Fishes 



207 



S. G. Rich, New York City. 



285 Insects. 

 Charles Rummel, Newark, N. J. 



Sphingid, from Brazil. 

 L. S. Russell, Calgary, Alberta. 



53 Insects, from Calgary, Alberta. 

 Manuel Segundo Sanchez, Caracas, 

 Venezuela. 

 Lantern fly, from Venezuela. 

 Herbert F. Schwarz, New York City. 

 101 Species of Bees purchased from 

 Friese — 166 specimens. 

 Capt. Frank Seeley, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Beetle, from Sierra Leone, Africa. 

 Show Shimotori, Kyoto, Japan. 



8 Insects, from Japan. 

 Ernest Shoemaker, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 18 Coleoptera and 1 Lepidopteron, 

 from Maryland and Virginia. 

 Prof. F. Silvestri, Portoco, Italy. 



6 Trigona. 

 Albert Thomson, New York City. 

 Insects and Bumble-bee Nest, from 

 Agate, Neb. 

 United States National Museum, 

 Washington, D. C. 

 Galls and Gall-insects, including para- 

 types. 

 Miss Gertrude Van Winkle, New 

 York City. 

 Insects, etc., from Garden City, L. I. 

 Harry B. Weiss, New Brunswick, N. J. 

 Insects, Insect eggs, larvae and Insect 

 work, from New Jersey. 

 L. H. Weld, Washington, D. C. 

 About 40 Galls and Gall-insects, in- 

 cluding paratypes. 

 Jesse H. Williamson, Bluffton, Ind. 



140 Dragonflies. 

 Enrique Witte, Loja, Ecuador. 

 170 Insects (mostly Beetles), from 

 Loja, Ecuador. 

 William C. Wood, New York City. 

 6 Lepidoptera, from Florida ; 188 

 Lepidoptera, from various localities. 

 Miss Mildred Wrightson, New York 

 City. 

 Pink Katydid, from New York. 



By Exchange 



W. B. Cole, Hinghwa, Fukien Province, 

 China. 

 Collection of Chinese Insects. 

 United States National Museum, 

 Washington, D. C. 

 Mesembrinella abundans and Hetni- 

 chlora vittigera. 



By Purchase 



25 Lepidoptera, from various locali- 

 ties; about 800 specimens of In- 

 dian Hymenoptera; Collection of 

 about 4,000 Lepidoptera. 



Through Museum Expeditions 



About 3,500 Insects and Spiders, from 

 Asia, Malaysia, and Australia. 

 Collected by Prof. H. E. Cramp- 

 ton. 



DEPARTMENT OF ICHTHYOLOGY 

 By Gift 



Dr. E. Bade, Glen Head, N. Y. 



1 Microscopic slide of the intromit- 

 tent organ of a Platypoecilus. 



W. Lannoy Brind, New York City. 

 Male Melanotcenia nigrans — Atherine 

 from Sydney, Australia. 

 Barnum Brown. 



Modern fishes : 104 marine and fresh- 

 water specimens, from Abyssinia 

 and French Somaliland. 

 Ernest Clive Brown, New York City. 



18 Fresh-water fishes, from Ohio. 

 E. J. Brownell, Chenango, N. Y. 



Head of a fresh-water Ling, from 

 Rockwell Mills, Chenango, N. Y. 

 Dr. L. C. Bulkley, Riverdale, N. Y. 



2 Specimens of Pristis, saw and 

 tooth. 



John Carlstrom, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 Skeleton of Crucifix Fish, from 

 Georgetown, British Guiana. 

 The Late Henry A. Cassebeer 

 (through Remsen Williams, Long 

 Island City, N. Y.) 

 Sawfish saw, and mounted Porcupine- 

 fish. 

 Arge Erich sen, New York City. 



Batfish, from Cuba. 

 Field and Stream, New York City. 

 2 Large Pike heads for skeletons, 

 from Jordan, Minn. 

 Mrs. Arthur Ellis Hamm, New York 

 City. 

 6 Fossil fishes, from Green River, 

 Wyo. 

 Institute of Jamaica, Kingston, Ja- 

 maica. 

 Colored sketch of fossil tooth of ex- 

 tinct shark (C ar char o don). 

 Department of Lower Invertebrates 

 (Transfer). 

 5 Gobies, from China, and 10 

 mounted fishes, from Mediterranean. 



