138 The Irish Naturalist, Juue, 



6. Brady, G. S.. and A. M. Norman.— Monograph of the Marine and 



Freshwater Ostracoda of the North Atlantic, and of North-western 

 Europe — Section I. Podocopa. Trans. Roy.Dubl, Soc, ser. 2, vol. iv., 

 1889, p. 63 ; and Part 2, Section ii.-iv. Myodocopa, Cladocopa, and 

 Platycopa. Ibidem, vol. v., 1896, p. 621. 



7. SCHARFF, R. F. — A list of Irish Ostracoda, compiled from Brady and 



Norman's Monograph. Irish Naturalist, 1897, p. 74. 



8. Brady, G. S.— Copepoda and other Crustacea taken in Ireland, and on 



the N.E. coast of England. Nat. Hist. Trans., Northumberland, 

 Durham, and Newcastk-tipon-Tyne, vol. xiv., 1902, p. 54. 



9. Brady, G. S. — List of the Ostiacoda collected by Mr. George Murray, 



F.R.vS., during the Cruise of the "Oceana" in 1898. Ann. and Mag. 

 Nat. Hist., ser. 7, vol xii., 1903, p. 337, 



I have taken the following excursions in Ireland. (I only 

 mention those, or those parts of excursions, where I collected 

 material for Ostracoda) : — 



1858. Ban try and GlengarriflF. 



1868. Belfast and Strangford Lough. 



1870. Valentia, dredging in company with my friend, Mr. 



Edward Waller, in Dr. Gwyn Jeffreys' yacht ^'Osprey." 



Dr. Jeffreys was unable to be with us. 

 1874. Westport and Roundstone, in company with my friend, 



Dr. D. Robertson. 

 1900. Clifden and Connemara, and subsequently counties Clare 



and Monaghan, in company with my friend, Mr, W. F. 



de Vismes Kane. 



In 1885, with the very kind help of a gentleman in the 

 neighbourhood, I employed two men for a week to use the 

 townet and dredge in Lough Neagh. My chief object was, if 

 possible to find My sis relicta, which I had sought for in vain 

 in some of the largest lakes of Scotland. Amidst an enormous 

 amount of plankton material was a single specimen which 

 proved the presence of that Mysis in Ireland. It has since been 

 taken in the same lough in abundance by Mr. Kane and others, 

 and also in Lough Erne. 



The present catalogue gives a larger number of marinie 

 Ostracoda than are found on the coasts of either England 

 or Scotland. The deep water off the west of Ireland affords 

 that country great advantages, which must increase more and 

 more as the investigation of its deep-sea fauna is carried on 

 more thoroughly. 



