furnish a well-marked ground plan of Ichthyology. The figures are mainly origjinal and designed to aid in 

 practical work as well as to illustrate the contrasts in the development of the principal organs through the five 

 groups. 



" Dr. Bashford Dean is known to zoologists, first, as the author of exhaustive and critical articles in the 

 publications of the United States Fish Commission, on the systems o( oyster culture pursued in Europe; and, 

 secondly, as an embryologist who has lately been doing good work on the development of various Ganoid 

 ^shes and the comparisbii that may be instituted with Teleostei. His recent addition to the well-known 

 ' Columbia University Biological Series,' now being brought out by The Macmil{an Company, under the ec^tor- 

 shipftf Professor H. F, Osborn, is an interesting volume upon fishes, in which considerable pronainence is giye^ 

 to the fo.ssiI forms, and the whole subject is presented to us from the point of view of the evolutionist. This is 

 the characteristic feature of the book. From the very first page of the Introduction to the last page in the vol- 

 ume, preceding the index, which is a table of the supposed descent of the groups of fishes, the book is full of 

 the spirit and the language of evolution." — Professor W. A. Herdman, in Mature^ London. 



Published la 1896. Second Bdhloa Revised aad Baiarged 1900 



Vol. IV. THE CELL IN DEVELOPMENT AND INHERITANCE 



By Edmund B. Wilson, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Zoology, Columbia Univereity. sjopages; 

 142 figures in the text. Price $-^.$0, net. 



Introduction. Chapters; I. General Sketch of the Cell. 11. Cell Division. III. The Germ Cells. I ^ 

 Fertilization of the Ovum. V. Reduction of the Chroniosomes, Oogenesis and Spermatogenesr?. VI. Some 

 Problems of Cell Qrganiza^on VII. Some Aspects of Cell Chemistry and Cell Physiology. VIII. Cell- 

 Division and Development. IX. Theories of Inheritance Sind Development. 



" During the fe>v years which have elapsed since the appearance of the first edition of Professor Wilson's 



'boo|c on the cell, the rapid accumulation of new facts has resulted in the modification, in many important 

 respects, of the views which were entertained concerning many cell phenomena even so lately as five years 

 ago. Hence, though the volume before us is issued as a second edition, it has not only been considerably 

 enlarged, but also much of the original matter has been replaced to make room for new treatment which shall 



■more faithfully reflect the attitude of cytologists toward the problems which confront them at the present time. 

 And we may fairly say, that the author's efutrts have not only been largely successful, but they have resulted 

 iu i^e production of one of the best works which it has been our good fortune to meet with for a long time. 

 TJie whole subject is handled in an easy and masterly fashion, and the reader is enabled readily to grasp the 

 leading facts and to obtain a clear insight into the nature of the chief questions of cy tological importance." — 



J. B, Farmer, Nature, igor. 



Pubiislied in 1899 



VoL V. THE FOUNDATIONS OF ZOOLOGY 



By William Keith Brooks, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Zoology in the Johns Hopkins Uni- 

 versity. 339 pages. Price #2.50, net. 



Contents. ~ Lectures I. Introductory. II. Huxley and the Problem of the Naturalist. III. Nature and 

 Nurture. IV. Lamarck. V. Migration in its bearing on Lamarckism. VI (i) Zoology and the Philosophy of 

 Evolution. VI. (11) An Inherent Error in the Views of Galton and Weismann on Inheritance. VII. Galton 

 .and t3he Statistical Study of Inheritance. VIII. Darwin and the Origin of Species. IX. Natural Selection 

 and the Antiquity of Life, X Natural Selection and Natural S^eology. XL Pal^ancNthe Argument from 

 Contrivance. XII. The Mechanism of Nature. XIII, Louis Agassiz and George Berkeley. 



',' It is a peculiar pleasure to a British naturalist to find the Darwinian principle illustrated and defended 

 with snch remaifcable force and success by a distinghished American zoologist " —Mature^ October 18, i()oo. 



*' Brooks' lectures on * The Foundation of Biology 'constitute a book tnat'.wilMive- as a permanent addition 

 to the common sense of science. It belongs to literature as well as to science. It belongs to philosophy as 

 much as to either, for it is full of that fundamental wisdom about realities which alone is worthy of the name 

 .of .philosophy." — Science, April 14 iSgg. 



" Without copious extracts it is impossible to do justice to this masterly presentation of the subject. The 

 chapter abounds in aphorisms as indeed do other portions of the work ; and these alone, if serially .collected 

 with their contexts, would make a valuable little handbook for the student of biology." — Popular Science 

 Monthly. June, 1899. 



Published in 1901 



VoL VL THE PROTOZOA 



By Gary N. Calkins, Ph.D., Professor of Invertebrate Zoology, Columbia University ; Biolo- 

 gist, State Cancer Laboratory, Buffeio, N.Y. 347 pages. Price, ^3.00, net. 



A General Introduction to the Study of Protozoa, In Nine Chapters. I. Ivtvoductory.'^xxh 

 historical review ; modern classification ; animals and plants, and generation de novo. II. General Sketch 

 Including general morphology ; general physiology, and economic aspects. III. The Sarcodina. Shellfe 

 and tests, and special locomotor and other organs. TV. The Mastigophora. General and special organization 

 V The Spzrozoa. General and special organization ; mode of life, and relations VI The Infusoria. Gen- 

 eral organization of ciliata and suctoria. VIII. Sexual Phenomena. Significance of coujugation and rise of 

 sex. VlII. The Protozoan Nttcleus. Special Morphology. The phylogenetic relations of the nucleus and 

 mitotic figure. IX. Some Problems in the Physiology 0/ the Protozoa. The phenomena of digestion 

 respiration, secretion, and irritability. 



" The author has not aimed at putting forward an exhaustive^ severely scientific treatise upon the group 

 in question. His work may be described rather as a simple and intelligible introduction to the study of the 

 Protozoa and of the many fascinating biological problems connected with, or illustrated by, this subdivision of 

 the animal kingdom, iii such a way as to awaken the interest of the beginner, no less than to strengthen the 

 hands of the expert." — Nature. 



