NO. 7 PROTECTIVE ADAPTATIONS — McATEE 145 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 



A complete bibliography of the subject matter of this paper would fill vol- 

 umes and nothing like it is attempted here. Articles on food habits cited 

 are chiefly those from which notes supplemental to our tabulations were gleaned ; 

 few of foreign origin are included. The citations relating to enemies of various 

 groups are illustrative only, not exhaustive, and some of exotic origin are 

 used where helpful in indicating the wide distribution of predatory attack. 



The bibliography is primarily one of predation and so far as possible entries 

 are distributed according to the thing eaten. When the feeding habits arc 

 varied, entries are filed according to the group the diet of which is reported 

 upon. Titles classifiable under either of these criteria are arranged according 

 to the phyla or orders to correspond with divisions of the text. Those unclassi- 

 fiable are grouped at the beginning of the bibliography as Miscellaneous. 



MISCELLANEOUS 

 Blegvad, H. 



1915. Food and conditions of nourishment among the communities of in- 

 vertebrate animals found on or in the sea bottom in Danish waters. 

 Rep. Danish Biol. Sta. to the Board Agr., vol. 22, 1914, pp. 41-78. 

 Notes on food and enemy relations of many groups. 

 Clark, A. H. 



1925. Life m the ocean. Smithsonian Rep. 1923, pp. 369-394. Chiefly a 

 discussion of food relations, many notes from which are used in 

 this paper. 

 EwiNG, H. E. 



1929. A manual of external parasites. 225 pp., 96 figs. Includes informa- 

 tion on the hosts attacked by mites, ticks, Mallophaga, Anoplura, 

 and fleas. 

 Force, Edith R. 



1925. Notes on reptiles and amphibians of Okmulgee County, Oklahoma. 

 Copeia, no. 141, p. 26, Apr. Notes on examinations of the stomachs 

 of 6 species. 

 Kjerskog-Agersborg, H. p. 



1920. The utilization of echinoderms and of gasteropod mollusks. Amcr. 

 Nat., vol. 54, pp. 414-426, Sept. -Oct. Notes on these forms as food 

 of fishes ; short bibliography. 

 McAtee, W. L. 



1918. Bird enemies of brine shrimps and alkali flies. The Auk, vol. 35, 

 no. 3, p. 372, July. Eight species of birds mentioned as feeding 

 extensively on l)oth. Doctor Wetmore states : " The toll taken by 

 birds from the brine shrimp and alkali fly larvae and pupae during 

 the course of a season constitutes a mass of individuals almost 

 beyond comprehension." 

 McIntosii, W. C. 



1899. The resources of the sea as shown in the scientific experiments to 

 test the efi^ects of trawling and of the closure of certain areas off 

 the Scottish shores. 248 pp., 32 tables, many pis. Notes on food 

 of fishes, and other marine animals. 



