The primary and selected secondary literature pertaining to the insect superorder Neuropterida (orders Neuroptera, Megaloptera, Raphidioptera and Glosselytrodea) are catalogued. Strong emphasis is placed on documenting the peer-reviewed scientific literature relevant to the group; informal, popular, secondary and manuscript print sources are documented where considered noteworthy, as are selected web-native works. Bibliography coverage is worldwide and includes all aspects of neuropterology. Coverage is particularly complete in the subject areas of systematics, taxonomy, phylogeny, biogeography, morphology, paleontology, biology and faunistics. Less complete, but still extensive, coverage is present for other subject areas, such as physiology, parasites, ecology and biological control. Each work included in the bibliography is represented by a separate bibliographic record. Individual records can be located, or lists of related records generated, by interactively searching on a suite of standardized data fields. Bibliographic records provide standardized data for citing and locating works, and, where available and permissible, links to one or more digital representations of those works. Many records contain detailed annotation data concerning publication errata, neuropterid content, date of publication, cited taxa, included illustrations and/or other aspects of particular works. This version of the bibliography contains bibliographic records for 13,200+ works and links to digital representations of 5700+ works. 68,400+ annotations document taxa cited and figures included in 1600+ works. ... [Information of the supplier]
Although these literature searches were originally conceived as providing working documents for our own researches, it soon became apparent that this comprehensive catalogue of literature and illustrations should be made generally available rapidly and freely as a working tool for all those interested in working on Trichoptera material from Africa, especially for colleagues in far-distant institutes and without access to large libraries. Each page will record the name of the species, its distribution, the best illustrations of its diagnostic characters available in the literature, usually of genital structures, and the appropriate original literature. This bibliographic reference work containing over 1200 species and subspecies in 26 families and 109 genera makes no claim to be complete. The clarification of problematic systematic questions or synonyms was also not one of its aims. ... [Information of the supplier]