LOLIGO PEALEII. 151 



With a razor make cross-sections of a squid, a quarter of an 

 inch thick, and arrange them in order, in a httle water, as they 

 are made. Identify the parts you have found in dissection. 



Make dramngs of the sections that pass through the infra-eso- 

 phageal ganglion, through the eyes, through the liver, and through 

 the heart. 



If time permits, study prepared sections that have pre- 

 viously been made. The structure of the eye and the positions 

 of the parts of the nervous system should receive special atten- 

 tion. 



Specimens of other cephalopods, such as Octopus and Nau- 

 tilus, should be compared with the squid and the adaptations 

 that fit them for their particular lives noted. 



Brooks: The Development of the Squid (Loligo Pealii). Mem. Bost. 

 Soc. Nat. Hist., 1880. 



: Handbook of Invertebrate Zoology. 



Cowdry: Color Changes in Cephalopods. Univ. of Toronto Studies, 10, 

 1911. 



Drew: Sexual Activities of the Squid. I. Copulation, Egg-laying and Fer- 

 tilization. Jour. Morph., 22, 1911. 



: Sexual Activities of the Squid. II. The Spermatophore ; Its Struc- 

 ture, Ejaculation and Formation. Jour. Morph., 32, 1919. 



Faussek: Untersuchungen iiber die Entwicklung der Cephalopoden. 

 Mitt. Zool. Stat. Neapel, 14, 1900. 



Grifl5n: The Anatomy of Nautilus pompilius. Mem. Nat. Acad. Sci., 9, 

 1900. 



Vialleton: Recherches sur les primieres phases du developpment de la 

 Seiche (Sepia ofhcinahs). Ann. Sci. Nat. (7) Zool., 6, 1888. 



Willey: Contribution to the Natural History of the Pearly Nautilus. 

 Willey's Zool. Results. 4, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1902. 



Williams: The Anatomy of the Common Squid, Loligo pealii. Amer. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist. "V .■ 



: The Vascular System of the Common Squid. Am. Nat., 36, 1902. 



