GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. 
Orust. 29 
On certain littoral Isopoda of the Azores, collected on the third 
voyage of the * Hirondelle,’ see Dollfus (3). 
Giesbrecht deals with Italian pelagic Copepoda. 
The podophthalmatous Crustacea of the Bay of Marseilles ; Gourret. 
The Crustacea of the Caspian; Grimm (Russian). 
In bis Natural History of France, pt. 15, Groult deals briefly with 
Crustacea. 
de Guerne (2) describes two new species of Diaptomus from Algeria. 
The same author and J. Richard deal with the geographical distribution 
of the genus, which they shew to be probably cosmopolitan. 
For the marine Malacostraca of W. Greenland, see Hansen. 
In his Preliminary Report on the Fauna of Plymouth Sound, Heape 
treats of Crustacea , on pp. 170-178. 
Henderson, in his ‘ Challenger ’ A no mura, describes 161 species from 
various regions. 
He rdm an gives an account of Crustacea taken off Liverpool with the 
use of the electric light. 
For rare Crustacea from the coast of France, see Hesse. 
Fresh- water fauna of the Vosges ; Imiiof. _ 
Silurian Ostracoda from Gottland; Jones. 
de Kerville issues his first list of the Crustacea of Normandy. 
The Crustacea of the neighbourhood of Moscow, to the number of 92 
species (2 new), will be found treated by Kortschagin (Russian). 
Two new species of Diaptomus from N. Europe ; Lilljeborg. 
Dromia vulgaris in Cornwall ; Lovett. 
de Man continues to report on the Podophthalmatous Crustacea of the 
Mergui Archipelago. 
In describing the Calanidae of Finnland, Nordquist deals with 12 
species, 2 of which are new. 
Osorio continues to catalogue the Crustacea collected in W. Africa, 
and at present in the Natural History Museum at Lisbon. 
The Crustacea of S. Georgia ; Pfeffer. 
French non-marine Cladocera and Copepoda ; Richard (2). 
Pelagic fauna of the Auvergne Lakes ; id. (3). 
Italian Miocene Crustacea ; Ristori. 
Robertson gives the names of 107 species of Amphipoda, and 41 species 
of Isopoda , from the Firth of Clyde. 
Sars describes 11 species of Australian Cladocera (5 new). 
The Ostracoda of Messina are dealt with by Seguenza. 
Smith reports on the Decapoda of the E. coast of the United States. 
For Slavonic Crustacea , see Sosteric. Pp. 108-110 are occupied with 
a bibliography of the subject. The remainder of the paper is systematic. 
Eylmann gives, on p. 80, a tabulated view of the geographical distribu- 
tion of European Daphnids. 
For the fresh-water Crustacea of the neighbourhood of Kiev, see 
Soyvinsky. 103 species are described. 
A parasitic Copepod from Beaumaris is described by Thompson (1). 
In his second paper he gives an account of the Copepoda of Madeira and 
the Canary Islands. 
