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| Introduction             The recorded history of biological
  control may be considered as dating from Egyptian records of 4,000 years ago,
  where domestic cats were depicted as useful in rodent control.             Insect
  Predation was recognized at an early date, but the significance of
  entomophagy and exploitation was lost except for a few early human
  populations in Asia where a sophisticated agriculture had developed.  The Chinese citrus growers placed nests of
  predaceous ants, Oncophylla smaradina, in trees where the
  ants fed on foliage-feeding insects. 
  Bamboo bridges were constructed to assist the ants in their movements
  from tree to tree.  Date growers in
  Yemen went to North Africa to collect colonies of predaceous ants which they
  colonized in date groves to control various pests.             Insect Parasitoidism was not
  recognized until the turn of the 17th Century.  The first record is attributed to the Italian, Aldrovandi
  (1602).  He observed the cocoons of Apanteles glomeratus being attached to larvae of Pieris rapae (the imported cabbageworm).  He incorrectly thought that the cocoons
  were insect eggs.  Printed
  illustrations of parasitoids are found in Metamorphosis by J. Goedart
  (1662) <PHOTO>. 
  He described "small flies" emerging from butterfly
  pupae.  Antoni van Leeuwenhoek  in 1700 (van Leeuwenhoek 1702) described
  the phenomenon of parasitoidism in insects. 
  He drew a female parasitoid ovipositing in aphid hosts.  Vallisnieri (1706) <PHOTO> first correctly interpreted this
  host-parasitoid association and probably became the first to report the
  existence of parasitoids.  Bodenheimer
  (1931), however, noted that several earlier entomologists recognized the essence
  of parasitoidism.  Cestoni (1706)
  reported other parasitoids from eggs of cruciferous insects.  He called aphids, "cabbage
  sheep," and their parasitoids, "wolf mosquitoes."  Erasmus Darwin (1800) discussed the useful
  role of parasitoids and predators in regulating insect pests.             During the remainder of the 18th Century an ever-increasing
  number of references to entomophagous and entomogenous organisms appeared in
  the literature, largely in the form of papers dealing with parasitoid biologies.  Diseases of silkworms were recognized
  early in the 18th Century.  De Reamur
  (1726) <PHOTO> described and illustrated Cordyceps fungus infecting a
  noctuid larva.   Biological Control Efforts in the 18th
  Century   By
  1762 the first successful importation of an organism from one country to
  another for biological control took place with the introduction of the mynah bird from India to the island of Mauritius, for
  locust control.     Further
  development of modern biological control awaited the recognition of the fact
  that insect pest problems were population phenomena.  The controversial publications of Malthus appeared toward the end of the 18th Century, and
  generated considerable interest in the subject of populations.  Malthus' work will be discussed further in
  the next section on "Concepts in Population Ecology."   Biological Control Efforts in the
  Early 19th Century   A
  number of articles appeared during the first half of the 19th Century that lauded
  the beneficial effects of entomophagous insects.  Erasmus Darwin (1800) recommended
  protecting and encouraging syrphid flies and ichneumonid wasps because they
  destroyed considerable numbers of cabbage-feeding caterpillars.  Kirby & Spence  (1815) [see <PHOTO>]
  showed that predaceous coccinellids controlled aphids.  Hartig (1827)
  recommended the construction of large rearing cages for parasitized
  caterpillars, with the ultimate aim of mass release.  Ratzeberg (ca. 1828)
  <PHOTO> called particular attention to the value of
  parasitic insects with publication of a large volume on the parasitoids of
  forest insects in Germany.  He did not
  believe that parasitic control could be augmented by humans.  Agustino Bassi (1834)
  first demonstrated that a microorganism, Beauvaria
  bassiana, caused an animal
  disease, namely the muscardine disease of
  silkworms.  Kollär
  <PHOTO>  (1837)
  writing an article for farmers, foresters and gardeners pointed out the
  importance of entomophagous insects in nature's economy; studied parasitoid
  biologies and was the first to report the existence of egg parasitoids.  Boisgiraud (1843)
  reported that he used the predaceous carabid beetle, Calasoma sycophanta,
  to successfully control gypsy moth larvae on poplars growing near his home in
  rural France.  He also reported that
  he had destroyed earwigs in his garden by introducing predaceous staphylinid
  beetles.   Biological Control in the Late 19th
  Century   Beginning
  in 1850, events associated with the westward expansion of agriculture in the
  United States paved the way for the further development of the field of
  biological control.  During and
  following the "Gold Rush" in California, agriculture expanded
  tremendously in California especially. 
  At first the new and expanded plantings escaped the ravages of
  arthropod pests.  Predictably,
  however, crops soon began to suffer from destructive arthropod
  outbreaks.  Many of these pests were
  found to be of foreign origin, and were observed to be far more destructive
  in the newly colonized areas than in their native countries.  Consequently, the notion grew that perhaps
  these pests had escaped from some regulatory factor or factors during their
  accidental introduction into America.   Asa Fitch <PHOTO>  (1855) was the
  State Entomologist of New York who is recorded as the first entomologist to seriously
  consider the transfer of beneficial insects from one country to another for
  the control of an agricultural pest. 
  Fitch suggested that the European parasitoids of the wheat midge, Sitydiplosis mesellana, be sent into the
  eastern United States.   Benjamin
  Walsh  <PHOTO>  supported Fitch's suggestion and in 1866
  he became the first worker in the United States to suggest that insects be
  employed in weed control.  He proposed
  that insects feeding on toadflax, Linaria
  vulgaris, be imported from
  Europe to control invaded yellow toad flax plants.  The first actual case of biological control of weeds was,
  nevertheless, in Asia, where around 1865 the cochineal insect Dactylopius ceylonicus was introduced from
  southern India into Ceylon for prickly pear cactus control (Opuntia vulgaris). 
  Originally, Dactylopius
  had been imported to India from Argentina in 1795, in the mistaken belief
  that it was the cochineal insect of commerce, D. cacti.   Louis
  Pasteur (1865-70) <PHOTO>  studied
  silkworm diseases and saved the silk industry in France from ruin [not really
  biological control].   Charles Valentine Riley  <PHOTO>  (1870) has been named the father of modern
  biological control.  He shipped
  parasitoids of the plum curculio from Kirkwood, Missouri to other parts of
  that state.  In 1873 he became the
  first person to successfully transfer a predator from one country to another
  with the shipment of the American predatory mite, Tyroglyphus phylloxerae
  to France for use against the destructive grapevine phylloxera.  The results were not particularly
  successful, however.  In 1883, Riley
  directed the first successful intercontinental transfer of an insect parasitoid,
  Apanteles glomeratus, from England to the
  United States for control of the imported cabbageworm.  He was Chief Entomologist of the U. S.
  Department of Agriculture.  In 1872,
  11 years before the importation of A.
  glomeratus, Riley began his
  interest in the cottony-cushion scale, Icerya
  purchasi, which was
  considered the most important citrus pest in California.  He correctly located its point of origin
  in Australia.  [Doutt's account of
  this biological control program on p. 31-38 of the DeBach (1964) text is
  particularly colorful.  Read this,
  paying particular attention to the following:   a.  the roles played by Riley, Albert Koebele
  and D. W. Coquillet.   b.  note the species of insects involved (the
  vedalia beetle, Rodolia cardinalis, and the dipterous
  parasitoid, Cryptochaetum iceryae), their source, numbers
  imported, and their activities relative to the cottony-cushion scale.   c.  note the method of colonization, and be
  able to describe the spectacular results of these introductions, which changed
  the status of the pest to an insect of no economic importance in only four
  years time.   The
  successful biological control effort against the cottony-cushion scale
  spirited many biological control attempts in many countries, resulting in
  over 200 biological control successes (see Chapter 24 of the DeBach (1964)
  text and other hand-outs).   The
  cottony-cushion scale success admittedly harmed overall pest control in
  California for quite some time because growers thought that the vedalia
  beetle would also control other insect pests.  Consequently, they neglected other mechanical and chemical
  control methods.   George Compere (1899) became
  the first state employee specifically hired for biological control work.  He worked as a foreign collector until
  1910, during which time he sent many shipments of beneficial insects to
  California from many parts of the world. 
  Harold Compere <PHOTO>, his son, also devoted his entire career to the
  search for and identification of natural enemies of scale insects.   Harry
  Scott Smith (1913) <PHOTO> was appointed superintendent of the State
  Insectary in Sacramento.  In 1923,
  biological control work was transferred to the Citrus Experiment Station and
  Graduate School of Subtropical Agriculture of the University of California,
  Riverside.  Biological control work at
  Riverside was first conducted in the Division of Beneficial Insect
  Investigations, and was changed to the Division of Biological Control with Smith
  as chairman in 1947.  Personnel were
  stationed at Albany and Riverside. 
  Under Smith, importation of Chrysolina
  beetles from Australia for Klamath weed control marked the beginning of
  biological weed control in California in 1944.   Edward Steinhaus (1947) <> established the first laboratory and
  curriculum in insect pathology at the University of California,
  Berkeley.  Later he transferred to the
  newly opened Irvine campus of the University and attempted to further insect
  pathology there.  His untimely death
  in 1968 precluded this goal.   The Division of Biological Control became the Department of
  Biological Control at UC Riverside and Berkeley in 1954.  In 1969 Biological Control was dropped as
  a department, becoming a Division of Biological Control within the Department
  of Entomology, against the wishes of the entire biological control faculty,
  numbering over 24 academics at Riverside and Berkeley at that time.  The Berkeley faculty created their own
  separate Division of Biological Control with guaranteed privileges and
  minimum control by the Department of Entomology.  At Riverside, the Division of Biological Control gradually
  became dominated by chemical control oriented faculty in the Department of
  Entomology.  In 1989 the Division was
  abolished, against the wishes of 85% of the faculty in the Division.  Ignorance and pecuniary control among the
  ranks of University of California bureaucrats is believed to be the principal
  cause.  Although the dissenting
  faculty in the Division each wrote a personal plea to the then Chancellor
  Rosemary S. J. Schraer to discuss the matter, in not one case was a reply
  received.     Biological
  Control at the University of California  The biological
  control unit at the new campus of the University of California in Riverside
  was by 1962 the most renowned research entity for
  that discipline in the world.  It
  served as a World Center for students and scientists devoted to the practice
  of classical biological control, where natural enemies were sought worldwide
  for importation and establishment. 
  Although this unit's headquarters was at Riverside, about 1/3rd of the
  faculty resided at facility in Central California at Albany, just five miles
  north of the UC-Berkeley campus.  By
  1961, UC-Riverside and the Albany facility had a total of about 18 full-time
  professional biological control faculty plus several emeriti; about 10
  Research Associates, and graduate students that varied from 10-20 until the
  1980's.  Members of this statewide
  department interacted with other similar organizations in various parts of
  the world, especially the Commonwealth Institute of Biological Control, that
  had established laboratories worldwide, and the U. S. Department of
  Agriculture. On the world scene, it is estimated that there were more than
  300 scientists engaged in Classical
  Biological Control (= The
  search for, importation and propagation of new species of natural
  enemies).  This does not include
  investigators engaged only in fundamental research.  The harmony amongst these scientists was exceptional and
  admired, and was spirited most likely from a realization that cooperation
  accelerated achievements in a field that required extensive knowledge of
  arthropod biology and breeding habits.   However,
  a feud developed among some of the top administrators in the University of
  California and within the Department of Biological Control itself that
  ultimately contributed to the demise of this outstanding unit.   The basis was involved, but especially
  referred to unprofessional conduct, the hiring of new faculty that was not
  supported by a majority of the Department, and animosities developed in
  previous years when current administrators had previously served as technical
  staff.  The then Dean of Agriculture,
  Dr. Alfred Boyce, operating through departmental administrators, organized a
  voting block among the younger faculty against one Dr. Robert van den Bosch
  <PHOTO>, who was
  very vociferous in denouncing what he perceived to be administrative
  inadequacy.  This ultimately led to
  van den Bosch being asked to leave the unit, especially after his rebellion
  extended to a denunciation of the scientific integrity of several active
  faculty.     A pervasive
  gloomy atmosphere followed, especially among the newly hired faculty.  Van den Bosch left the Riverside campus
  for the branch laboratory in Albany, California, taking with him some highly
  skilled technical personnel, and a while later a new faculty member, Dr.
  George Poinar, Jr.  Other faculty and
  staff at Riverside that were disturbed by the politics of these events then
  joined the separate Department of Entomology.     The
  feud had far reaching consequences in the University of California that persisted
  into the latter part of the 20th Century. 
  One Riverside professor who had sympathy for the Albany group tried on
  two occasions to have a faculty member fired whom the Riverside group had
  supported.  This even though his first
  attempt presumably banned him from the fellow's promotion committee.  Another especially malevolent incident
  involved a Korean graduate student, where a junior member of the Qualifying
  Committee who had been a student at Albany contrived a scheme to deny the
  Korean student his PhD Degree. 
  Teaming up with another faculty of the Biology Department the two
  failed the student and refused to grant him a second Qualifying Examination
  even though other members of the committee deemed his performance on the
  examination excellent.  The incident
  was especially illogical and sordid because the two dissenting faculty had
  given the student high passing grades in their courses, and no indication of
  inadequacy was ever made to the major professor whom they obviously despised
  for his support of Dean Al Boyce in the earlier Interdepartmental
  conflicts.  The Korean student had
  gained high grades in all his courses and established an excellent rapport
  among Public Health organizations in California while performing his thesis
  research.  As a credit to the
  integrity of the University of California, wisdom prevailed as the two
  dissenters were removed from the student's committee.  He gained the PhD Degree following a
  successful reexamination and later became Head of the Department of Public
  Health in Seoul, Korea.     Dr.
  Boyce later expounded on matters that revealed more of the nature of the feud
  (Boyce 1997/98) and personal communications).  He was especially distraught when Dr. Paul DeBach <PHOTO> and associates
  at Albany ignored his contribution to the discovery of the citrus red scale
  parasitoids, Aphytis maculicornis
  and Coccophagoides utilis
  that parasitized olive scale in Pakistan and Iran.  He also maintained that he had made the original discovery of Aphytis melinus that attacks red
  scale (Aoidinella auranti) in Pakistan, although it is unclear whether
  he was able to send a viable culture to California [Personal communication to
  Dr. E. F. Legner]. The living cultures that he did obtain from that region that
  was typically undergoing intense political unrest exposed him to "a hail
  of bullets" as he once described to Dr. E. F. Legner.  Yet, not one mention of his involvement in
  the discovery or acquisitions of these parasitoids was ever made by DeBach or
  his associates who later were credited with their discovery.  A disregard of the honor process among
  scientists in recognizing each other's contributions may have far reaching
  effects.  Yet these failures continue
  and may be widespread as shown by the recent description of Biosteres
  sublaevus Wharton that ignored mention of original specimens
  donated from years of effort in securing them from the wild  (Legner & Goeden 1987 ).   Being
  weakened as it was, by the loss of highly capable and productive scientists,
  and lacking in political adeptness, the Riverside unit fell victim to the one
  Riverside Campus President who had the power to do a coup de graz.   It
  may be debated that his professional background in Political Science
  certainly did not justify his making unilateral decisions concerning the
  Biological Control discipline.  By this time, DeBach had become
  dismayed at the politics and rather accepted the final triumph of the Al
  Boyce lobby.   DeBach, because of his
  international renown in the field of Biological Control, should have been the
  logical choice to lead the Department as Chairman.   However, against the wishes of most of the faculty, Dr. Boyce
  hired Dr. Don Chant of Ontario, Canada to head the Department.  Chant had a very positive influence on the
  younger faculty especially by helping them to attain the research funds that
  are needed to do this highly sophisticated and time-consuming research.  However, he then gradually became
  increasingly dismayed at the politics of the higher administration and after
  three years returned to Canada to head the Department of Zoology at the
  University of Toronto.  Boyce then,
  against the wishes of the entire faculty, unilaterally abolished the
  Department of Biological Control, and forced it to reorganize as a subsidiary
  Division of Biological Control within the Department of Entomology, that was
  on the whole devoted to the use of pesticides to control agricultural
  pests.   Later the Division itself was
  abolished through the intense efforts of Dr. Boyce and against the objection
  of 90% of its faculty.  In the
  meantime, the Albany faculty continued relatively autonomous from the
  pesticide-oriented fraction, but ultimately lost critical numbers who were
  devoted solely to the classical biological control approach.    Another contributing
  factor to Riverside’s decrease in classical biological control activity is
  related to a reduced ability to interact with professionals overseas.  To illustrate this it should be considered
  that classical biological control successes have relied heavily on
  the interaction with other international organizations, especially the
  Commonwealth Institute of Biological Control with headquarters in Curepe,
  Trinidad.  Various permanent and
  temporary laboratories of this organization existed in all parts of the
  world.  Researchers there would host,
  assist and otherwise interact with those of the United States Department of
  Agriculture and the University of California to obtain beneficial
  species.  As independence from the
  British Commonwealth developed among the different countries that maintained
  laboratories, local support for their continuance diminished, and in many
  cases ceased entirely.  This has
  resulted in a greater than 90% decrease in classical biological control
  activity worldwide.   Bizarre Tragedies
  Among Biological Control Specialists  There
  have been four known suicides among the ranks of
  biological control scientists.  These
  were Owen Smith and Irv Newell of the Untied States, Giuseppii Zinna of
  Italy, and David Annecke <PHOTO> of South
  Africa.  Smith was found by technician
  Louis Dawson, hanging from a tree in the biological control orange grove on
  the University of California, Riverside campus.  This just after his success in classical biological control of
  the grape leaf skeletonizer.  The
  caterpillars possess urticating hairs that can interfere with the health of
  persons in close contact with them. 
  Zinna had just been hired by the Division of Biological Control in
  Riverside as chief systematist: the position that was later filled by Gordon
  Gordh.  Zinna returned to Italy,
  presumably to gather his personal effects, when he, unprovoked, jumped from
  an eight-story building.  Annecke
  killed himself in South Africa, also without known provocation.  Luciano Campos of Chile died from a
  suspected suicide.  Newell killed
  himself with a shotgun at his home in Riverside.  Rumors were that he suffered from cancer, but he also was known
  to suffer constant severe pain in the facial area, which may have been an
  allergic reaction to the mites with which he so diligently worked.   Robert
  van den Bosch died from a
  heart attack while jogging in the Berkeley, California area.  He had been ardently pursuing the
  Pesticide Industry (van den Bosch 1978) for unscrupulous activities in pest
  control, gaining the animosity of many dedicated to chemical pest control.  There seemed to be no generally known
  history of cardiac illness.  Paul
  Messenger, who took up the struggle against pesticides after van den Bosch's
  death, also died mysteriously from a heart attack.  Blair Bartlett died in his hospital bed immediately after
  having heart bypass surgery in San Bernardino, California.  He had been studying the effects of
  pesticides on beneficial organisms, and just concluded that almost all
  available materials had severe detrimental effects on an array of species in
  many important families (Bartlett 1964*-- 1966).   Harry Shorey, working with insect pheromones as a substitute
  for chemical insecticides in the Coachella Valley, was killed when the
  automobile that his student was driving collided with a truck transporting
  produce from Mexico.             Also, the early onset of dementia
  and related illnesses plagued a number of scientists who were directly or
  indirectly involved in biological control research.  Among these were Robert Luck, Thomas Bellows and Everett
  Schlinger.     Exercises       Exercise 2.1-- When was the
  importance of insect predation first recognized?  Insect           parasitoidism?        Exercise 2.2-- Trace the
  development of biological control in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.        Exercise 2.3-- Give the past and
  present organization of biological control research in the            University of California.     REFERENCES:   [Additional references may be found at  MELVYL Library ]     Bartlett, B. R.  1964a.  Integration of chemical and biological
  control, p. 489-511.  In:  P. DeBach (ed.), Biological Control of Insect Pests and
  Weeds.  Reinhold, New York.     Bartlett, B. R.  1964b.  The toxicity of some pesticides to eggs,
  larvae, and adults of the green lacewing, Chrysopa
  carnea.  J. Econ. Ent. 57:  366-9.   Bartlett, B. R.  1964c.  The toxicity of some pesticide residues to
  adult Amblyseius hibisci, with a compilation of
  the effects of pesticides upon phytoseiid mites.  J. Econ. Ent. 57: 
  559-63.   Bartlett, B. R.  1965.  The repellent effects of some pesticides
  to hymenopteraous parasites and coccinellid predators.  J. Econ. Ent. 58:  294-96.   Bartlett, B. R.  1966.  Toxicity and acceptance of some pesticides
  fed to parasitic Hymenoptera and predatory coccinellids.  J. Econ. Ent. 59:  1142-49.   Bassi, A.  1935.  Del mal del
  segno, calcinaccio o moscardino, mallatia che affigge i bachi da seta e sul
  modo di liberarne le bigattaie anche le piu infestate.  Part
  I:  Theoria.  Orcesi, Lodi. p. 1-9, 1-67.   Bellows,
  T. S., Jr. & T. W. Fisher, (eds) 
  1999. Handbook of Biological
  Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, CA.  1046 p.   Bodenheimer, F. S.  1931. 
  Der Massenwechsel in der Tierwelt. 
  Grundriss einer allgemeinen tierischen Bevölkerungslehre.  Arch.
  Zool. Ital. (Napoli) 16:  98-111.   Boyce, A. M. 1987. Odyssey of an Entomologist. Kingsport Press, Kingsport Tenn. pg 213-219.  Boyce, Alfred Mullikin. 
  1997/1998.  Odyssey of an
  Entomologist: adventures on the farm, at sea, and in the university / by
  Alfred M. Boyce ; based on taped conversations with John G  Gabbert ; edited by Elizabeth Lang and
  Robert Lang.  Riverside, Calif. : UC
  Riverside Foundation, 1987, c1986.   Compere, G.  1902.  Entomologist's Report.  Introduction of Parasites.  West. Austral. Dept. Agric. J. 6:  237-40.   Compere, G.  1904.  Black scale parasite (Scutellista cyanea).  West Austral. Dept. Agric. J. 10:  94.   Compere, G.  1921.  Seasonal history of black scale and
  relation to biological control. 
  Calif. Citrog. 6:  197.   Darwin, E.  1800.  Phytologia.  Publ., London.   Doutt, R. L. 
  1964.  The historical
  Development of biological control.  In:  P. DeBach (ed.), Biological Control of Insect Pests and
  Weeds.  Reinhold Publ. Corp., New
  York.  844 p.   Fitch, Asa.  1954.  Sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth reports
  on the noxious, beneficial and other insects of the state of New York.  Albany, New York.  259 p.   Goedaert, J.  1662. 
  Metamorphosis et Historia Naturalis Insectorum.  Jacques
  Fierens, Middelburgh.     Kirby,
  W. & W. Spence.  1815.  An Introduction to Entomology.  Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans,
  London.  285 p.   Kollär, Vincent. 
  1837.  In:  London's Gardner's
  Magazine. 1840.  [English
  translation].   Legner, E. F. & R. D. Goeden.  1987.  Larval
  parasitism of Rhagoletis completa (Diptera: Tephritidae)
  on Juglans microcarpa (Juglandaceae) in western
  Texas and southeastern New Mexico.  
  Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 89(4): 
  739-743.   Malthus, T. R. 
  1803.  An Essay on the
  Principle of Population as It Affects the Future Improvement of Society.  J. Johnson, London, 2nd ed.  610 p.   Pasteur, L.  1870  Etudes
  dur la maladie des vers a soie.  Gautherie-Villars, Paris, I: 
  322 p.; II: 327 p.   Ratzeburg, J. T. C.  1944a. 
  Die Ichneumonen der Forstinsekten in forstlicher und entomologischer
  Beziehung; ein Anhang zur Abbildung und Beschreibung der Forstinsekten.  Theile, Berlin.   3 vol.   Ratzeburg, J. T. C.  1944b. 
  Die Ichneumonen der Forstinsekten, Vol. I.  Berlin.   Réaumur, M. de.  1726. 
  Remarques sur la plante appellée a la Chine Hia Tsao Tom Tchom, ou
  plante ver.  Mem. Acad. Roy. Sci. (21 Aug 1726).  p. 302-5.   Riley, C. V. 
  1893.  Parasitic and predaceous
  insects in applied entomology.  Insect
  Life 6:  130-41.   Riley, W. A. 
  1931.  Erasmus Darwin and the
  biologic control of insects.  Science
  73:  475-6.   Smith, H. S. 
  1916.  An attempt to redefine
  the host relationships exhibited by entomophagous insects.  J. Econ. Ent. 9:  477-86.   Smith, H. S. 
  1919.  On some phases of insect
  control by the biological method.  J. Econ. Ent.
  12:  288-92.   Smith, H. S. 
  1929.  The utilization of
  entomophagous insects in the control of citrus pests.  Trans. 4th Internatl. Congr. Ent. 2:  191-8.   Steinhaus, E. A.  1946.  Insect Microbiology.  Comstock Publ. Co., Inc., Ithaca, New
  York.  763 p.    Steinhaus, E. A.  1949.  Principles of Insect Pathology.  McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., New York.  757 p.   van den Bosch, R.  1978.  The Pesticide Conspiracy.  Doubleday, New York.  226 p.   van Leeuwenhoek,
  A.  1702.  Letter in Nr.
  266 of the Philosophical Transaction 1700-1701, Vol. 22, p. 659-72.  Smith & Walford, London.   van Lenteren, J.
  C.  1983.  Biological pest
  control:  passing fashion or here to
  stay?  Organorama (Netherlands)
  20:  1-9.   Walsh, B. D. 
  1866.  Practical
  Entomologist.  June 1866.  p. 1   |