LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



243 



BRYOZOANS. 



OsBUEN, Raymond C. The Bryozoa of 

 the Tortugas Islands, Florida. 



Carnegie Inst, of M'ash- 

 Ington, Pub. No. 182, 

 1914, pp. 181-222, 

 figs. 1-23. 

 Although this paper is con- 

 cerned mainly with material ob- 

 tained for the Carnegie Institu- 



OsBURN, Raymond C. — Continued. 



tion, specimens are recorded of 

 two species, Lichcnopora his- 

 pida and Holoporelln, species 

 not named, which were obtained 

 by Dr. Paul Bartsch at Biscayne 

 Key and are in the National Mu- 

 seum collection. 



COELENTERATES. 



Hargitt, Charles W. The Anthozoa 

 of the Woods Hole region. 



Bull. Bur. Fisheries, 32, 

 No. 788, Apr. 25, 

 1914, pp. 223-254, 

 pis. 41-44, figs. 1-5. 

 Gives a general account of 

 the characteristics of the An- 

 thozoa, their morphology, color- 

 ation, phosphorescence, repro- 



Hargitt, Charles W. — Continued. 



duction, distribution and eco- 

 nomic relations. The syste- 

 matic part includes descriptions 

 of all the divisions down to 

 species, and keys to families. 

 Twenty-two species are in- 

 cluded In the fauna. Two of 

 the plates are colored. 



PROTOZOANS. 



CusHMAN, Joseph Augustine. A mon- 

 ograph of the foraminifera of the 

 North Pacific Ocean. Pt. 3. La- 

 genidse. 



Bull. U. <S'. Nat. Mus., 

 No. 71, Dec. 12, 

 1913, pp. 1-ts, 1- 

 125, pis. 1-47. 

 This is the third part of a 

 work on the Foraminifera of the 

 North Pacific Ocean, the first of 

 which appeared in 1910 and the 

 second in 1911. The author de- 

 scribes 5 subfamilies, 12 genera, 

 162 species, and 46 varieties, 

 subspecies, and forms. Nearly all 

 are figured. There are 13 new 

 species, 17 new varieties and 2 

 new names for known species. 



Nat. Mus., 



Feb. 28, 



i-vi, 1-46, 



CusHMAN, Joseph Augustine. A 

 monograph of the Foraminifera of 

 the North Pacific Ocean. Pt. 4. 

 Chilostomellidse, Glohigerinidie, Num- 



mulitidifi. 



Bull. U. S. 

 No. 71, 

 1914, pp 

 pis. 1-19. 

 This is the fourth part of a 

 work on the Foraminifera, the 

 third part of which is noticed 

 above. The three families dis- 

 cussed are represented in the 

 North Pacific Ocean by 14 gen- 

 era, 41 species and 1 variety. 

 All but two of The species are 

 figured. 



BOTANY. 



Cook, O. F. Nomenclature of the Sa- 



pote and the Sapodilla. 



Contr. U. S. Nat. Herh., 

 16, pt. 11, Dec. 13, 

 1913, pp. 277-285, 

 pis. 100, 101. 



Greene, Edward L. Certain violet 



names. 



Amer. Midland Natu- 

 ralist, 3, No. 4, July, 

 1913, pp. 79-85. 



NovitatesBoreali-Americanae. 7. 



Repertorium speclcrum 

 novarum regni vege- 



Greene, Edward L. — Continued. 



taMlis auctore F. 



Fedde, 13, Apr. 28, 



1914, pp. 320-324. 



Descriptions of new species, 



two in Aquilegia, one in Aconi- 



tum, five In Vancouveria, two 



in Dodecatheon, one In Calliste- 



ris, and one in Agoseris. 



Hitchcock, A. S. Mexican grasses in 



the United States National Herba- 



rium. 



Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herh 

 17, pt. 3. .Tuly 1.'. 

 1913. pp. 181-389. 



