PUBLKA'J'IONS OF CHARLES GIKAIU), M. D. 93 



1889. GiRAKD, Charles — Continued. 



This question, however, has uot been (Icliiiittly settled. The objections to this tlieory are 

 given iu tlio abov(> jjapcr. 



Tlie following species have been oliserved and tigured: 

 C'l/prinodon calaritantii. Val. 



Zab occidental and all the wells of Oucd Rix. 

 Chrmnis Desfontainii, Sauv. 



Hot Springs of Gaffa. 30° K. 

 C hromis zillii, Sanv. 



Oued Rix from Meliix Chott to Toiigoiirt. 

 Hemiehromis Saharre, Sauv. 



AVells from the vicinities of Tougoiirt. 

 Tlemichromisi liolandii, Sauv. 

 Zab occidental (Zibans). 

 Similar, though ditfercut .species of the Cliromid family, live in the depths of the Lake of 

 Tiberias, with the curious habits of hatching their own eggs and bringing up their progeny 

 sheltered iu their buccal cavity. It remains to be seen whether the Chromids of Africa exhibit 

 the .same traits in their habits. 



190. 



1889. GiRAKD, Charles. Les Andes et la, Cordillfere 6(piatoriennes. Le Xafnraliste, 

 Paris, 37-38, 1.59-161, 1889. 



The conimitteo for the organization of the first international congress of zoology have en- 

 deavored to point out a certain number of questions upon which a discussion might bo usefully 

 raised byitsfuture members. Among those questions was the "Determinationof the regions 

 of tlie globe the fauna of whicli was insufficiently known." 



The above paper tends to show that the Republic of the Equator throughout, witli the sur- 

 rounding headwaters of the Rio del Cauca, the Rio Magdalena, tlie Amazon River, the Rio 

 Parana, and th(! Rio La Plata, with special references to the subterranean faunas, were in- 

 cluded in tliat category. 



191. 



1889. Girard, Charles. Les Andes, laCordilloicd rAmazonic: PrecM6 d'lme lettre 

 a Mr. Ra]>h. Blanchard. 

 Congres international de Zoologic, Paris, 1889, 101. 



Revised edition of the foregoing paper, together with special reference to the fishes ejected 

 by the volcanos of tho equator, and to the lack of scientific information as to their natural 

 history. A letter to R. Blanchard enumerates the species actually living in open waters sur- 

 rounding those volcanos, and which have been too ha.stily identified from Humboldt's time to 

 our days by ichthyologists. 



192. 



1889. GiRARD, Charles. La Faiiue Soiiterraiue des Andes et de la- Cordillfere. 



Congres international de Zoologie, Paris, 1889, 110. 



A complement of the foregoing "Paper, "and entering into fuller details respecting our 

 actual knowledge upon the subterranean fauna of the regions previously mentioned. 



193. 



1890. GiitARD, Charles. Les I'oissous Yivii)ares de la cAte Ani(:^rieaine de I'ocdan 



Pacifique. 



Le NatHraliste, No. 69, 24-25 ; No. 70, 39 ; No. 72, 61-62 (figs. ). Paris, 1890. 



A French translation from the "Report on the Fishes in the Explorations and Surveys of 

 tho Pacific Railroad." [No. 93.] 



194. 



1890. GiRARi), Charles. 1 >e la Pliosjdioreseeuee en {i;^n<5ral et celle desmersenpar- 

 tienlier. 

 Le Naturalistc Paris, 1890, pji. 210-212. 



