200 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 85 



Dixon, Joseph. 



1925. Food predilections of predatory and fur-bearing mammals. Journ. 

 Mamm., vol. 6, no. i, pp. 34-46, pi. 4, Feb. Wild cat: Mammals, 

 birds, fish ; coyote : Game, stock, rodents, insects, mammals, birds ; 

 mountain-lion : Deer, stock, small wild mammals ; skunks : Insects, 

 rodents, birds, mammals. 



Dyche, L. L. 



1903. Food habits of the common garden mole (Scalops aqimticus ma- 

 chrinus Rafinesque). Trans. Acad. Sci. Kansas 1901-1902, pp. 183- 

 186. Report on the stomach contents of 50 specimens. 



FORBUSH, E. H. 



1916. The domestic cat. Bird killer, mouser, and destroyer of wild life. 

 Means of utilizing and controlling it. Econ. Biol. Bull. 2, Massa- 

 chusetts State Board Agr., 112 pp., 20 pis., figs. The most compre- 

 hensive review of the subject; cats kill millions of birds annually; 

 destructive also to moles, shrews, toads, field mice, wood mice, 

 insects. 



Garman, H. 



1895. The food of the common mole. 7th Ann. Rep. Kentucky Agr. Exp. 

 Sta. 1894, pp. xli-xlv. Notes on contents of 14 stomachs. 



Hamilton, W. J., Jr. 



1930. The food of the Soricidae. Journ. Mamm., vol. 11, no. i, pp. 26-39, 

 Feb. Over 300 stomachs representing four species; food is insects, 

 annelids, Crustacea, snails, mice, salamanders, arachnids, centipeds, 

 and millipeds. Bibliography. 



JoHANSEN, Frits. 



1910. Observations on seals (Pinnipedia) and whales (Cetaceae) made on 

 the " Danmark Expedition" 1906-1908. Danmark Eksp. Gronl. 

 Nordostkyst, 1906-1908, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 203-224, 9 figs. Includes 

 some notes on food. 



Johnson, Chas. E. 



1925. The muskrat in New York ; its natural history and economics. 

 Roosevelt Wild Life Bull., vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 205-320, pi. 5, figs. 48- 

 87, Mar. Animal food includes bivalves, snails, crayfish, insects, 

 fishes, turtles, and birds ; enemies include minks, foxes, weasels, 

 otters, hawks, and owls. 



Lantz, D. E. 



1905. Kansas mammals in their relations to agriculture. Bull. 129, Kansas 



Agr. Exp. Sta., Dec, 1904, pp. 331-404, i pi., i fig. Notes on the 

 food habits of most of the groups. 



1906. Meadow mice in relation to agriculture and horticulture. U. S. Dcp. 



Agr. Yearbook 1905, pp. 363-376, pis. 38-41, fig. 89. Natural 

 enemies (pp. 370-373) include wolves, lynxes, foxes, badgers, 

 raccoons, opossums, skunks, minks, weasels, shrews, hawks, owls, 

 crows, shrikes, cranes, herons, bitterns, snakes, and domestic cats 

 and dogs. 

 1 918. The house rat the most destructive animal in the world. U. S. Dep. 

 Agr. Yearbook 1917, pp. 235-251, pis. 41-44. Natural enemies (pp. 

 248-249) include domestic dog, cat, and ferret, as well as snakes, 

 storks, herons, owls, hawks, skunks, weasels. 



