218 



Fishes 



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



Numerous specimens of Insects and 

 Plants showing injury to the Even- 

 ing Primrose. 



Insect Work. 



19 Photographs of Insects and Insect 

 Work. 



Insects, including type specimens of 

 Captodisca kalmiella (360 speci- 

 mens). 



Insects and their work (about 1,150 

 specimens). 



All from New Jersey. 



Prof. William Morton Wheeler, For- 

 est Hills, Boston, Mass. 

 180 Specimens of Bees, 2 of Beetles. 

 Miss Marguerite S. Willard, Clinton, 

 Conn. 

 3 Beetles, Calosoma sycophanta, from 

 Clinton. 

 Francis X. Williams, Honolulu, Ha- 

 waii. 



13 Specimens of Wasps and their 

 nests, from Philippine Islands. 

 M. C. G. Witte, Clinton, Conn. 



11 Beetles, Calosoma sycophanta, 

 from Clinton. 

 Lewis B. Woodruff, New York City. 



8 Beetles, from New York City. 

 William S. Wright, San Diego, Cal. 

 1,280 Insects, chiefly Lepidoptera, in- 

 cluding paratopes of Lepidoptera, 

 from California. 



By Exchange 



Edwin Ashby, Blackwood, South Aus- 

 tralia. 

 195 Specimens of Shells : Amphineura, 

 from Southern Australia. 

 George H. Clapp, Cambridge, Mass. 

 254 Specimens of Liguus fasciatus 

 (land shells). 

 A. A. Hinkley, DuBois, 111. 



Collection of Shells (55 species, in- 

 cluding paratypes), from Alabama 

 and Mexico. 

 Ida S. Oldroyd, Leland Stanford Uni- 

 versity, Cal. 

 138 Species of West Coast Shells 

 (identified) — 138 specimens. 

 United States National Museum, 

 Washington, D. C. 

 269 Alcoholic specimens of Ascidians, 

 from West Indies, Florida, etc. 



Francis X. Williams, Honolulu, Ha- 

 waii. 

 47 Bees. 



By Purchase 



314 Insects, from Brazil. 



Numerous specimens of Beetle larvae, 



pupae, etc. — 240 species. 

 3,970 Diptera. 



Through Museum Expeditions 



12,000 Specimens of Insects, Spiders, 

 etc., from Wyoming, Colorado, Ida- 

 ho, Utah, and Indiana. Collected 

 by Dr. F. E. Lutz. 



1 Starfish, from Sinaloa, Mexico. Col- 

 lected by Paul D. Ruthling. 



Specimens of Invertebrates, chiefly 

 Insects, from Jamaica. Collected by 

 F. E. Watson. 



4 Insects, from Jamaica, B. W. I. Col- 

 lected by H. E. Anthony. 



DEPARTMENT OF ICHTHYOLOGY 

 By Gift 



A. Baudon, Bossangoa, West Africa. 

 50 Small fresh-water fishes, from 



Equatorial Africa. 

 20 Small fresh-water fishes, from 

 West Africa. 

 Mrs. J. Bremner, New York City. 

 Fossil fish, from Caithness-shire, Scot- 

 land. 

 Van Campen Heilner, Spring Lake, 

 N. J. 



8 Brackish-water fishes, 3 young 

 Squirrel Hake, from Spring Lake. 



Department of Herpetology (Trans- 

 fer). 



9 South American fishes. 

 Department of Invertebrate Zoology 



(Transfer). 



19 Dried fish skins, from Japan. 

 Dr. David Starr Jordan, Leland Stan- 

 ford University, Cal. 



Numerous fossil fishes, from Mio- 

 cene of Lompoc, Santa Barbara Co., 

 Cal. 



8 Slabs of fossil fishes, from same lo- 

 cality. 

 Roy Latham, Orient, L. I. 



1 Trachurus and 1 young White 

 Perch, from Oiient, L. I. 



