LXX REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. 



Report upon tlie constriictiou aud e(|uipiiioii1 of the schooner Crinnjius, liy J. W. 

 Collins. (Report for 1887, pp. 430-190.) 



Report upon the operations of the U. S. Fish Commission schooner Grampus, from 

 March 15, 1887, to June 30, 1888, by J. W. Collins. (Report for 1887, pp. 491-598.) 



A review of the labroid fishes of America and Europe, by David Starr Jordan. 

 (Report for 1887, pp. 599-699.) 



On some Lake Superior Entomostraca, by S. A. Forbes. (Report for 1887, pp. 

 701-718.) 



Notes on cntozoa of marine fishes of New l<>ngland, with descriptions of several 

 new species, Part II, by Edwin Linton. (Report for 1887, pp. 719-899.) 



Report of the Commissioner for 1887, by ISIarshall McDonald. (Report for 1887,, 



pp. I-LXIII.) 



Statistical review of the coast fisheries of the United States, by J. W. Collins, 

 (Report for 1888, pp. 271-378.) 



Report on the fisheries of the Pacific coast of the United States, by J. W. Collins, 

 (Report for 1888, pp. .3-269.) 



Report on the investigations of the U. S. Fish Commission steamer Albatross for the 

 year ending June 30, 1889, by Z. L. Tanner. (Report for 1888, pp. 39.5-512.) 



Report on the operations at the laboratory of the U. S. Fish Commission, Woods 

 Holl, Massachusetts, during the summer of 1888, by John A. Ryder. (Report for 

 1888, pp. 513-522.) 



A preliminary review of the apodal fishes or eels inhabiting the waters of America 

 and Europe, by David Starr Jordan and Bradley Moore Davis. (Report for 1888, pp. 

 581-677.) 



The chemical composition and nutritive values of food-fishes aud aquatic inverte- 

 brates, by W. O. Atwater. (Rei)ort for 1888, pp. 679-868.) 



Observations on the aquaria of the U. S. Fish Commission at Central Station, 

 Washington, D. C, by William P. Seal. (IJulletin for 1890, pp. 1-12.) 



The fishing vessels and boats of the Pacific coast, by J. W. Collins. (Bulletin for 

 1890, pp. 13-48.) 



Observations upon fishes and fish-culture. (Bulletin for 1890, pp. 49-61.) 



Notes on a collection of fishes from the Lower Potomac River, by Hugh M. Smith, 

 (Bulletin for 1890, pp. 63-72.) 



A review of the Centrarchidaj or fresh-water sunfishes of North America, by 

 Charles H. Bollman. (Report for 1888, pp. 557-579.) 



There was also issued as Senate Miscellaneous Document No. 65, a 

 "Eeport on the establishment of a fish-cultural station in the Rocky 

 Mountain region and Gulf States" by Marshall McDonald, Commis- 

 sioner, and Barton W. Evermann, assistant. 



The following publications relating to the cruise of the U. S. Fish 

 Commission steamer Albatross, under the direction of Prof, Alexander 

 Agassiz, have been published by the Museum of Comparative Zoology : 



Three letters from Alexander Agassiz to the Hon. Marshall McDonald, U. S. Com- 

 missioner of Fish and Fisheries, on the dredging operations off the west coast of 

 Central America to the Galapagos, to the west coast of Mexico, aud in the Gulf of 

 California, in cliarge of Alexander Agassiz, carried on by the U. S. Fish Commission 

 steamer Albatross, Lieut. Commander Z. L. Tanner, U. S. Navy, commanding. (Bnl- 

 letin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, vol. xxi, No. 4.) 



General sketch of the expedition of the Albatross, from February to May, 1891, by 

 Alexander Agassiz. (Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard 

 College, vol. xxiii, No. 1.) 



Calamocrinus Diomedae, a new stalked Crinoid, with notes on the Apical System 

 and the Homologies of Echinoderms, by Alexander Agassiz. (Memoirs of the Museum 

 of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, vol. xvii, No. 2.) 



