Bibliographical Xotices. 555 



(3) IIarmer, S. F. ''The rterobranchia of the 'Siboga' Expedition, 



with an Account of other Species.'' Siboga-Expeditie, Monogr. 

 xxvi. bis : I.eiden, July 1905, pp. 132, fourteen plates and two text- 

 tigures. 



(4) Lankester, E. R. "On a new Species of Cephalodiscus {C. niyres- 



cens) from the Antarctic Ocean." Proc. Roy. Soc. London, 100.3, 

 vol. 76 B, pp. 400-402, one plate. 



(5) M'Intosh, W. C. '^lle])OYton Cephalodiscusdodecalop/ius.''' 'Chal- 



lenger ' Report.*, Zoology, xx. part Ixii. 1887, with Appendix by 

 S. r. Harmer, pp. 48, s^eveu plates and six text-figures. 



(6) RiDEWoon, W. G. " A new Species of Cephalodiscus (C. gilchristi) 



from the Cape Seas." Marine Investigations, South Africa, iv., 

 Cape Town, 1906, pp. 173-192, three plates and five text-figures. 



(7) . " Pterobranchia : Cephalodiscus." National Antarctic Expe- 

 dition, Natural History, vol. ii., Loudon, 1907, pp. 1-67, seven 

 plates and seventeen text-figures. 



(8) Ros.s, J. C. A Voyage of Di.scovery and Research in the Southern 



and Antarctic Regions during the years 1839-43. Two vols., 

 London, 1847. 



(9) ScHEPOTiEFF, A. " Die Pterobranchief des Indischeu Ozeans." 



Zool. Jahrb., Abth. fur Syst. Bd. xxviii. Heft 4, 1909, pp. 429- 

 445, two plates. 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES. 

 liecent Foreign and Colonial Natural Historij Periodicals. 



(1) Annals of the Transvaal Museum. May 1912. 



(2) The Journal of the East African and Uganda Natural Hisiorg 



Societg. Vol. i. no. 2. 1911. 



(3) Annals of the Queensland Museum. No. 10. November 1911. 



(1) Includes a First Check-List of the Flowering Plants and 

 Ferns of the Transvaal and Swaziland, by Joseph Burtt-Davy and 

 Mrs. Reno Pott-Leendertz (3240 species, included in 920 genera and 

 157 families). 



(2) Includes a variety of papers on Garae-Birds of the Protecto- 

 rate, on Collecting and Preserving Fishes, the Central African Stone- 

 Curlew, Mimicry in East African Butterflies, the smaller fauna of 

 Mount Elgon, Spitting Cobra, European migrants in British East 

 Africa, the microscopical structure of Diutomite, random observa- 

 tions of chamseleons, melanism in Felis servul, Avhite water-buck, 

 Gazella grantii, Kaviroudo Potto, and Honey-Guides. Most of 

 these papers are well illustrated, and the frontispiece gives an inter- 

 esting flashlight photo of a lion going down to drink. 



(3) Another miscellaneous assortment of papers on fossils, 

 mammals, snakes, batracliians, fishes, Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, 

 Arachnida, Cestodea, &c. 



