FISHERY INVESTIGATIONS 339 



Marine Zoological subjects. Since then, as just intimated, 

 the number has been greatly increased, but, of these three 

 hundred and thirty-nine papers, seventy-one were published 

 before the founding of the Marine Biological Station, and 

 extend over a period from 1848 to 1882. After January 1884 

 two hundred and sixty-eight papers appeared up to 1896, and 

 of these one hundred and eighty-one relate particularly to fish 

 and fisheries, while eighty-seven deal with other zoological 

 subjects. A complete list of the titles of these memoirs and 

 papers, however interesting they might be to the scientific 

 specialist, would not be altogether appropriate in the present 

 brief review, and it must suffice to merely refer to the names of 

 the more prominent workers who have occupied tables in the 

 Marine Station and have carried on researches at St Andrews. 

 Many of these have been trained in the Biological Depart- 

 ment of the University, while a considerable proportion have 

 come from other Universities, and from distant countries, to 

 engage in original investigations. 



ABBREVIATED LIST OF BIOLOGICAL INVESTIGATORS AT 

 ST ANDREWS SINCE 1880 



The list includes Sir J. Burdon Sanderson; Professor 

 Francis Gotch of Oxford; Dr R. F. Scharff, head of the 

 National Museum, Dublin ; Professor John Cleland, Glasgow ; 

 Professor Ernst Haeckel, Jena ; Professor A. W. W. Hubrecht, 

 Utrecht ; Dr John Wilson, St Andrews ; Dr R. Kennedy, 

 Glasgow ; Dr Marcus Gunn, London ; Professor W. F. R. 

 Weldon, Cambridge ; Professor A. G. Bourne, Oxford ; Dr 

 H. E. Durham, London ; Mr W. L. Calderwood, Edinburgh ; 

 Mr E. W. L. Holt, Scientific Adviser to the Board of Agricul- 

 ture and Fisheries, Dublin ; Mr J. Pentland Smith, Swanage ; 

 Professor J. Lindsay Stephen, Glasgow ; Rev. A. D. Sloan, 

 St Andrews ; Mr W. E. Collinge, Birmingham ; Professor 

 J. D. F. Gilchrist, Cape Town, South Africa; Dr A. T. 



