76 



KEPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1910. 



Agriculture, Department op — Con. 

 plants collected in California by Dr. 

 C. Hart Merriam (51109); 41 plants col- 

 lected in Arizona by E. W. Nelson 

 (51138); nest of a bush-tit, Psaltriparus 

 (51143); 6 specimens of landshells col- 

 lected by Vernon Bailey and D. D. 

 Streeter at Coos Bay, Oreg. (5117G); 103 

 birds' eggs (46 sets) and a nest from 

 Mexico (51206); 9 plants from the west- 

 ern part of the United States (51216); 4 

 specimens of Amphipods representing 

 the species Gammarus confervicolus 

 (51327); 20 specimens of Orthoptera 

 (51444); reptiles and batrachians from 

 Colorado and Wyoming, collected by 

 M. Cary (51613); 10 birds' eggs (3 sets) 

 (51635); 3 specimens of Opuntia col- 

 lected in Montana by ('. Birdseye, and 

 2 specimens of Cactacete collected in 

 Montana by E. A. Preble (51659); 50 

 plants collected in Washington and 

 Oregon by Dr. C. Hart Merriam and 

 Vernon Bailey (51672); 8 eggs and 12 

 nests of birds i'rom California, received 

 from H. W. Henshaw (51699). 



Bureau of Entomology: 4 specimens 

 of Isopods, Armadillidium vulgare from 

 Cincinnati (50524); 300 specimens of 

 Microlepidoptera collected by C. N. 

 Ainslie in New Mexico (50575); 39 liv- 

 ing specimens of Cactacese from the 

 southwestern part of the United States 

 (50873); 2 parasitic Hymenoptera 

 (50902) ; 79 specimens of Diptera (51140) ; 

 51 specimens of Hemiptera and Coleop- 

 tera (51190); about 200 parasitic Hy- 

 menoptera bred at the Gipsy Moth 

 Parasitic Laboratory, Melrose High- 

 lands, Mass. (51215); 206 specimens of 

 Coleoptera (51244); 37 specimens of 

 Coleoptera and Hemiptera (51293); 

 1,272 specimens of Diptera collected by 

 C. H. T. Townsend in Mexico (51331); 

 20 specimens of Coleoptera, mostly 

 types of species described by W. D. 

 Pierce (51353); 50 butterflies from the 

 Canal Zone (51380); 450 specimens of 

 Coleoptera (51400); about 5,000 insects 

 collected in Tampico, Mexico, by E. A. 

 Schwarz (51401); about 5,000 insects 

 from Paraguay collected by K. Fiebrig 

 (51418); about 30 specimens of para- 

 sitic Hymenoptera (51481); through 



Agriculture, Department of — Con. 

 C. V. Piper, 100 specimens of insects 

 received from George F. Berthoud, 

 Waroona, Western Australia (51539). 



Bureau of Plant Industry: 9 living 

 cacti from Colorado (50324); 450 plants 

 from Mexico, collected by Messrs. Cook, 

 Collins, and Doyle (50389); 2 speci- 

 mens of living Opuntia from Texas 

 (50481); 3 specimens of Cactacese from 

 Texas (50515); living specimen of Opun- 

 tia from Texas (50561); 3 living speci- 

 mens of Opuntia from Texas (50574); 3 

 living specimens of Cactaceee from 

 Texas (50581); 2 living specimens of 

 Opuntia from Texas (50600); 2 living 

 specimens of Cactaceae from Kansas 

 (50630); specimen of Echinocereus iroxn 

 Texas (50631); 2 living specimens of 

 Opuntia from Kansas (50650); 4 living 

 specimens of Opuntia from Kansas 

 (50663); 6 living specimens of Opuntia 

 from New Mexico (50666); specimen of 

 living Opuntia from Kansas (50669); 15 

 living specimens of Opuntia (50687); 

 living specimen of Opuntia pulcheUa 

 from Nevada (50697); 61 plants from 

 Kansas and Nebraska (50780) ; 23 plants 

 from the Arkansas National Forest; 1 

 plant from Alaska, collected by L. M. 

 Prindle, and 1 plant from Hawaii 

 (50835); 20 plants from Alaska (50868); 

 3 living specimens of Nopalea collected 

 in South Carolina by W. L. McAtee 

 (51026); 2 living specimens of Opuntia 

 collected in Florida by W. L. McAtee 

 (51125); land shells representing 3 spe- 

 cies from mountains near Balaklava, 

 Crimea, Russia, collected by Frank N. 

 Meyer (51163); 8 specimens of North 

 American grasses (51247); 18 photo- 

 graphs of plants, Dioscorea, from the 

 United States, received through H. H. 

 Bartlett (51384); land shells represent- 

 ing 4 species from near Novorosusk, Cau- 

 casus, Russia, collected by F. N. 

 Meyer (51424); 3 specimens of plants 

 collected in Panama by Charles F. 

 Mason (51479) ; living specimen of cac- 

 tus, Opuntia, collected in Nevada by 

 F. B. Headley (51515); 295 plants from 

 the United States (51584). 



Forest Service: 4 specimens of Cicuta 

 grandifolia (50321); 6 pitched water 



