i88 



Fishes 



Ernest Shoemaker, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



2 Coleoptera from Slide Mt, N. Y. ; 

 544 Insects, mostly Hymenoptera, 

 from various places. 



Robert K. Straus, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. 

 i Walking Stick. 



A. H. Sturtevant, Columbia Univer- 

 sity, N. Y. C. 

 51 Diptera, including 1 type specimen; 

 1 Coleopteron. 



H. Thurston, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 About 500 Insects of various orders. 



F. E. Watson, New York City. 

 87 Insects from Mosholu, N. Y.; 40 

 Lepidoptera and 4 Pupae. 



F. E. Watson and E. L. Bell, Flushing, 

 N. Y. 

 38 Insects of various orders, from 

 Greenwood Lake Glens, N. J. 



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

 Mole cricket and photographs (12 

 specimens) ; 9 Homoptera, 15 Pe- 

 diculus corporis, 54 Hymenoptera; 8 

 Specimens of Rhaboscelis tenuis 

 and 10 specimens of their work; 9 

 Specimens of Zeugophora scutel- 

 laris, 6 specimens of their larvae and 

 10 of their work; 28 Specimens of 

 Beetles, also about 30 specimens of 

 plants and seeds showing the dam- 

 age caused by the insect, from New 

 Jersey; a collection of insects af- 

 fecting the Hibiscus, with specimens 

 of the plant showing the insect in- 

 juries, from New Jersey. 



Dr. H. E. Wheeler, Conway, Ark. 



3 Specimens of Arkansia wheeleri, 

 W & O, from Old River of Quachita, 

 near Arkadelphia, Ark. 



William S. Wright, San Diego, Cal. 

 500 Lepidoptera, from California. 



By Exchange 



Dr. Jos. H. Pazos, Cuba. 



30 Beetles. 

 Mrs. Lillian Dyer Thompson, Cam- 

 bridge, Mass. 

 30 Microscopic slides of mollusk 

 radulae, also 19 shells from which 

 the mounted material was taken. 



W. H. Weeks, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 254 Marine and fresh-water shells, 



By Purchase 

 102 Beetles. 



14 Lepidoptera from Tropical America. 

 2000 Beetles. 

 Collection of Pacific Mollusks, Brachi- 



opods, and Corals, comprising about 



100 species, 464 specimens, mostly 



from Puget Sound. 

 227 Lepidoptera, 442 Coleoptera, 657 



Hymenoptera, from Gull Lake, 



Canada. 



Through Museum Expeditions 



Crustacea, Mollusca, Chordata, An- 



nulata, Echinodermata, Myriapoda, 



about 2000 specimens, from Cuba. 



Collected by Barnum Brown. 

 Corals and sponges from Bahamas. 



Collected by Dr. E. O. Hovey. 

 Numerous Insects, Spiders, Spider 



Webs, etc., from Ramsey, N. J. 



Collected by Dr. Frank E. Lutz. 

 Invertebrates, from Woods Hole, 



Mass. Collected by R. W. Miner. 



DEPARTMENT OF ICHTHYOLOGY 

 AND HERPETOLOGY 



FISHES 



By Gift 



Theodoor de Booy, Yonkers, N. Y. 



6 Catfish and 6 Characins. 

 W. Brind, New York City. 



Aquarium fishes. 

 Mortimer H. Cooper, Bridge Hampton, 

 L. I. 



1 Orange Filefish and 1 Sea Raven, 

 from Bridge Hampton. 



Dr. Herman Haupt, Jr., South Haven, 



Mich. 

 12 Lake Herrings, 1 Perch, 1 Minnow; 



10 fishes (White-fish, Perch, etc.), 



from Lake Michigan. 

 Dr. E. O. Hovey, New York City. 



2 Blindfish, from Mammoth Cave, Ky. 



