Online Encyclopedia

LOUSE (O. Eng. leis, cf. Du. luis, Ge...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 66 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LOUSE (O. Eng. leis, cf. Du. luis, Ger. Laus,
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Dan. and Swed. lus)
  , a
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term applied to small wingless
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insects, parasitic upon birds and mammals, and belonging strictly speaking to the order Anoplura, often included among the Hemiptera, though the term is frequently extended to the
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bird-lice constituting the sub-order Mallophaga, formerly included among the Neuroptera . Both agree in having nothing that can be termed a
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metamorphosis; they are active from the time of their exit from the egg to their
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death, gradually increasing in
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size, and undergoing several moults or changes of skin . The true lice (or Anoplura) are found on the bodies of many Mammalia, and occasion by their presence intolerable irritation . The number of genera is few . Two
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species of Pediculus are found on the human
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body, and are known ordinarily as the head-louse (P. capitis) and the body-louse (P. vestimenti); P. capitis is found on the head, especially of children . The eggs, laid on the hairs, and known as " nits," hatch in about eight days, and the lice are full grown in about a month . Such is their fecundity that it has been asserted that one
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female (probably of P. vestimenti) may in eight weeks produce five thousand descendants . Want of cleanliness favours their multiplication in a high degree—the idea once existed, and is probably still held by the very ignorant, that they are directly engendered from dirt . The irritation is caused by the rostrum of the
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insect being inserted into the skin, from which the
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blood is rapidly pumped up . A third human louse, known as the crab-louse (Phthirius pubis) is found amongst the hairs on other parts of the body, particularly those of the pubic region, but probably never on the head . The louse of monkeys is now generally considered as forming a
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separate genus ( Pedicinus) , but the greater
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part of those infesting domestic and wild quadrupeds are mostly grouped in the large genus Haematopinus, and very rarely is the same species found on different kinds of animals . The bird-lice (Mallophaga) are far more numerous in species, although the number of genera is comparatively small .

With the exception of the genus Trichodectes, the various species of ,vhich are found on mammalia, all infest birds (as their

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English names implies) (see BIRD-LOUSE) . Louse-infestation is known as phthiriasis in medical and veterinary terminology .

End of Article: LOUSE (O. Eng. leis, cf. Du. luis, Ger. Laus, Dan. and Swed. lus)
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