258 entomological news. [December, 



gung von Hermann M filler's Werk " Die Befruchtung der Blumen durch 

 Insekten". I Band : Einleitung und Litteratur. Leipzig. W. Engelmann, 

 1898. — 400 pp., 81 figs., 1 portrait. — Lyman, H. H. The freezing of 

 insects, 4.— Poul ton , E. B. Report of the Hope Professor of Zoology, 

 Tenth Annual Report of the Delegates of the University Museum (for 

 1897). Oxford. —Rebel , H. On the biological significance of color 

 in the animal kingdom, Schriften des Vereines zur Verbreitung natur- 

 wissenschaftliche Kenntnisse in Wien, xxxviii, '98. — R ousseau, E. 

 Essays on the histology of insects, 35, 10, Oct. 29. — S teiner, J. Die 

 Functionen des Centralnervensystems und ihre Phylogenese. Dritter 

 Abtheilung Die wirbellosen Thiere. Braunschweig, F. Vieweg & Sohn, 

 1898. 154 pp., 46 figs. Insects and Myriopods, pp. 45-50, 85-87, 1 16-118. 

 Terre, L. On the physiological troubles which accompany the meta- 

 morphoses of holometabolic insects, 13. — Tutt, J. W. Migration and 

 dispersal of insects : Coccids and Aphides, 21. — Woodforde, F. C. 

 The protective mimicry of insects, Annual Report and Transactions, 

 North Staffordshire Field Club, xxxii, Stafford, ['98]. 



Economic Entomology.— A ndrd, E. Acclimatation of wild silk 

 worms — sericulture in the Maconnais region, 1 pi., 96, Mar. 1.— Anon. 

 Destruction of migratory crickets and grasshoppers, 87, Oct. 29. — A non. 

 Insect powders, Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, No. 143, Royal 

 Gardens, Kew, Nov., '98. — Berlese, A. and Gustavo, L. Chermo- 

 theca Italiana continens exsiccata, in situ, coccidarum plantis, praecipue 

 cultis, in Italia occurrentibus, obnoxiarum. Fascicolo III. Species 51-75. 

 Portici, 1898. — Bruner, L. The first report of the Merchants' Locust 

 Investigation Commission of Buenos Aires. Published in English and 

 Spanish by the Commission. Buenos Aires, Mch. '98. Engl. edit. pp. 

 x, 100. 28 figs, and 1 col. plate.— Cock ere 11, T. D. A. Two new Coc- 

 cidae from Lagos, W. Africa, 9.— Craig, C. F. The transmission of 

 disease by certain insects : ticks, bedbugs, ants, etc. New York Medical 

 Journal, Oct. 22, '98.— Debray. The destruction of injurious insects 

 (cont.), Le Naturaliste, Paris, Oct. 15, '98.— E n o c k , F. Insect blights 

 and blessings, Journal, Royal Horticultural Society, London, Oct. '98.-- 

 G a 1 , J. Influence of colored lights on the development of silk worms, 

 87, Oct. 29. — Grassi, B. Relations between malaria and certain 

 insects (mosquitoes), 93.— K e n y o n , F. C. Abstracts of publications 

 on entomology, Experiment Station Record, x, 2, Washington, '98.— 

 Marlatt, C. L. The tenth annual meeting of the Association of Eco- 

 nomic Entomologists, Boston, Mass., Aug. 19 and 20, 189S, G8, Oct. 28 — 

 Redemann, G. Unfailing means of destroying the injurious wasp, 

 Vespa vulgaris, Societas Entomologica, Zurich-Hottingen, Oct. 15, '9S. — 

 Sch . , S. The fight against the San Jose scale, Naturwissenschaftliche 

 Wochenschrift, Berlin, Oct. 9, '9S.— T r u e 1 1 e , M. and Anon. The 

 San J ose" scale [three notices], Bulletin, Soctete' Nationale d' Agriculture 

 de France, lvii, 6, Paris, '98.— W e e d , C. M. The winter food of the 

 chickadee, figs. Bulletin 54, New Hampshire College Agric. Exper. Sta- 

 tion, Durham, N. H. June, '98. 



