Ship Island and at the Gulf Coast Research Laboratory just east of 

 Ocean Springs. 



771 



Miller, G. J., and S. B. Jones. 1967. The vascular flora of Ship 

 Island, Mississippi. Castanea 32(2):84-99. 



A checklist of the flora of Ship Island is presented, which in- 

 cludes 319 species in 78 families. 



772 



Waller, T. H. , and L. P. Malbrough. 1976. Temporal changes in the 

 offshore islands of Mississippi. Mississippi State University, 

 Mississippi Water Resources Research Institute, Completion Report. 

 109 pp. 



Deals with historical monitoring of Petit Bois, Horn, Ship, and 

 Cat Islands and the recording of shoreline changes as an insight 

 into factors affecting these changes. 



Cat Island 



773 

 *Eleuterius, L. N. 1972. The marshes of Mississippi. Castanea 37: 

 153-168. 



This paper presents the results of a 1968-1969 study to deter- 

 mine the composition, area, zonation, and organic production of 

 marsh vegetation along the Mississippi coast, including specifi- 

 cally Deer, Petit Bois, Horn, Ship, and Cat islands. 



774 



Krutak, P. R. 1975. Environmental variation in living and total 

 populations of Holocene Foraminifera and Ostracoda, coastal Mis- 

 sissippi, USA. American Association of Petroleum Geology, Bulle- 

 tin 59(1):140-145. 



Quantitative bottom samples are described from seven subenviron- 

 ments of the Bay St. Louis and Cat Island barrier-island complex, 

 Mississippi . 



775 

 *Penfound, W. T., and M. E. O'Neill. 1934. The vegetation of Cat 

 Island, Mississippi. Ecology 15:10-16. 



Describes Cat Island and its vegetation of pine-oak forest, marsh, 

 grassland, and sand dunes. 



776 



Perry, H. M. 1972. Notes on the life history of the blue crab, Cal- 

 linectes sapidus Rathbun, in Mississippi Sound and adjacent waters. 



165 



