LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



139 



Fisher, Walter K. New starfishes from 

 the North Pacific— II. Spinulosa. 



Zool. A nzeigcr, 35, No. 18, Mar. 29, 



1910, pp. 568-574. 



Diagnoses five new species and four 



new subspecies belonging to the genera 



Poraniopsis, Ilenricia, Solasler, and Lo- 



phast%. 



McClendon, J. F. Contributions from 

 the laboratory of the Marine Biological 

 Association of San Diego, xxv. The 

 Ophiurans of the San Diego Region. 



Univ. Cal. Pub. Zool., 6, No. 3, 



July 15, 1909, pp. 33-fi4, pis. 1-6. 



The result of studies carried on at the 



Marine Biological Station at La Jolla. 



McClendon, J. F. — Continued. 



The ophiuran fauna was found to com- 

 prise twenty species, five of which are 

 described as new. 



Verrill, a. E. Descriptions of new gen- 

 era and species of starfishes from the 

 North Pacific coast of America. 



Amer. Journ. Sci., 4th ser., 28, 

 July, 1909, pp. 59-70, figs. 1-0. 

 Eleven new species, two new varieties, 

 and one new genus, Allasterias, are de- 

 scribed. Only four species and two varie- 

 ties are based on material in the National 

 Museum. 



WORMS, CCELENTERATES, PORIFERA, PROTOZOA, ETC. 



Annandale, Nelson. Fresh - water 



sponges collected in the Philippines by 



the Albatross Expedition. (Scientific 



results of the Philippine cruise of the 



Fisheries steamer Albatross, 1907-10. — 



No. 3.) 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 37, No. 



1702, Oct. 23, 1909, pp. 131, 132. 



Describes two new species, Spongilla 



micTosclerifera and S. philippinensis, both 



belonging to the subgenus Euspongilla. 



Fresh-water sponges in the collec- 



tion of the United States National Mu- 

 seum. — Pt. 2. Specimens from North 

 and South America. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 37, No. 



1712, Dec. 22, 1909, pp. 401-406, 



figs. 1-3. 



Notes six species and figures details 



of three of them. Distributes the species 



of the genus Carterius between Hetero- 



meycnia and Ephydatia. 



Fresh-water sponges in the collec- 



tion of the United States National Mu- 

 seum. — Pt. 3. Description of a new 

 species of Spongilla from China. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 38, No. 

 1737, June 6, 1910, p. 183. 

 Describes Spongilla {StTatospongilla) 

 sinensis, new species, from the canal at 

 Su-Chau, near Shanghai. 



BiGELow, Henry B. Cruise of the U. S. 

 Fisheries schooner Grampus in the Gulf 

 Stream during July, 1908, with descrip- 

 tion of a new Medusa (Bythotiaridse). 

 Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., 52, No. 

 12, Aug., 1909, pp. 195-210, 1 pi., 

 1 map. 

 Gives an account of the apparatus and 

 methods used and the results obtained for 



BiGELow, Henry B. — Continued. 



the surface, intermediate, and deep-sea 

 faunas. Descril»s a new speciesof Sibogita, 

 S. nauarchus, of the family Bythotiaridse. 



— ■ Ccelenterates from Labrador and 



Newfoundland, collected by Mr. Owen 

 Bryant from July to October, 1908. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 37, No. 



1706, Dec. 14, 1909, pp. 301-320, 



pis. 30-.32. 



Treats of the jellyfishes collected by Mr. 



Bryant along the east coast of Labrador 



and off the coast of Newfoundland. Gives 



notes on nineteen species, describes the 



young stages of Catablema vesicaria and 



certain anatomical features in Jiginopsis 



laurentii. 



The first set of duplicates is in the U. S. 

 National Museum. 



Crawley, Howard. Studies on blood 

 and blood parasites. 1. Observations 

 on mammalian blood with dark-field 

 illumination. 2. The priority of Cryp- 

 tobia Leidy, 1846, over Trypanoplasma 

 Laveran and Mesnil, 1901. 3. Trypan- 

 osoma americanum n. sp., a trypano- 

 some which appears in cultures made 

 from the blood of American cattle. 



(Preliminary notice.) U. S. 

 Dept. Agric, Bur. Animal In- 

 dustry, Bull. 119, Oct. 22, 1909, 

 pp. 1-31, figs. 1-3. 

 Trypanosoma americanum, a parasite 

 of cattle, is described as a new species and 

 notes on its biology are given. 



Cryptobia. The morphology and the 

 generic relationships of Cryptobia helicis 

 are discussed. It is shown that morpho- 

 logically the type species of Cryptobia 

 Leidy, 1840, and Trypanoplasma Laveran 

 and Mesnil, 1901 ( Cryptobia helicis Leidy, 



