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The occurrence of a Leech (Trocheta subviridis) in an Allotment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

R. A. Harper Gray
Affiliation:
Adviser in Agricultural Zoology, Armstrong College, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Extract

In April of this year (1922) a specimen was sent to the Agricultural Department, Armstrong College, by Mr S. Giles of South Shields, along with a note explaining that it had been found “down in the first spit of the soil” in one of a group of allotments there. It was obviously a specimen of a leech, but the specimen was submitted later, to Mr John Ritchie, the Museum, Perth, who kindly identified the species as Trocheta subviridis, and who mentioned that “this gives so far as I am aware, a more northern habitat than hitherto recorded. See Parasitology, vol. III, p. 182.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1922

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References

1 “A Revision of the British Leeches,” by Harding, W. A., M.A., F.L.S. (1910). Parasitology, III. 130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

1 Loc. cit. Harding, p. 186.