DRAGONFLIES AND DAMSEI.FUES IN PONDFISH CULTURE . 



263 



Meehan, Wm. E. 



1913. Fish culture in ponds and other inland waters. 8°. Sturgis and Walton Co., New York. 

 A general treatise taking up all the various aspects of the subject. 

 MuTTKOwsKi, Richard A. 



1908. Review of the dragonflies of Wisconsin. Bulletin, Wisconsin Natural History Society, vol. 



6, Nos. I and 2, pp. 57-123, pi. and map. Milwaukee. Gave briefly a history of the 

 Odonata, the life history, the geographic distribution, the seasonal distribution, the food 

 habits and economic value, and directions for collecting and preserving. 



1910. Catalogue of the Odonata of North America. Bulletin, Public Museum of the city of Mil- 

 waukee, Vol. I, Art. I, 207 pp. Milwaukee. Included synonyms and all references of 

 taxonomic value, as well as many of ethological and morphological character. 

 Needham, James G. 



1898. Birds vs. dragonflies. Osprey, vol. 2, pp. 85-86. 



1899. Directions for collecting and rearing dragonflies, stoneflies, and m.ayflies. Bulletin, U. S. 



National Museum, Pt. O, No. 39, 9 pp., 4 text figs. Washington. "The best way to rear 

 nymphs is to let them rear themselves; ' * does not include directions for feeding the nymphs. 



Needham, James G., and Betten, CornEuus. 



1901. Aquatic insects in the Adirondacks. N. Y. State Museum, Bulletin 47, pp. 383-612, 36 pis. 



Albany. An annotated list of the dragonflies (Axiisoptera) of New York, giving especial 

 attention to the nymphs, with extensive keys for both nymphs and imagos. 



Needham, James G., and Hart, Chas. A. 



1901. The dragonflies (Odonata) of Illinois, with descriptions of the immature stages. Part I. 



Petaluridae, .^schnidae, and Gomphidae. Bulletin, Illinois State Laboratory of Natural 

 History, Vol. VI, art. i, 94 pp., i pi. Champaign. Included an excellent general treatise 

 on the Odonata, giving the literature, the life history, the habitat of the nymphs, the food 

 relations, and directions for collecting and rearing nymphs. 



Needham, James G.; MacGiluvray, Ai.Ex D.; JohannsEn, O. A.; and Davis, K. C. 



1903. Aquatic insects in New York State. N. Y. State Museum, Bulletin 68, Entomology 18, 

 pp. 197-517, 52 pis. Albany. Included 7 parts of which Needham was the author of 

 part 2, Food of brook trout in Bone Pond, and part 3, Life histories of Odonata, suborder 

 Zygoptera. In the former the nymph of jEschna constricta was said to eat trout fry, but 

 was also found in the stomachs of two trout. In the latter were keys for both nymphs 

 and imagos. 



Needham, JamES G., and Lloyd, J. T. 



1916. The life of inland waters. 8°, 438 pp., 244 text figs. Ithaca. An excellent account of 

 the nature and types of aquatic environment, aquatic organisms, and their adjustment to 

 environment, aquatic societies, and inland-water culture. 



PearsE, a. S. 



191 5. On the food of the small shore fishes in the waters near Madison, Wis. Bulletin, Wisconsin 

 Natural History Society, vol. 13, No. i, pp. 7-22. Milwaukee. 

 PouLTON, Edward B. 



1906. Predaceous insects and their prey. Transactions, Entomological Society of Ivondon, pp. 



323-409. London. A collection of original records of the food of various predaceous 

 insects, including dragonflies, but all foreign species. 



Riley, C. V. 



1888. Larva of Anax Junius destroys carp. Insect Life, vol. i, p. 58. Washington. Reference 

 quoted in full and discussed on page 204. 

 Selys-Longchamps, Edm. de, and HagEn H. A. 



1850. Revue des Odonates ou Libellules d 'Europe. Paris. 

 SsiNiTziN, D. Th. 



1907. Observations sur les metamorphoses des trematodes. Archives de zoologie experimentale et 



generale, t. 7, pp. 21-37. Paris. Found stages of a frog-lung fluke free in the body cavity 

 of both nymphs and imagos of the damselfly, Agrion (Calopieryx) virgo. 



