Definition of Family psocidae

1. Noun. A family of small soft-bodied insects that feed on decaying vegetation; related to booklice.


Lexicographical Neighbors of Family Psocidae

family Potamogetonaceae
family Priacanthidae
family Primulaceae
family Pristidae
family Procaviidae
family Procellariidae
family Procyonidae
family Proteaceae
family Proteidae
family Prunellidae
family Pseudococcidae
family Pseudomonodaceae
family Psilophytaceae
family Psilotaceae
family Psittacidae
family Psocidae
family Psophiidae
family Psychodidae
family Psyllidae
family Pteridaceae
family Pteriidae
family Pteroclididae
family Pterodactylidae
family Ptilonorhynchidae
family Pucciniaceae
family Pulicidae
family Punicaceae
family Pygopodidae
family Pyralidae
family Pyralididae

Literary usage of Family psocidae

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Plagues and Pleasures of Life in Bengal by David Douglas Cunningham (1907)
"Certain small relatives of dragon-flies and white- ants, in the form of insects of the family Psocidae, are often to be met with in Indian gardens, ..."

2. A Manual on the Study of Insects by John Henry Comstock, Anna Botsford Comstock (1895)
"Some members of the family Psocidae do not live in books, but feed upon lichens that are found on the trunks of trees and on fences, often a great number ..."

3. The Encyclopedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"In the case of the smaller death-watches, some of the so-called book-lice of the family Psocidae, the exact way in which the sound is caused has not been ..."

4. Insects Injurious to the Household and Annoying to Man by Glenn Washington Herrick (1914)
"There are several species of the family Psocidae occurring in dwelling-houses, but none of them except this one apparently ever becomes numerous enough to ..."

5. Entomology for Beginners for the Use of Young Folks, Fruit-growers, Farmers by Alpheus Spring Packard (1888)
"family psocidae.—Small insects, with short cylindrical bodies, a small prothorax, and a swollen clypeus, resembling Aphides; wings small, ..."

6. Economic Zoology: An Introductory Text-book in Zoology, with Special by Herbert Osborn (1908)
"... which includes book lice, mostly included in the family Psocidae. The most common form of book louse is ..."

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