90 ANIMAL ECOLOGY 



WEISS, F. E. 



1909. A Preliminary Account of the Submerged Vegetation 



of Lake Windermere as Affecting the Feeding Ground 



of Fish. Mem. and Pro. Manchester Lit. and Phil. 



Soc., Manchester Memoirs, 1908-1909, Vol. LETT, 



Mem. 11, pp. 1-9. 

 TRANSEAU, E. N. 



1908. The Relation of Plant Societies to Evaporation. Bot. 



Gaz., Vol. XLV, pp. 217-231. 

 Shows vegetational control upon the relative humidity 



of the air. 

 FULLER, G. D. 



1911. Evaporation and Plant Succession. Bot. Gaz., Vol. 



LII, pp. 193-208. 

 Further studies of the vegetational control of the 



relative evaporating power of the air. 

 SHELFORD, V. E. 



1907. Preliminary Note on the Distribution of the Tiger 

 Beetles (Cicindela) and its Relation to Plant Suc- 

 cession. Biol. Bull., Vol. XIV, pp. 9-14. 

 The sequence of vegetational changes which determine 

 the habitats of a predaceous insect. 



1912. Ecological Succession. IV. Vegetation and the Con- 



trol of Land Animal Communities. Biol. Bull., 

 Vol. XXin, pp. 59-99. 



An important paper correlating the development of 

 the vegetation and the changing animal associations. 

 COOK, O. F. 



1909. Vegetation Affected by Agriculture in Central America. 



U. S. Dept. Agr., Bur. Plant Industry, Bull. No. 145. 

 pp. 30. 

 Vegetational change in the tropics as affected by 



man and its relation to plant succession. 

 FERNOW, B. E., and HARRINGTON, M. W., and others. 



1893. Forest Influences. U. S. Dept. Agr., Forestry Div., 

 Bull. No. 7. pp. 197. 



