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THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



experiment stations, etc., so thai the importance of the subject should not be 

 measured by comparing tlie economic figures in Table I with the figures of other 

 groups. 



Papers on distribution, including host lists and those covering general 

 entomology, are evidently of considerable interest to entomologists, judging \)y 

 the number of titles devoted to each. The same is true for brief notes on all 

 phases of the subject. Anatomical, morphological and physiological subjects 

 are fairly well represented and will undoubtedly be more so in the future. Insect 

 behaviour, ecology and origin are poorly represented, but papers on such sub- 

 jects often appear in other journals, such as those devoted to animal behaviour 

 and natural history in general. 



TABLE L NUMBER OF TITLES ON EACH Sl'BJECT, 



TABLE II, NUMBER OF MAJOR AND MINOR PAPERS IN ALL JOURNALS. 



In Table 11 the titles are further grouped into major ones, which include 

 all of those listed in Table III and minor ones which include everything else, 



