time. In partial compensation for this, the total of Canadian species is reduced by the recognition of two synonyms.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1952

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Augustson, G. F. 1941. A new flea from the Mojave Desert (California). Bull. Southern California Acad. Sci. 40: 138139; 3 figs.Google Scholar
Baker, C. F. 1895. Preliminary studies in Siphonaptera 1–7. Canadian Ent. 27: 1922; 63–67; 108–112; 130–132; 162–164; 186–191; 221–222.Google Scholar
Baker, C. F. 1904. A revision of American Siphonaptera or fleas, together with a complete list and bibliography of the group. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. 27: 365469; pl. 10–26.Google Scholar
Collins, B. J. 1936. A new species of Anomiopsyllus from Montana (Siphonaptera). Ent. News 47: 128130; 4 figs.Google Scholar
Ewing, H. E. 1929. Notes on the siphonapteran genus Catallagia Rothschild, including the description of a new species. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington 42: 125127.Google Scholar
Fox, I. 1939. New species and a new genus of Nearctic Siphonaptera. Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington 41: 4550; 6 figs.Google Scholar
Fox, I. 1940. Fleas of eastern United States. Iowa State College Press, Ames. 191 pp.; 166. figs.Google Scholar
Fuller, H. S. 1943. Studies on Siphonaptera of eastern North America. Bull. Brooklyn Ent. Soc. 38: 1823.Google Scholar
Good, N. E. 1942. Stenistomera (Siphonaptera): a reevaluation of the genus, with the description of a new subgenus and species. Proc. Ent. Soc. Washington 44: 131139; 5 figs.Google Scholar
Holland, G. P. 1944. Notes on some northern Canadian Siphonaptera, with the description of a new species. Canadian Ent. 76: 242246; 10 figs.Google Scholar
Holland, G. P. 1949a. A revised check list of the fleas of British Columbia. Proc. Ent. Soc. British Columbia 45: 714.Google Scholar
Holland, G. P. 1949b. The Siphonaptera of Canada. Canada, Dept. Agr., Tech. Bull. 70, 306 pp.; 350 figs.; 44 maps.Google Scholar
Holland, G. P. 1950. Notes on Megabothris asio (Baker) and M. calcarifer (Wagner) with the description of a new subspecies (Siphonaptera: Ceratophyllidae). Canadian Ent. 82: 126133; 8 figs.Google Scholar
Holland, G. P. 1951a. A note on the occurrence of Catallagia dacenkoi Ioff in North America, with the description of a Nearctic subspecies (Siphonaptera: Neopsyllidae). Canadian Ent. 83: 156160; 7 figs.Google Scholar
Holland, G. P. 1951b. Notes on some bird fleas, with the description of a new species of Ceratophyllus, and a key to the bird fleas known from Canada (Siphonaptera: Ceratophyllidae). Canadian Ent. 83: 281289; 10 figs.Google Scholar
Hubbard, C. A. 1947. Fleas of western North America. Iowa State College Press, Ames. 533 pp.; numerous figs.Google Scholar
Hubbard, C. A. 1949a. Fleas of the sagebrush meadow mouse. Ent. News 60: 141144; figs.Google Scholar
Hubbard, C. A. 1949b. Additional data upon the fleas of the sagebrush vole. Ent. News 60: 169174; figs.Google Scholar
Jameson, E. W. Jr. 1950. Catallagia mathesoni, a new hystrichopsyllid flea (Siphonaptera) from California. J. Kansas Ent. Soc. 23: 9496; figs.Google Scholar
Jordan, K. 1929a. Notes on North American fleas. Nov. Zool. 35: 2839; plates 1, 2.Google Scholar
Jordan, K. 1929b. On a small collection of Siphonaptera from the Adirondacks, with a list of the species known from the State of New York. Nov. Zool. 35: 168177; 4 figs.Google Scholar
Jordan, K. 1933a. Two new American species of Siphonaptera. Entomologist 66: 1417; 7 figs.Google Scholar
Jordan, K. 1933b. A survey of the classification of the American species of Ceratophyllus s. lat. Nov. Zool. 39: 7079.Google Scholar
Jordan, K. 1948. Suctoria. In A handbook for the identification of insects of medical importance, by Smart, J., pp. 211245; 16 figs. British Museum, London.Google Scholar
Rothschild, N. C. 1915. Contribution to our knowledge of the Siphonaptera Fracticipita. Nov. Zool. 22: 302308; 6 figs.Google Scholar
Stewart, M. A. 1926. Two new Siphonaptera from New York, Insec. Inscit. Mens. 14: 122126; 1 fig.Google Scholar
Wahlgren, E. 1903. Aphanipterologische Notizen nebst Beschreibung neuer Arten. Arkiv. för Zool 1: 181196; pl. 7–9.Google Scholar