SECRETARY'S REPORT 11 



The Graham Held collection of 2,243 specunens, chiefly Lycaenidae, 

 from Atlanta, Ga., was also obtained. The Boyce Thompson Institute 

 for Plant Research presented 7,966 miscellaneous insects through 

 Dr. Albert Hartzell; O. L. Cartwright donated 7,500 Scarabaeidae 

 from his personal collection; and Dr. C. M. Biezanko added 621 

 Brazilian insects. Dr. Nell B. Causey, University of Arkansas, do- 

 nated 415 centipedes, most of wliich were collected in the southern 

 United States. Received by transfer from the Insect Identification 

 and Parasite Introduction Research Branch, U.S. Department of 

 Agriculture, were 59,673 specunens retained in the course of identifica- 

 tions made by the combined staffs. 



Outstanding among the accessions acquired by the division of ma- 

 rine invertebrates were 1,461 identified copepod crustaceans, including 

 2 holotypes, 2 allotypes, and 672 paratypes of 14 species, donated by 

 Dr. Arthur G. Humes, of Boston University. Received from Mrs. 

 Will Hutchins, Washington, D.C., were 2,000 slides of bryozoans 

 representing the personal collection of her son, the late Dr. Louis W. 

 Hutchins. Dr. Paul L. Illg, University of Washington, added 22 

 specimens of 10 species of notodelphyid copepod crustaceans, includ- 

 ing holotypes of all 10 species, allotypes of 2, and paratypes of 6, 

 From C. E. Dawson, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory, 620 miscellan- 

 eous marine invertebrates collected in the Persian Gulf were received. 

 Dr. Arthur Loveridge, St. Helena Island, added 334 miscellaneous 

 marine invertebrates. A gift of 208 amphipod crustaceans collected 

 during a voyage in the Okhotsk Sea of the training ship Hokusei Maru 

 was made by Dr. Sigeru Motoda, Hokkaido University. Received 

 from the Carnegie Institution of Washington were 1,800 lots of plank- 

 ton from the cruises of the Carnegie. Received by transfer from the 

 U.S. Navy Hydrographic Office, through William H. Littlewood, were 

 360 miscellaneous marine invertebrates collected in the Ross Sea by 

 J. Q. Tierney, from the U.S.S. Staten Island during the U.S. Navy 

 Deep Freeze Expedition of 1960-61. Collections made for the Smith- 

 sonian include 1,165 miscellaneous marine invertebrates from Puerto 

 Rico by Dr. Thomas E. Bowman and 1,512 crayfishes from Alabama, 

 Georgia, North Carolina, Kentucky, and Tennessee by Dr. Horton H. 

 Hobbs, Jr. 



A total of 127 accessions, comprising 1,923 lots and 20,621 speci- 

 mens, was received by the division of mollusks. In addition, 1,597 

 lots, totaling 14,980 specimens, from previously recorded accessions 

 were added. A number of important collections of marine mollusks 

 from areas in the Indo-Pacific region poorly represented in the study 

 collection were received from various sources. Purchased through 

 the Chamberlain fund was a marine collection of 702 lots containing 

 2,165 specimens from the Kudat area, North Borneo. Two collections 



