VIII BULLETIN 100, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 
found expedient to publish in this report. The first two are Acartia 
tumida Willey (p. 155) and 7igriopus incertus Smirnov (p. 344) ; the 
third is Augaptilus glacialis Sars (p.170). Figures 311-316 and 318- 
322 (pl. 22), together with the accompanying text, have been omitted, 
for while they represent two species of fresh-water copepods collected 
by Dr. Wilson they are not properly part of this report on marine 
plankton, nor are they a part of the Albatross collections. Figures 
18, 19, 20, 205, 206, 222, 266, 270, 420, 440, 444, 489, and 538, were found 
to be incorrect in certain particulars, and a few of these have been 
deleted. Seven species, represented among unrecorded lots of mate- 
rial that Dr. Wilson had determined and labeled, for some reason 
failed of mention in the text of his manuscript. These are entered in 
alphabetical sequence in the discussion of the species, together with 
the number of the station from which he recorded them and bracketed 
comment. They are, with the National Museum catalog numbers, the 
following: Bradyidius-armatus (78848), Drepanopus forcipatus 
(79441), Haloptilus bulliceps (73928), Lubbockia brevis (73970), 
Metridia macrura (74391), Ratania flava (74107), and Tortanus 
recticauda (78844). 
Twenty-six stations with their accompanying lists of species iden- 
tified were removed from the manuscript, as the stations were cited 
by number only and it was not possible to assign them to the proper 
D. or H. series in the absence of the original field labels, which appar- 
ently were not retained when the plankton samples were sorted. The 
species identified from these particular stations, though not published, 
are available in the catalogs and reference files of the Division of 
Marine Invertebrates, United States National Museum. The num- 
bers of these stations are: 101, 136, 1870, 1919, 2369, 2374, 2456, 2750, 
2763, 2796, 2928, 2939, 8195, 3587, 3594, 3596, 3597, 3599, 3621, 3628, 
3710, 3790, 3827, 3857, 3869, 3986. 
Of 15 species discussed in the text no specimens appear to have 
been saved or segregated by Dr. Wilson. They are: 
Amallothriz arcuata Pontella cerami 
Centropages bradyi Pontellopsis bitumida 
Disseta maxima Pseudochirella divaricata 
Huaugaptilus rigidus Sapphirina sinuicauda 
Farrania oblonga Scaphocalanus angulifrens, male 
Gaetanus inermis Scaphocalanus robustus 
Metridia gerlachei Scolecithricella minor 
Pareuchaeta exigua 
In Dr. Wilson’s report on “The Copepods of the Plankton Gathered 
during the Last Cruise of the Carnegie” (Carnegie Inst. Washington 
Publ. 536, p. 176, 1942), W. A. Gosline, of Stanford University, noticed 
that Wilson’s new generic name Carnegiella had been used some years 
