187 
years the latter is more abundant, and in two, the former. The 
relative abundance of these forms in the river at a given point of 
collection is an epitome of their distribution 1n a wide area of channel 
and backwaters. An application of the principle advanced by 
Zacharias would in this instance lead to constant change. The 
retention of pala (Ehrbg., 1830) as the type and amphiceros (Ehrbg., 
1838) as the variety is in keeping with priority in nomenclature and 
with the principle of regarding the more highly differentiated or 
divergent form as the variety. Variety ampliceros occupies thus 
the same relation to the type that bidens does to its type angularts. 
Both are illustrations of the tendency common to all species of 
Brachionus to develop posteriorly directed spines. 
I shall proceed to discuss the salient points in the seasonal dis- 
tribution and statistics of the several varieties :— 
Brachionus pala Ehrbg., type-—Average number of individuals, 
2,693; of eggs, 20,809, including all free eggs referable to the species 
in the broader sense. Inthe present connection I shall call attention 
only to the fact that the type form,without the posterior spines, is less 
abundant during the midsummer interval than the spinous variety 
amphiceros. This appears in Table I., and is to be found in the 
records of years prior to 1898. A fuller comparison of the records 
of the two forms will be made in the discussion of amphiceros. I 
shall not discuss the recurrent pulses of this form or of amphiceros, 
since as they dominate those of the species as a whole it would lead 
to considerable repetition. The pulses of pala in the main (Table I.) 
coincide in location with those of the species as a whole, and the 
direction of movement of the seasonal curve of distribution is quite 
similar, save in the fact that the amplitude of the pulses is less, and 
that the differences in seasonal distribution between pala and 
amphiceros modify the curve of each. 
The decisive evidence of sexual reproduction in the species in the 
form of attached male and winter eggs is found repeatedly at times 
of the major pulses. In some instances they appear during the rise 
ot the pulse. The autumnal pulse of 1895 will serve as an illustra- 
tion cf the character of these statistical data. (See following page.) 
This pulse is sustained much longer than usual, but it serves to 
show the prevalence of parthenogenetic eggs during the rise of the 
pulse, and the evidence of sexual reproduction during its progress. 
In some other instances the number of free winter eggs after the 
