140 



EEPOET OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1910. 



Crawley, Howard — Continued. 



1846, and Trypanoplasma borreli Laveran 

 and Mesnil, 1901), are congeneric, and 

 that the generic name Trypanoplasma 

 should therefore give way to the name 

 Cryptobia. 



CusHMAN, Joseph Augustine. A mono- 

 graph of the Foraminifera of the North 

 Pacific Ocean | Part I. Astrorhizidse 

 and Lituolid* | By | Joseph Augus- 

 tine Cushman | of the Boston Society 

 of Natural History | (Seal) | Wash- 

 ington I Government Printing Office ] 

 1910. 



Biill. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 71, 



June 30, 1910, pp. i-xiv, \-\U, 



figs. 1-20.3. 



This is the first part of a work the intent 



of which is to describe and illustrate the 



Foraminifera of the North Pacific Ocean; 



it includes the families Astrorhizidas and 



Lituolid;c', together often known as the 



arenaceous foraminifera, and commonly 



considered the more primitive group. 



A considerable number of changes in 

 the nomenclature and systematic arrange- 

 ment have been made in an attempt to 

 separate more clearly species and groups 

 which, after the study of the extensive 

 material available, appear to be dis- 

 tinctive. 



The collections upon which this mono- 

 graph is based were brought together as a 

 result of the work of the various vessels of 

 the Navy Department, the Coast and 

 Geodetic Survey, and the Bureau of Fish- 

 eries. 



KopoiD, Charles Atwood. Reports on 

 the scientific results of the expedition 

 to th^ eastern tropical Pacific, in charge 

 of Alexander Agassiz, by the U. S. Fish 

 Commission steamer Albatross, from 

 October, 1904, to March, 1905, Lieut. 

 Commander L. M. Garrett, U. S. N., 

 commanding, xx. Mutations in Cer- 

 atium. 



Bull. Mus. Com p. Zool., 52, No. 

 13, Sept., 1909, pp. 21.3-2.57, pis. 

 1-4. text figs. A-E. 

 Discusses normal schizogony in Cerat- 

 ium, the distribution of the genus, its 

 division into five subgenera, the mutation 

 of C tripos to C. calif orniense, and be- 

 tween the latter and C. ostenftidi. Re- 

 views the earlier observations on muta- 

 tions in Protista and discusses the signifi- 

 cance of the phenomena. Concludes 

 with a bibliography of the subject. 



Moore, J. Percy. The polychsetoua 

 annelids dredged by the U. S. S. Alba- 

 tross off the coast of southern California 



1 Omitted from 



Moore, J. Percy — Continued. 



in 1904. — I. Syllidee, Sphserodoridse, 

 Hesionidae, and Phyllodocidae. 



Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 41, 

 Pt. 2, .Tune, 1909, pp. 321-351, 

 pis. 15, 10. 

 Based on a rich collection from Monte- 

 rey Bay and southward, comprising 

 twenty-one species, of which twelve are 

 described as new. 



The polycheetous annelids 



dredged in 1908 by Mr. Owen Bryant 

 off the coasts of Labrador, Newfound- 

 land, and Nova Scotia. 



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

 1703, Oct. 25, 1909, pp. 133-146. 

 Fifty-one species are recorded, with 

 notes; thirty-one are supposed to be new 

 to the region, while six have not previ- 

 ously been reported from American 

 waters. 



Ransom, Brayton Howard. The Tae- 

 nioid Cestodes of North | American 

 Birds I By | Brayton Howard Ran- 

 som I Assistant Custodian, Helmin- 

 thological Collections, U. S. National 

 Museum | (Seal) | Washington | Gov- 

 ernment Printing Office | 1909. 



Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 69, 



Dec. 31, 1909, pp. 1-141, figs. 



1-42. 



This includes a description of several 



new species, the type specimens of which 



are deposited in the Helminthological 



collection of the U. S. National Museum; 



a synopsis of the superfamily Taenioidea, 



with generic diagnoses, and a list of all 



species of this superfamily occurring in 



North American birds. 



RiTTER, Wm. E. ' The ascidians col- 

 lected by the United States Fisheries 

 Bureau steamer Albatross on the coast 

 of California during the summer of 

 1904. 



Univ. Cal. Pub. Zool, 4, No. 1, 



Oct. 20, 1907, pp. 1-52, pis. 1-3. 



Deals with the offshore fauna only. 



Fourteen species were collected, all but 



two of which are new. 



Stiles, Charles Wardell, and Charles 

 George Crane. The internal para- 

 sites of rats and mice in their relation 

 to diseases of man. 



Pub. Health Bull., U. S. P. H. 

 and M. H.S., 1910, pp. 87-110, 

 figs. 9-58. 

 One of several papers comprising the 

 bulletin entitled "The rat and its rela- 

 tion to the public health." 



Report for 1908. 



