26 Prot, 
PROTOZOA. 
FLAQELLATA, MO 1ST ADS, &o. 
Chief Works. 
32. Bioiioir, R. S. Dor Orgaiiismus dor Cilioflagollatou. Morph. JB. vii. 
p. 177, pis. xii.-xvi. [A short account of this paper is given by the 
author under the title, “ Bidrag till Cilioflagellaternes Naturhistorie,” 
in Vid. Medd. 1881, p. 60.] 
A histological and systematic study of some genera of Cilioflagellata ; 
the results are summed up in a classification and some phylogenetic 
trees. Tables are given which show an immense range of variability in 
the proportions of certain species. 5 new species described from the 
Baltic. 
• 33. CuNNiNAGHM, J. D. On the Development of certain Microscopic 
Organisms occurring in the Intestinal Canal. Q. J. Micr. Sci. xxi. 
p. 234, pi. xviii., and 26 woodcuts. 
Stated to have been first published as an appendix to the fifteenth 
Annual Report of the Sanitary Commission of India. 
33a. Geddes, P. Sur une nouvelle sous-classe d’Infusoires. C. R. xciii. 
p. 1083. 
34. Kunstleu, j. Contribution i\ l’6tude dos Flagellates. C. R. xciii. 
pp. 602 & 746 ; reported in Ann. N. H. (5) viii. p. 390. 
35. Maggi, L. Tassonomia e corologia dei Ciliofiagellati. Boll, scient. 
ii. [1880] p. 7. 
Gives a classified list of the described genera and species, recent and 
fossil, with references and synonyms, and with the distribution of each 
species. 
And see Kent, W. S., suprii \_Infasoria]. 
L. Maggi. Intorno ai Ciliofiagellati. Nota corologica. Rend. 1st. 
Lomb. (2) xiii. 
J. Smita. Ueber Moneren, xix. Programm d. erst, deutsch. Staats- 
Oberrealschule. Prag : 1880, 8vo, 1 plate. [Not seen by Recorder.] 
Faunae. 
Denmark. See Bergh (32). 
Italy. See General Subject. 
Classification. 
Bergh (32) considers the Flagellata as a starting-point from which 
have diverged in different directions the Noctiluc(e, the Rhizopoda, the 
Cilioflagellata, and, by way of the latter group, the Peritricha, which he 
regards as the most ancient of the Ciliata. He believes the anterior, 
