GULF OF MEXICO 



169 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Agassiz, Alexander. 



1888. Three cruises of the U. S. Coast and Geodetic 

 Survey steamer Blake. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 

 Harvard College 14: 1-814. 



Conger, Paul S. 



1925-26. Diatom investigations of the Tortugas during 



June, 1926. Carnegie Inst. Washington Yearbook 



25: 240-241. 

 1926-27. Diatom research at the Tortugas Laboratory. 



Carnegie Inst. Washington Yearbook 26: 218. 

 1927-28. Diatom research at the Tortugas Laboratory, 



1928. Carnegie Inst. Washington Yearbook 27: 

 271-272. 



1928-29. Diatom research at the Tortugas Laboratory, 



1929. Carnegie Inst. Washington Yearbook 28: 

 283. 



1937-38. Diatom investigations. Carnegie Inst. Wash- 

 ington Yearbook 37: 89. 



1938-39. Diatom investigations. Carnegie Inst. Wash- 

 ington Yearbook 38: 223. 

 CoNNELL, C. H., and Cross, J. B. 



1950. Mass mortality of fish associated with the pro- 

 tozoan Gonyaulax in the Gulf of Mexico. Science 

 112 (2909): 359-363. 

 Davis, Charles C. 



1948a. Gymnodinium brevis sp. nov., a cause of dis- 

 colored water and animal mortality in the Gulf of 

 Mexico. Bot. Gaz. 109 (3) : 358-360. 



1948b. Notes on the plankton of Long Lake, Dade 

 County, Florida, with descriptions of two new cope- 

 pods. Quar. Jour. Florida Acad. Sci. 10 (2-3) : 79-88. 



1950. Observations of plankton taken in marine waters 

 of Florida in 1947 and 1948. Quar. Jour. Florida 

 Acad. Sci. 12 (2): 67-103. 



1954. The marine and fresh-wat«r plankton. Michigan 

 State College Press. (In press.) 

 and Williams, R. H. 



1950. Brackish wat<ar plankton from mangrove areas in 

 southern Florida. Ecology 31 (4): 519-531. 

 Grave, C, and Burkenroad, M. 



1928-29. Examination of pelagic organisms. Carnegie 

 Inst. Washington Yearbook 28: 283-284. 



GuNTER, Gordon. 



1942. OfTatts Bayou, a locality with recurrent summer 

 mortality of marine organisms. Am. Midland Nat. 

 28: 631-633. 

 1951. Mass mortality and dinoflagellate blooms in the 

 Gulf of Mexico. Science 113 (2931): 250-251. 

 Gunter, G.; Williams, R. H.; Davis, C. C; and Smith, 

 F. G. W. 



1948. Catastrophic mass mortality of marine animals 

 and coincident phytoplankton bloom on the west 

 coast of Florida, November 1946 to August 1947. 

 Ecol. Monographs 18: 309-324. 



King, Gladys S. 



1949. Production of red tide in the laboratory. Proe. 

 Gulf and Caribbean Fish. Inst. 2: 107-109. 



King, Joseph E. 



1950. A preliminary report on the plankton of the west 

 coast of Florida. Quar. Jour. Florida Acad. Sci., 

 12 (2): 109-137. 



OsoRio Tafall, B. F. 



1942. Estudios sobre el plancton de Mexico. Ciencia 



3 (3-4): 114-119. 



1944. Hallasgo de la diatomea Biddulphia sinensis 

 Greville en aguas del Golfo de Mdxico. Ciencia 



4 (8-10): 225-230. 

 Parr, Albert E. 



1935. Report on hydrographic observations in the Gulf 

 of Mexico and the adjacent straits made during the 

 Yale Oceanographic Expedition on the Mabel Taylor 

 in 1932. Bull. Bingham Oceanog. Coll. 5 (1): 1-93. 

 1939. Quantitative observations on the pelagic Sargas- 

 sum vegetation of the western North Atlantic with 

 preliminary discussions of morphology and relation- 

 ships. Bull. Bingham Oceanog. Coll. 6 (7) : 1-94. 

 Rilet, Gordon A. 



1937. The significance of the Mississippi River drainage 

 for biological conditions in the northern Gulf of 

 Mexico. Jour. Mar. Res. 1 (1): 60-74. 



1938. Plankton studies. I. A preliminary investigation 

 of the plankton of the Tortugas region. Jour. Mar. 

 Res. 1 (4): 335-352. 



Taylor, William R. 



1928. The marine algae of Florida, with special refer- 

 ence to the Dry Tortugas. Papers from the Tortugas 

 Lab. 25: 1-219, pis. 1-37. 



I 



