Mary Adrian, The mystery of the night explorers, New York, Hastings House, 1962.
Archives de l’auteur : Hubert
Strange and often complex
Lincolm Coles Pettit, Introductory Zoology, Saint Louis, The C.V. Mosby Company, 1962, p. 226.
Caddis-fly architecture
Anonyme, The Oxford Magazine: a weekly newspaper and review, Oxford, vol. 3, 1962, p. 198.
The larva’s head isn’t detected
Theodore Kesting, Trout fishing, New York, Thomas Nelson, 1962, p. 14.
Selection of materials for case-buiding
Hilmy M. Hanna, « Selection of materials for case-buiding by larvae of caddis flies (Trichoptera) », Londres, Proceeding of the Royal Entomological Society., (A) 36, 1961
On dirait une jeune tortue se déplaçant par bonds au fond de la rivière
Ronald N. Rood, Insectes, Ill. C. & A. Koehler, Encyclopédie des juniors, Editions R.S.T, 1961, p. 20.
Elongate cones or cylinders
George K. Reid, Ecology of Inland Waters and Estuaries, New York, D.Van Nostrand Company, 1961.
Easily within range
E.L. Grant Watson, What to look for in summer, Ill. C. F. Tunnicliffe, Loughborough, Will & Hepworth, 1960, p.12.
Splendid gentles
E. Marshall-Hardy, Anglers Ways, Londres, Herbert Jenkins, 1960, p. 62.
In the stomach
Francis E. Sell, Pratical Fresh water Fishing, New York, The Ronald Press Company, 1960, p. 31.
Horns or trumpets
Alexander B. Klots & Elsie B. Klots, Living Insects of the World, Londres, Hamish Hamilton, 1959, p. 105,
The Seedling Stars
James Blish, The Seedling Stars, New York, The New American Library, (1957) 1959, p. 104-105.
The Golden Books of Nature Crafts
John R. Saunders, The Golden Books of Nature Crafts, New York, Golden Press, 1958, p.31
A stricky saliva
Millicent Selsam, See through the lake, Ill. Winifred Lubel, New York, Harper & Row, 1958, p.34.
These cases form the most obvious means of identification
D. Fisher, The Teacher’s Book of Nature Study. W. & R. Chambers, Londres, 1958, p. 178-179.