40 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Jan., 



mologists that the antennse are the organs of smell in insects. The 

 evidence he sets forth is far from being convincing of the truth of 

 his final asseveration that "the antennse can no longer be regarded 

 as the seat of the sense of smell in insects"; and equally remote from 

 acceptance should be his conclusion that the organs he chooses to 

 call "olfactory pores" "are the true olfactory apparatus in 

 Hymenoptera. " 



List of Miss Fielde's Published Papers on Ants. 



(a) Portable Ant Nests. Biological Bulletin, Vol. II, No. 11, September, 1900. 

 (6) A Study of an Ant. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of 



Philadelphia, July, 1901; issued September 4, 1901. 

 (f) Further Study of an Ant. Proceedings, October, 1901; issued November 



22, 1901. 



(d) Notes on an Ant. Proceedings, September, 1902; issued December 4, 1902. 



(e) Supplementary Notes on an Ant. Proceedings, June, 1903; issued September 



4, 1903. 



(/) Experiments with Ants induced to Swim. Proceedings, September, 1903; 

 issued October 5, 1903. 



ig) A Cause of Feud between Ants of the same Species living in different Com- 

 munities. Biological Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 6, November, 1903. 



(/i) Artificial Mi.xed Nests of Ants. Biological Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 6, November, 

 1903. 



(i) Observations on Ants in their Relation to Temperature and Submergence. 

 Biological Bulletin, Vol. VII, No. 3, August, 1904. 



0') Portable Ant Nests. Biological Bulletin, Vol. VII, No. 4, September, 1904. 



(k) Power of Recognition among Ants. Biological Bulletin, Vol. VII, No. 5, 

 October, 1904. 



(I) Reactions of Ants to material Vibrations. Proceedings, September, 1904; 

 issued November 2, 1904. 



(ni) Three Odd Incidents in Ant Life. Proceedings, September, 1904; issued 

 November 2, 1904. 



(«) Tenacitv of Life in Ants. Biological Bulletin, Vol. VII, No. 6, November, 

 1904.' 



(o) The Sense of Smell in Ants. The Independent, August 17, 1905. 



(p) How an Ant went to Market and came Home again. Written October, 1905. 

 In Boys and Girls' Magazine, Ithaca, New York, April, 1906. 



(q) Temperature as a Factor in the Development of Ants. Biological Bulletin, 

 Vol. IX, No. 6, November, 1905. 



(r) Observations on the Progeny of Virgin Ants. Biological Bulletin, Vol. IX, 

 No. 6, November, 1905. 



(s) The Communal Life of Ants. Nature-Study Review, Vol. I, No. 6, Novem- 

 ber, 1905. 



(t) The Progressive Odor of Ants. Biological Bulletin, Vol. X, No. 1, December, 

 1905. 



(u) Longevity of a Velvet Ant. Biological Bulletin, Vol. XI, No. 5, October, 

 1906. 



(r) Suggested Explanations of certain Phenomena in the Lives of Ants. Bio- 

 logical Bulletin, Vol. XIII, No. 3, August, 1907. 



(ir) The Nose of an Ant. Spinning Wheel Magazine, Vol. I, No. 2, December, 

 1914. 



