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PHASMID INJURY TO THE HUMAN EYE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

M. A. Stewart
Affiliation:
University of California, Davis, California

Extract

It has long been known that some of the Phasmidae discharge a fetid fluid from certain glands. King (1867) published a note on his observations of a phasmid in Jamaica, identified as Anisomorpha buprestoides (Stoll) but which Bates believed to be a true Phasma, in which he stated that the prothorax contains two glands, secreting a fetid fluid which is discharged through two elevated pores and serves as a defensive agent. This author further stated that these nocturnal, or crepuscular, and gregarious insects are almost always found in the adult stage in copulation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1937

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References

REFERENCES

Caudell, A. N. (1903). The Phasmidae, or walkingsticks, of the United States. Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 26, pp. 863885.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, C. B. (1867). An untitled note. Joun. of Proceed. of Ent. Soc. of Lond., Trans, of Ent. Soc. of London, 5, 3rd ser., p. 78.Google Scholar
McAtee, W. L. (1918). Vaporous discharge by Anisomorpha buprestoides (Orthoptera: (Phasmidae), Ent. News, 29, p. 388.Google Scholar
Scudder, Samuel H. (1876). Odoriferous glands in Phasmidae. Psyche 1, no. 22, pp. 137140.Google Scholar