144 ANIMAL ECOLOGY 



The cave environment, the vital optimum, and the 

 food relations are discussed. A valuable paper. 



BLATCHLEY, W. S. 



1896. Indiana Caves and their Fauna. Twenty-first Ann. 

 Rep. Geol. and Natural Resources of Indiana, pp. 

 121-212. 

 DENDY, A. 



1896. The Cryptozoic Fauna of Australasia. Austr. Assoc. 



Adv. Sci., 1895, pp. [1-21]. 



On animals living under stones, logs, and bark of trees. 

 DIEM, K. 



1903. Untersuchungen iiber die Bodenfauna in den Alpen. 

 Jahrb. d. St. Gallischen Naturwiss. Gesellsch. f. 

 1901-1902, pp. 234-414. 

 HAMANN, O. 



1896. Europaische Hb'hlenfauna. Eine Darstellung der in 

 den Hohlen Europas lebenden Tierwelt mit be- 

 sonderer Beriicksichtigung der Hohlenfauna Krains. 

 pp. 296. Jena. 



HOTTER, M. G. 



1898. A Contribution to the Study of the Fauna of the Grave. 

 A Study of One Hundred and Fifty Disinterments, 

 with Some Additional Experimental Observations. 

 Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc., Vol. VI, pp. 201-231. 

 A list of invertebrates, snails, Crustacea, insects, etc., 

 found in graves. Table compiled from Megnin 

 shows the kinds of animals which invade bodies at 

 the different stages of decay. This is a form of 

 succession comparable to the changes in the animals 

 living in a log at different stages of decay. 



PACKARD, A. S. 



1888. The Cave Fauna of North America, with Remarks on 

 the Anatomy of the Brain and Origin of the Blind 

 Species. Memoirs Nat. Acad. Sci., Vol. IV, pp. 

 1-156. 



