ANT COMMUNITIES 



W. WHEELER, PROF. WILLIAM MORTON, Harvard Uni- 

 versity. 



1. Compound and Mixed Nests of American Ants. 



American Naturalist, Nos. 414, 415, 417. 418. Re- 

 print by Ginn c\: Co., Boston, 1901. 



2. On the Founding of Colonies by Queen Ants, with 



Special Reference to the Parasitic and Slave-Holding 

 Species. 1906, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat, Hist,, vol. 

 xxii. 



3. Notes on a New Guest- Ant. Bull. Wisconsin Nat. 



Hist, Soc., vol. v., No. 2, 1907. 



4. Ethological Observations on an American Ant. 



Journal fur Psychologic und Neurologic, ii., pp. 

 1-31. Leipzig, 1902. 



5. A Crustacean-Eating Ant. Biological Bulletin, vol. 



vi., No. 6, May, 1904. 



6. The Polymorphism of Ants, with an Account of Some 



Singular Abnormalities Due to Parasitism. Bull. 

 Am. Mus. Nat. Hist,, vol. xxiii., 1907. 



7. A New Type of Social Parasitism Among Ants. Bull. 



Am. Mus. Nat, Hist., vol. xx., art, xxx., pp. 347- 

 375, 1904. 



8. The Habits of the Tent -Building Ant (Cremastogaster 



lineolata SAY). Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. 

 xxii. 



9. Ants' Nests. Translation of Doctor Forel's paper on 



Ants' Nests for Smithsonian Report for 1894. 



10. Comparative Ethology of the European and North 

 American Ants. Journal fiir Psychologic und Neu- 

 rologie, pp. 400-435, Leipzig, 1908. 



11. A European Ant (Myrmica hvinodus) Introduced 

 into Massachusetts. Journal of Economic Entomol- 

 ogy, vol. i., No. 6, 1908. 



12. Studies on Myrmecophiles. I. Cremastochclus. Jour- 

 nal N. Y. Entomolog Soc., vol. xvi., No. 2, June, 1908. 



13. Ditto. II. Hetjerius. Id., Sept., 1908. 



14. Ditto. III. Microdon. Id., Dec.. 1908. 



312 



