LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 187 
dominali del Priofinus cinereus. Bull. Ent. Ital. iv. (pp. 1- 
13) pi. 1. 
Targioni-Tozzetti, a. Catalogo di Crostacei podottalmi bra- 
chiuri ed anomouri raccolti nel viaggio della fregata Italian a 
Magenta, riportati dal Prof. E. Giglioli. Ibid. 11 pp. 
Yernet, H. Observations anatomiques et pliysiologiques sur 
le genre Cyclops. Dissertation inaugurate presentee h la 
faculte pliilosoph. de Zurich. Geneve : 1871, gr. 4to, 46 
pp. I pi. 
Wood-Mason, James. Contributions to Indian Carcinology. 
Part 1. On Indian and Malayan Telphusidae. J. A. S. B. 
xl. part ii. (1871), pp. 189-200, pis. 11 & 12, pp. 201-207, 
pis. 13 & 14, and pp. 449-454, pi. 27. 
Physiology. 
The zoosperms of several higher Crustacea, as the lobster, 
some Paguriy Btenorhynchus longirosh'is, and Carcinus mdsnaSf 
and their development, are the subject of a paper by A. Sanders, 
M. Micr. J. 1869, pp. 267-276, pis. 11 & 12. They are not 
linear, and have no undulating motion, thus agreeing with 
those of the Arachnida and Myriopoda. 
The faculty of accommodating the colour of the skin to the 
surrounding medium by contraction of the pigment-cells is 
said to exist in P alamort serratus, and to be lost when the 
animal has been deprived of sight: G. Pouchet, C. 11. Ixxiv, 
p. 757, J. Zool. i. p. 361, and Rep. Brit. Assoc. 1872. 
G. O. Sars states that in several genera of Crustacea there 
are two sorts of males, one nearly resembling, the other very 
different from, the females ; the former is much more common 
and may be found all the year round, the other only in one 
season ; the latter may be the fully developed and the former 
the incomplete stage of the male. This has been observed in 
DiastyliSi Pontoporiaj Apseudes, and Philomedes, and exists 
therefore in very different orders. Beskriv. Freg. Joseph. 
Cumaceer, pp. 23 & 24. 
Lloyd recommends the preservation of Crustacea by keeping them in 
glycerine and then drying them. C. Spence Bate, 4th Rep. on the Fauna of 
South Devon, Q. J. Micr. Soc. (2) xii. p. 402. 
Contributions to Faunas. 
Six species of Cumacea found at great depths (640-2600 fathoms) in the 
arctic sea are enumerated by G. 0. Sars, QSfv. Ak. Forh. 1871, pp. 797-802. 
A. Boeck, discussing the geographical distribution of the 
Amphipods in the Northern seas, states that the Arctic seas are 
