640 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol. xxv. 



1864. Thorell, M. T. Om tveniie Europeiske Argulider; jemte anmiirkningar om 

 Argulidernas morfologi och systematiska stiillning, samt en ofversigt af de 

 for niirvarande ktinda arterna af denna familj. 



Oefversigt af Kongl. Vetenskaps-Akademicns FOrhandlingar, 1864, No. 1. Pp. 7-72, pl.s. 

 II-IV. 



Translated in Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 3d ser., XVIII, 1866, pp. 149-169, 

 268-286, 436-451. 



Summary and description of all known species. Advocates inclusion of the Argulida- as 

 a third suborder under the order Branchiopoda, of equal value with the Phyllopods and 

 Cladocera, and to be called Branchiura. 

 1864. Thorell, M. T. Om Argulus dactylopteri, en ny Yestindisk hafs-argulid. 



Oefversigt af Kongl. Vetenskaps-Akademiens Forhandlingar, 1864, No. 10, pp. 609-614, 



pi. XVI. 



Describes and figures this new species. 

 1866 — . Gerstaecker, A. Arthropoda, in Bronn's Klass^en iind Ordnungen des 

 Thier-Reichs, V, Leipzig und Heidelberg. 

 Retracts his former classification and places the Argulidai under the Branchiopoda, p. 16. 

 1871. Leydig, Franz. Ueber eiiiem Argulus der Umgebung von Tubingen. 

 Archiv fiir Naturgeschichte, XXXVII, pt. 1, pp. 1-24. 



Adopts Thorell's classification, placing the Argulidse under the Branchiopoda. Describes 

 and figures the new si)ecies .4. phnxini. 



1874. Smith, S. I. The Invertebrates of Vineyard Sound. 



Report of U. S. Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries, 1874. 



Describes (pp. 574, 575) the new .species A. laticauda, A. latus, and A. vwt/alops, but gives 

 no figures. 



1875. Claus, Carl. Ueber die Entwickelung, Organisation luid systeniatische Stcl- 



lung der Arguliden. 



Zeitschrift fiir wissenschaftliche Zoologie, XXV, pp. 217-284, pis. xiv-xviii. 



From studies of .4. /otoeeits and A. coregoiii advocates the placing of the Argulidis as a 

 second suborder of the Branchiura, under the order Copepoda, the other suborder, the 

 Eucopepoda, consisting, respectively, of the free-swimming Copepods ( Gnatlinstomatii) and 

 the parasitic forms exclusive of the Argulidai {Parasita vr Siphoninitonidta). the classifica- 

 tion adopted by Parker and Haswell. 



1877. Kellicott, David S. Description of a New Species of Argulus. 

 Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Science, III, p. 214. 

 Describes and figures A. lepidostci, found on the gar-pike in the Niagara River. 



1880. Kellicott, David S. A Larval Argulus. 

 North American Entomologist, I, p. 57. 



Describes the larva of an undetermined species of Argulus. The eggs require eighty days 

 to hatch, and the newly hatched larva has all the appendages of the adult (A. xtizostetliii). 



1880. Kellicott, David S. Argnhix tilizoKldliii, n. s. 



American Journal of Microscoiiy ami i'opular Science, V, p. 53. 



Describes and figures the new sj.cciis which was obtained from a blue pike in tlie Niag- 

 ara River. This account was published two months after the preceding, and although not 

 actually so stated, yet the details agree so fully as to leave it almost certain that these are 

 the adults of which those were the larvae. 



1882. Faxon, WaliEr. Bibliography of the Crustacea. 



Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard, IX, No. 

 Includes only the embryological literature. 



1885. Van Beneden, P. J. Animal Parasites and Messmates. 



International Scientific Series, XIX, D. Appleton & Co. 

 1884. Rathbun, Richard. Annotated List of Described Species of Parasitic Cope- 

 pods (Siphonostoma) from American Waters contained in the U. S. National 

 Museum. 



Proceedings of the U. S. National Museum, VII, p. 483. 



1886. Kellicott, David S. A Note on Argidxis catostomi. 



Proceedings of the American Society of Microscopists, VII, p. 144. 



Records the fact that this "hitherto rare and supposed marine species of such beauty 

 occurs in our fresh-water lakes, ' having been taken by Prof. S. H. Gage from suckers in 

 Cayuga Lake, Ithaca, New York, May, 18o6. 



