LITERATURE CITED 



Cargo, D. G. 



1958. Sizes of crabs compared. Md. Tidewater 

 News 13(3): 1-4. 



Churchill, E. P., Jr. 



1919. Life history of the blue crab. Bull. U.S. Bur. 

 Fish. 36: 91-128. 

 CosTLOw, John D., Jr., and C. G. Bookhout. 



1959. The larval development of Callinectes sapidus 

 Rathbiui reared in the laboratory. Biol. Bull. 

 (Woods Hole) 116: 373-396. 



FiSCHLER, K. J. 



1959. Occurrence of extremely small ovigerous crabs 

 (Callinectes sp.) in coastal North Carolina. Ecology 

 40: 720. 

 Gray, Ellen H., and Curtis L. Newcombe. 



1938. Studies of moulting in Callinectes sapidus 

 Rathbun. Growth 2: 28.5-296. 

 Haefner, Paul A., Jr., and Carl N. Shuster, Jr. 



1964. Length increments during terminal molt of 

 the female blue crab, Callinectes sapidus, in dif- 

 ferent salinity environments. Chesapeake Sci. 

 5: 114-118. 

 Newcombe, Curtis L. 



1945. 1944-1945 report of the Virginia Fisheries 

 Laboratory. Va. Comm. of Fish., Annu. Rep. 46 

 and 47, pp. 21-30. 



Newcombe, Curtis L., Mildred D. Sandoz, and R 



ROGERS-T ALBERT. 



1949. Differential growth and moulting characteris- 

 tics of the blue crab, Callinectes sapidus Rathbun. 

 J. Exp. Zool. 110: 113-1.52. 

 Odum, Howard T. 



1953. Factors controlling marine invasion into 

 Florida fresh waters. Bull. Mar. Sci. Gulf Caribbean 

 3: 134-1.56. 

 Porter, Hugh J. 



1956. Delaware blue crab. LTniv. Del., Mar. Lab., 

 Estuarine Bull. 2(2): 3-5. 

 Rees, George H. 



1963. Edible crabs of the United States. U.S. Fish 

 Wildl. Serv., Fish. Leaf!. 550, 18 pp. 

 Tagatz, Marlin E. 



1965. The fishery for blue crabs in the St. Johns 

 River, Florida, with special reference to fluctuation 

 in yield between 1961 and 1962. LT.S. Fish Wildl. 

 Serv., Spec. Sci. Rep. Fish. 501, iii-fll pp. 

 Tyler, Albert V., and David G. Cargo. 



1963. Size relations of two instars of the blue crab, 

 Callinectes sapidus. Chesapeake Sci. 4: 52-54. 

 Van Engel, W. A. 



1958. The blue crab and its fishery in Chesapeake 

 Bay. Part 1. Reproduction, early development, 

 growth, and migration. Commcr. Fish. Rev. 20(6) : 

 6-17. 



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