CURRENT LITERATURE 61 



ON THE BRITISH SPECIES OF HYDROT.EA, Dsv. Percy H. 

 Grimshaw, F.E.S. Ent. Mo. Ma : j., October and November 1905, 

 pp. 239-247. Several Scottish localities mentioned for the various 

 species. 



NEW AND RARE BRITISH ARACHNIDA. Rev. O. P. Cambridge. 

 Proc. Dorset Nat. Hist, and Antig. Field-Club, vol. xxvi. (1905), 

 pp. 40-74, 2 pis. Contains several Scottish records, including two 

 species new to science, namely, Trochosa postuma, found many years 

 ago at Balmoral by the late Col. Pickard, and Cnephalocotes am/u'ginis, 

 taken in Arran (not Bute as stated) by W. Evans in April 1895. 



ON SOME NEW AND RARE CRUSTACEA FROM THE SCOTTISH 

 SEAS. Thomas Scott, LL.D., F.L.S., etc. 2yd Ann. Rep. Fishery 

 Board for Scotland, part iii. (published i4th August 1905), pp. 141- 

 153, pis. x.-xiii. Describes fourteen species and varieties, of which 

 eisht are new to science and two new to Scotland. 



O 



NOTES ON BRITISH COPEPODA : CHANGE OF NAMES. Thomas 

 Scott, LL.D., F.L.S., Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., November 1905, 

 pp. 567-571. A new genus (Beatricella] erected, of which B. mi mica 

 is the type. This is recorded from the Firths of Forth and Clyde 

 and the Moray Firth. Dehwalia normani, sp. nov., is described from 

 specimens obtained at Hunterston, Firth of Clyde. 



OBSERVATIONS ON SOME PARASITES OF FISHES NEW OR RARE 

 IN SCOTTISH WATERS. Thomas Scott, LL.D., F.L.S., etc. 23;-^ 

 Ann. Rep. Fishery Board for Scotland, part iii. (published i4th 

 August 1905), pp. 108-119, pis. v. and vi. This paper deals with 

 twelve species of Copepoda and five of Trematoda, one of the former 

 group being new to science. 



BOTANY. 



OBITUARY NOTICE OF THE LATE DR. ANDREW PEEBLES AITKEN, 

 D.Sc. By William B. Boyd. Trans. Edin. Bot. Soc., xxiii. pp. 47-53. 



HERBARIA AND BIOLOGY. By Prof. J. W. H. Trail. Trans. 

 Edin. Bot. Soc., xxiii. pp. 69-81. 



SUPPLEMENT TO " TOPOGRAPHICAL BOTANY." Edited by Arthur 

 Bennett. This valuable supplement, which has been issued as a 

 separately-paged supplement to the Journal of Botany, was completed 

 in November. It extends to 118 pages. 



SCOTTISH ALPINE BOTANICAL CLUB MEETING, 1894. By 

 Alexander Cowan. Trans. Edin. Bot. Soc., xxiii. pp. 53-56. At 

 Cannich in Glenaffaric. 



MOSSES AND HEPATICS COLLECTED DURING EXCURSION OF 

 S. A. BOT. CLUB IN 1904. By L. J. Cocks. L.c. pp. 61, 62. 



