234 American Fisheries Society 



Linton, E. — Cont. 



1901b. Parasites of fishes of the Woods Hole region. Ibid., vol. xix, 

 1899, p. 405-492, pi. i-xxxiv. 



Among numerous records of marine fishes are included the following 

 from migratory or strictly fresh-water hosts: Daoiitis spharocephala. 

 Nitzschia elegans from the sturgeon; Echinorhynchus attenuatus from 

 the short-nosed sturgeon; E. globosus, E. agilis from the eel; T tenia 

 dilatata, Rhynchobothrium hctcrospiuc, R. imparispinc, R. bulbifer, 

 Distomum grandiporum, D. vitellositm, Ascaris sp. from salmon; Cucul- 

 lamis elegans from brook trout. 



\l VI l ' AI.LUM, W. G. 



1895. On the anatomy of two distome parasites of fresh-water fish. 

 Veterinary Magazine, vol. n, no. 7, 12 p., 8 fig. 

 1 (escribes Distomum isoporum, var. armatum from fresh-water drum. 

 bluegill and sturgeon; also D. lobotes from eel, perch and wall-eye. 

 Records further D. nodulosum from rock bass, eel, sunfish, drum, stur- 

 geon, black bass; and D. opacum from eel. All of the parasites noted 

 are flukes. 



Marsh, M. C. 



1906. The Cold Spring Harbor epidemic among trout. Tenth An- 

 nual Report N. Y. Forest, Fish and Game Commission, 

 p. 125-139. (In Report for 1904-5-6, p. 149-161.) 



Describes epidemic of 1904 which destroyed most of the adult stock 

 at the station. Regarded as due to Lymphosporidium tiuttir (cf. 

 Calkins, 1900). Advises to avoid overcrowding, to transfer to larger 

 quarters with better flow of water, and to use chloride of lime or 

 sulphate of copper as disinfectant. 



Marshall, William, and Gilbert, N. C. 



1 ' >( ) 5 ( / . Notes on the food and parasites of some fresh-water fishes 

 from the lakes at Madison, Wis. Report U. S. Bureau of 

 Fisheries, 1904, p. 513-522. 



In the gar were found a few trematodes and cestodes yet unnamed. 

 In the bow-fin parasites were very prevalent. The bullhead sheltered 

 prominently cestodes. Parasites were regularly present in the iish 

 examined. The white bass and calico bass had few parasites, and the 

 rock bass sheltered many Acanthocephala. In the large-mouth black 

 bass no individual was free from parasites. Cestodes and Acantho- 

 cephala most abundant. Perch are also heavily infected even in winter. 



1905/;. Three new trematodes found principally in black bass. Zoolo- 

 gische Jahrbucher, Abt. Syst., bd. xxn, p. 475-488, 1 taf. 



Common in fish from lakes around Madison (Wis.). The species 

 were named Ceecincola parvulus, heuceruthrus micropteri and Asygia 



loossii. The pike and bowfin were also infected with last-named species. 



MlLNER, J. W. 



1874. Report on the fisheries of the Great Lakes, the result of in- 

 quiries prosecuted in 1871 and 1872. Report U. S. Commis- 

 sion of Fish and Fisheries, 1872-1873, p. 1-75. 



Found in lake trout a few parasites, especially a tapeworm that is 

 very numerous in same. The cisco also carries tapeworms in abun- 

 dance and a lernaean on the skin. This is parasitic on the whitefish, 

 as are also a leech, Ichthyobdella punctata (Smith), and two intestinal 

 parasites, a cestode (?) and an Echinorhynchus. The most marked 

 parasite of the lake herring is a larval cestode in the dorsal muscles, 

 common in April but not later than June. It lias also intestinal 

 parasites. 



NlCKERSON, W. S. 



1900. Concerning Cotylogaster occidentalis. Science, n. s., vol. n, 

 p. 250. 

 Brief abstract of following paper. 



