190 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 85 



Lewis, Ralph C. 



1929. The food habits of the California sardine in relation to the seasonal 



distribution of microplankton. Bull. Scripps Inst. Oceanography, 



Techn. Ser. 2, pp. 155-180, 2 figs. Items of animal food are schizo- 



pods and copepods. 

 Linton, Edwin. 



1901. Fish parasites collected at Woods Hole in 1898. Bull. U. S. Fish 



Comm., vol. 19, 1899, pp. 267-304. pis. 33-43- Notes on fish food, 



pp. 270-284. 

 1901. Parasites of fishes of the Woods Hole region. Bull. U. S. Fish 



Comm., vol. 19, 1899, pp. 405-492, pis. 1-34. Summary of parasites, 



pp. 425-488, contains many references to food of fishes. 



1921. Food of young winter flounders. Rep. U. S. Comm. Fisheries, 



App. 4, 14 pp. Pscudopletironectes americanus , food of young 

 principally amphipods, other small Crustacea, and annelids ; food 

 of adults, annelids, Crustacea, ascidians, fish, moUusks. Almost 

 as much on parasites (Sporozoa, trematodes, nematodes, and 

 Acanthocephala) as on food. 



MacCoy, Clinton V. 



1929. The mackerel in New England. Bull. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 

 53. PP- 3-7. Oct. Food, small fish, squids, pteropods, amphipods, 

 copepods. Enemies, whales, porpoises, sharks, dogfish, bluefish, 

 gannets, parasitic worms. 



Marshall, W. S., and Gilber, N. C. 



1905. Notes on the food and parasites of some fresh-water fishes from 

 the lakes at Madison, Wis. Rep. U. S. Comm. Fisheries 1904, 

 App., pp. 513-522. Incidental notes on food. 



Moore, J. Percy. 



1922. Use of fishes for control of mosquitoes in northern fresh waters of 



the United States. Rep. U. S. Comm. Fisheries, App. 4, 60 pp., 

 7 pis. Food of roach: Entomostraca, insects, mites. Protozoa; 

 mudminnow : Insects, Crustacea, mollusks. Protozoa ; killifish : 

 Oligochaetes, mollusks, Entomostraca ; top minnow : cannibalistic ; 

 blue-spotted sunfish : Midge larvae, Entomostraca, amphipods ; 

 long-eared sunfish : Midge larvae, Entomostraca, oligochaetes ; 

 common sunfish : Midge larvae, Entomostraca, snails, mites, tad- 

 poles. All eat mosquito larvae. Bibliography. 

 MuTTKOwsKi, Richard A. 



1925. The food of trout in Yellowstone National Park. Roosevelt Wild 

 Life Bull, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 471-497, figs. 1 14-133, Feb. Stoncflies, 

 90 per cent ; mayflies, caddisflies, adults and young of all ; and 

 water-trapped land insects. 



1929. The ecology of trout streams in Yellowstone National Park. Roose- 

 velt Wild Life Ann., vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 155-240, figs. 53-116, Oct. 

 Food of trout, pp. 222-230, conclusions as in his 1925 paper on the 

 subject. Food of insects, pp. 230-233 ; see under Muttkowski and 

 Smith. 

 Neediiam, James G. 



1903. Food of brook trout in Bone Pond. Bull. 68, New York State Mus., 

 pp. 204-217. Contents of 25 stomachs tabulated. 



