278 THE LIFE OF CRUSTACEA 



British Crustacea 



Baird, W. The Natural History of the British Entomostraca. 

 (Ray Society.) London, 1850. 



Bell, T. A History of the British Stalk-eyed Crustacea. 

 London, 1853. 



Speiice Bate, C, and West-wood^ J. O. A History of the British 

 Sessile-eyed Crustacea. 2 vols. London, 1863 and 1868. 



Brady^ G. S. A Monograph of the Free and Semiparasitic 

 Copepoda of the British Islands. (Ray Society.) 3 vols. 

 London, 1 878-1 880. 



These works, although still valuable, and indeed 

 indispensable, are now more or less out of date. A 

 list of British Malacostraca (except Amphipoda) 

 will be found in Mr. Stebbing's volume mentioned 

 above. 



Sars^ G. O. An Account of the Crustacea of Norway. Vol. i., 

 Amphipoda, 1890-1895. Vol. ii., Isopoda, 1896-1899. 

 Vol. iii., Cumacea, 1899-1900. Vols. iv. and v., Copepoda, 

 1903 (in progress). Christiania and Bergen. 



A very large proportion of the British species in 



the groups mentioned are described and figured in 



this splendid series of volumes. The text is in 

 English. 



Norman^ A. M., and Scott^ T. The Crustacea of Devon and 

 Cornwall. London, 1906. 



Webb, IV. M., and Sille7n, C. The British Woodlice. London, 

 1906. 



Memoirs of the Liverpool Marine Biology Committee, edited 

 by Professor W. A. Herdnian. A useful series of mono- 



