BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE XL S. NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1890. 691 



J. W. Collins. Report upon the operations of the U. S. Fish Commission schooner 

 Grampus from June 5, 1886, to March 15, 1887. 



Annual report of the 77. &. Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries, Part xiv, 1886 (1889), pp. 701- 



720. 

 Describes investigations off the eastern coast of the United States, during which many fishes 

 and marine invertebrates were taken. 

 E. D. Cope. Scientific results of explorations by the U. S. Fish Commission steamer 

 Albatross (published by permission of Col. Marshall McDonald, U. S. Commis- 

 sioner of Fisheries). No. in. Report on the batrachiaus and reptiles collected 

 in 1887-1888. 



Proc. 77. S. Nat. Mus., XII, 1889 (1890), pp. 141-147. 



Twenty-six species treated of, the following being described as new : Zachosnus roseus from 

 Patagonia, type U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 15126; Paludicola frenata from Chili, type No. 15129; 

 Phyllodactylus feci, type No. 14957, and Tropidurus lemniscatus, type No. 14945, both from 

 the Galapagos Islands. 

 E. D. Cope. The Batrachia of North America. 



Bull 34, 77. S. Nat. Mus., 1889, 8 vo., pp. 1-525. pi. 1-lxxxvi; figs. 1-119. 

 Chakles B. Cory. The Birds of the West Indies, including all species known to 

 occur in the Bahama Islands and Greater Antilles, the Caymans, and the Lesser 

 Antilles, excepting the Islands of Tobago and Trinidad. Published by Estes & 

 Lauriat, Boston, Mass., 1889. 



8 vo, pp. 324, 2 maps, and numerous wood-cuts in the text. 

 John Merle Coulter. Upon a collection of plants made by G. C. Nealley in the 

 region of the Rio Graude, in Texas, from Brazos Santiago to El Paso County. 

 Contributions from the 77. S. National Herbarium, I, No. 2, pp. 29-61. 



Twenty-two new species and fifteen varieties are described by Coulter, Vasey, Scribner, and 

 Vasey and Scribner. 

 John Merle Coulter and Joseph Nelson Rose. Notes on North American Um- 

 bellifera). I. 



The Botanical Gazette, xiv, pp. 274-284. 



Described as new, Peucedanum Hassci, P. Torreyi, P. evittatum, P. Lemmoni, P. Plummerce 

 Eryngium Lemmoni, Eulophus Parishii, var. ternata, Carum Lemmoni, Tmniopleurum 

 (genus), and T. Howellii. 

 John Merle Coulter and Joseph Nelson Rose. Notes on North American Um- 

 belliferw. II. 



The Botanical Gazette, xv, p. 259. 



Described as new, Hydrocotyle Bonariensis var. Texana, Arracacia Donnell-Smithii (with 

 plate). 

 John Merle Coulter and Joseph Nelson Rose. A new genus of Umbelliferw. 

 The Botanical Gazette, xv, pp. 15-16. 



Donnellsmithia Guatemalensis is described (with plate) as a new genus and species. 

 Frederick Vernon Coville. Revision of the United States species of the genus 

 Fuirena. 



Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, xvn, pp. 1-18. 



An early described form given a new name, Fuirena squarrosa var. breviseta ; and the fruit 

 of all the species figured. 

 William Healey Dall. A preliminary catalogue of the shell-bearing mariue mol- 

 lusks and brachiopods of the southeastern coast of the United States, with illus- 

 trations of many of the species. 



Bull. 37, 77. S. Nat. Mus., 1889, 8vo, pp. 1-221, pi. i-lxxiv. 



This publication comprises, besides the introductory remarks, a bibliography of literature re- 

 lating to the mollusk fauna of the region ; a sketch of the general arrangement ; tables 

 showing the bathymetric, geographic, and geologic distribution on the southeastern coast 

 of the United States and adjacent region of the brachiopods, pelecypods, schaphopods, 

 pteropods, shell-bearing gastropods, and cephalopods, with illustrations of six hundred 

 and twenty species, by over a thousand figures on seventy-four plates. These are followed 

 by a summary showing the standing of the various groups in relation to each other as ex- 

 hibited by the tables; by a full explanation in detail of each plate, and a complete alpha- 

 betical index. The conclusion is reached that the fauna of this part of the coast includes 

 about 1,635 shell-bearing mollusks, to which, if the naked gastropods, heteropods, and 

 cephalopods were added, the total mollusk fauna, after all allowances were made, would 

 probably reach at least 1,800 species. Although this volume is chiefly a catalogue and an 



