1648 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. 



Liitken has not been able to find any confirmation of the statements of Bennett and Scammon 

 that there are Cyami on the Cachalot (Physeter maerocephalus). He now thinks it 

 may be doubtful whether the same species of Cyamus ever lives on different closely related 

 species of Whale, though it is certain that the same species of Whale may play the host to 

 two or three species of Cyamus. 



1887. Monaco, le Prince Albert de. 



Sur les recherches zoologiques poursinvies durant la seconde campagne 



scientifique de Z'Hirondelle, 1886. Note du Prince Albert de Monaco, presentee 



par M. A. Milne-Edwards. Comptes rendus Hebdomadaires des seances de 



rAcademie de Sciences, par MM. les Secretaires perpetuels. Tome CIV. No. 7 



(14 Fevrier 1887). Paris, 1887. pp. 452-454. 



It is mentioned that, in dredging between the latitudes of Belle-Isle and la Gironde, 



" Sur les pentes de sable fin plus ou moins vaseux qui s'^tendent au large des cotes de France et 



par 130 m a 166 m de profondeur; 

 "Parmi les Amphipodes, trois formes, non signalizes en ces parages, ont ete recueillies : Eusirus 



longipes Boeck, Epimeria eomigera Fabr., Tryphosa longipes Sp. Bate." 



1886- Packard, A. S. 



1887. 



The American Naturalist. Vol. XX. pp. 889, 973, Vol. XXI. p. 279. 



In these papers referring to the organs of smell in the Arthropoda, the views of various writers 

 are briefly compared. 



1887. Stebbing, T. R. R. 



On some new Exotic Amphipoda from Singapore and New Zealand. Received 

 November 12th, 1885, read January 19th, 1886. From the Transactions of the 

 Zoological Society of London, Vol. XII. part. vi. 1887. Plates XXXVIIL, XXXIX. 



See Note on Stebbing, 1886 (p. 586). Amphifhopsis cserulea (Thomson), is here named Pherusa 

 cmrulea as Mr. G. M. Thomson had originally proposed that it should be called. This species 

 and Talorcliestia tumida, Thomson, are figured, as also Byblis kallarthrus, Stebbing. 



1887. Whymper, Edward. 



Several specimens of Amphipods taken by Mr. Whymper at various localities in Ecuador have 

 proved on examination to be the species named Hyalella inermis by Professor S. I. Smith. 

 See Note on de Saussure, 1858, and on Philippi, 1860. Some of the specimens, Mr. 

 Whymper informs me, were taken at Antisana, at a height of 13,300 feet above the sea. 

 This, so far as I can discover, is the highest point from which Amphipoda have been obtained. 



1888. BARROIS, Th. 



Note sur l'histoire naturelle des Acores. — De l'adaptation de YOrchestia littorea 



Montagu a la vie terrestre. Bulletin de la Societe Zoologique de France pour 



l'annue 1888. t. xiii, sdance du 10 Janvier 1888. Paris, Janvier 1888. pp. 19-22. 



After recalling the observations on the terrestrial habits of various species of Orchestia recorded 

 by Dana, Heller, Hoek, Spence Bate, von Martens, Fritz Muller, Bate and Westwood, 



