148 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 85 



Breoek, C. M., Jr. 



1922. Notes on the suninier food of Chiloinyctcnis schocpfi Walbaum. 



Copeia, no. 104, pp. 18-19, Mar. 20. Analysis of contents of 26 

 stomachs ; chiefly crabs. 



CoTT, Hugh B. 



1929. The Zoological Society's Expedition to the Zambesi, 1927: No. 2, 

 Observations on the natural history of the land-crab Sesarma 

 meinerti, from Beira, with special reference to the theory of warn- 

 ing colours. Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1929, pp. 679-692, pi. i, 

 figs. 1-4. "Crabs have numerous enemies; they are preyed upon 

 by many small mammals, such as jackals, civets, and mongooses, 

 but more especially by birds." Pelicans, secretary-birds, herons, 

 ibises, storks, owls, hawks, gulls, and waders (p. 689). 



Embody, George C. 



1910. A new fresh-water amphipod from Virginia, with some notes on its 

 biology. Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 38, pp. 299-305, 17 figs., 

 June 18. Notes on 3 species of fish eating this Eucrangonyx, p. 305. 



Forbes, S. A. 



1880. On the food of young fishes. Bull. 111. State Lab. Nat. Hist., vol. i, 

 no. 3, pp. 66-79, Nov. Notes on stomach examinations ; entomo- 

 straca the most important food. 

 1883. The first food of the common white fish. Bull. 111. State Lab. Nat. 

 Hist., vol. I, no. 6, pp. 95-109, May. Entomostraca. 



Hankinson, T. L. 



1914. Young whitefish in Lake Superior. Science, n. s., vol. 40, pp. 239-240, 

 Aug. 14. Notes on food, chiefly entomostraca. 



Kendall, W. C. 



1923. Fresh-water Crustacea as food for young fishes. Rep. U. S. Comm. 



Fisheries, 1922, app. i, 32 pp., 10 figs. Copepods and ostracods in 

 part carnivorous ; Malacostraca and isopods, and amphipods, scaven- 

 gers ; crayfishes, carnivorous. Enemies of amphipods include fishes, 

 birds, insects. Hydra, and the plant Utricularia ; crustaceans im- 

 portant food for young fishes. Bibliography. 



Klugh, A. B. 



1927. The ecology, food-relations, and culture of fresh-water Entomostraca. 

 Trans. Royal Can. Inst., vol. 16, pt. i, pp. 15-98, May. The chief 

 enemies of entomostracans are fish, dragonfly nymphs, and Hydra. 

 They are eaten also by Corethra, young larvae of Dytiscus, tadpoles 

 of Ratw sylvatica, and by the entomostracans Leptodora kindtii and 

 Cyclops jusciis. Their chief food is planktonic Chlorophyceae. A 

 long bibliography. 



McAtee, W. L. 



1913. Some bird enemies of amphipods. The Auk, vol. 30, no. i, pp. 136- 

 137, Jan. Amphipods preyed upon by 30 species of birds, including 

 6 species of shorebirds and 14 ducks. 



MYRIAPODA 

 Sinclair, F. G. 



1910. Myriapoda. Cambridge Nat. Hist., vol. 5, pp. 29-80. Food of milli- 

 peds, vegetable, of ccntipeds, animal, including diptera, other insects, 

 worms, other centipeds. Centipcds eaten by South American 

 Indians. 



