Pediculus (4)
Pediculus clavicornis Nitzsch, 1864
Pediculus humanus Linnaeus, 1758 (4)
Pediculus mjobergi Ferris, 1916 (1)
Pediculus schaeffi Fahrenholz, 1910
Chewing Lice (10)
Boopiidae (10)
Gyropidae (19)
Haematomyzidae (3)
Laemobothriidae (6)
Menoponidae (161)
Philopteridae (332)
Ricinidae (5)
Trichodectidae (54)
Trimenoponidae (7)
Unknown (3)
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Posted Tue, 07/07/2009 - 10:58 by Robert Dalgleish
http://www.amnh.org/science/?src=toolbar Research Center, http://research.amnh.org/invertzoo/ Division of Invertebrates
The chewing lice are in slide boxes. The total collection is probably less than 3,000 slides, with most slides having multiple specimens. The majority of the specimens were prepared by E. W. Stafford, who as Carriker (1955) has stated with characteristic bluntness, was not a particularly good technician. The specimens are mounted in Canada Balsam, however, they were not macerated in potassium hydroxide, thus internal structures remain and make identifications particularly difficult. This does, however, present a wonderful opportunity for examining the gut contents of many hundreds of specimens. Material mounted by Stafford or Francis Wilson typically has one or two labels with 'Cornell University' printed, and 'E.W.S.' or 'F.H.W.' in ink. Locations and host names are frequently misspelled and require verification. It appears as though Stafford and Wilson 'collected' the lice from skins (primarily marine and coastal bird species) at the American Museum of Natural History, and as a consequence split the collection between the two institutions. There are about an equal number of slides and specimens deposited in both the AMNH and Cornell collections. For a complete review of a series it is necessary to look at both collections. Types of some of the species described by Robert Edwards in his review of the lice of the Procellariiformes are deposited at the AMNH.