mallophagan

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English

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A mallophagan (genus Menacanthus, unidentified species)

Etymology

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From Mallophaga +‎ -an.

Noun

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mallophagan (plural mallophagans)

  1. A chewing louse, any louse of the now obsolete suborder Mallophaga, any true louse that is not a sucking louse.
    • 1985, Olin Sewall Pettingill, Jr., Ornithology in Laboratory and Field, page 116:
      As a rule, mallophagans are host-specific, each species being restricted and adapted to a single bird species or groups of closely related bird species.
    • 1993, May Berenbaum, Ninety-nine More Maggots, Mites, and Munchers, page 226:
      Most are associated with birds (although at least one hundred species deign to dine on mammalian body tissues); the majority of mallophagans on birds (and hence the majority of mallophagans in general) have a pair of well-developed claws on the tips of their tarsi.
    • 2005, M. J. Lehane, The Biology of Blood-Sucking in Insects, page 8:
      While these mouthparts are not primarily designed to pierce skin some mallophagans do feed on blood. Menacanthus stramineus, a present-day mallophagan, feeds at the base of feathers or on the skin of the chicken.

Coordinate terms

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