504 
Green, S. 
General notes on fish-culture. 
Trans. Amer. Fisheries Soc. 1880 (1881), 
13-19. 1881.2 
Hybridizing fishes. Trans. Amer. 
Fisheries Soe. 1881 (1882), 5-9. 
1882.1 
The introduction of landlocked 
salmon into Woodhull lake, New York, 
and the subsequent capture of some of 
them. Bull. U. 8S. Fish Comm. 1881 
(1882), 1, 421. 1882.2 
Rearing of California mountain 
trout (Salmo irideus) Bull. U. S. Fish 
Comm. 1881 (1882), 1, 23. 1882.3 
Salmon caught in Genessee 
river, New York. Bull. U. S. Fish 
Comm. 1881 (1882), 1, 23. 1882.4 
Hatching striped bass, sturgeon 
and trout. Trans. Amer. Fisheries Soc. 
1882 (1883), 37-40. 1883.1 
On the spawning of black bass. 
Amer. Angler, 1884, 6, 133. 1884.1 
Home fishing and home waters; 
a practical treatise on fish culture, the 
utilization of farm streams, the manage- 
ment of fish in the artificial pond, the 
transportation of eggs and fry; with 
observations on common fish and the 
methods of capturing them. New York, 
1888. 8lp. 8°. 1888.1 
Green, Seth, & Collins, A..S. Trout- 
culture. Caledonia & Rochester, N. Y., 
1870. 92p. 8°. 1870.1 
Green, Seth, & Roosevelt, Robert 
Barnwell. See Roosevelt & Green. 
Green, William Spotswood. Notes 
on the Irish mackerel fisheries. Bull. 
U.S. Fish Comm. 1893 (1894), 13, 357— 
360. 1894.1 
Green, Wyman Rf. A description of 
the specimens of the teleostean genus 
Enchodus in the university of Kansas. 
Kansas Univ. Sci. Bull., 1918, 7, 71-107. 
17 pls. 1913.1 
Greene, Charles Wilson. The phos- 
phorescent organs in the _ toadfish, 
Porichthys notatus Girard. Journ. Mor- 
phol., 1899, 15, 667-696. 3pls. 1899.1 
Contributions to the physiology 
of the California hagfish, Polistotrema 
stoutt. I. The anatomy and physiology 
of the caudal heart. II. The absence of 
regulative nerves for the systemic heart. 
AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 
GRE 
Amer. Journ. Physiol., 1900, 3, 366- 
082. 6 figs. Ibid., 1902, 6, 318-324. 
1900.1 
Ae panne of pt. iin Amer. Naturalist, 1900, 34, 
Notes on the physiology of the 
circulatory system of the California 
hagfish, Polistotrema stouwti. Amer. 
Journ. Physiol. (Proc.), 1902, 6, xii—xiii. 
— Science, n. s. 15, 342. 1902.1 
Physiological studies of the 
Chinook salmon. I. Relation of the 
blood pressure to the functional activity. 
II. A study of the blood and serous 
liquids by the freezing-point method. 
Bull. Bureau Fisheries, 1904 (1905), 24, 
429-456. 15 pls. & 7 figs. 1905.1 
An experimental determination 
of the speed of migration of salmon in 
the Columbia river. Journ. Exper. 
Zool., 1910, 9, no. 3, 579-591. pil. 
1910.1 
The speed of migrating salmon 
in the Columbia river. Proc. Indiana 
Acad. Sci. 1909 (1910), 125-126. 1910.2 
—— The migration of the salmon in 
the Columbia river. Bull. Bureau 
Fisheries, 1909 (1911), 29, 129-148. 2 
pls. 1911.1 
The absorption of fat in the 
salmon muscular tissue and its resorp- 
tion during the migration fast. Amer. 
Journ. Physiol., 1912, 29, xxxix—xl. 
1912.1 
The absorption of fats by the 
alimentary tract, with special reference 
to the formation of the pyloric cceca in 
the king salmon, Oncorhynchus tschawyt- 
scha. Trans. Amer. Fisheries Soc. 1911 
(1912), 261-270. 1912.2 
Anatomy and histology of the 
alimentary tract of the king salmon. 
Bull. Bureau Fisheries, 1912, 32, 73- 
100. 4 pls. 1912.3 
A new type of fat-storing muscle 
in the salmon, Oncorhynchus  tscha- 
wytscha. Amer. Journ. Anat., 1912, 18, 
175-181. pl. 1912.4 
On the absorption of fat by the 
salmon stomach. Amer. Journ. Physiol., 
1912, 30, 278-282. 2 figs. 1912.5 
The storage of fat in the salmon 
muscular tissue and its resorption during 
the migration fast. Proc. Amer. Soc. 
Biol. Chemists, 1912, 2, 52-54. — Journ. 
Biol. Chem., 11, xviii-xx. 1912.6 
