GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. 
Crust. 23 
French Isopoda ; Dollfus (3). 
Swiss forms of Diaptomus ; Imiiof (4). 
Ostracoda (palaeozoic) from France and the Bosphorus ; Jones (3). 
Crustacea from Mayenne ; LabbiL 
Cladocera from Moscow ; Matile. 
Malacostraca from Kanonbad ; Meinert. 
Entomostraca from Belle Isle, &c. ; Richard. 
Crustacea of Norway ; Sars (2). 
Imiiof (1) concludes his account of the pelagic fauna of the mountain 
lakes of Carinthia. The most uniformly distributed of the Cladocera is 
Daphnella brachyura , which is only absent in three lakes. Bosmina was 
represented in sixteen lakes, Daphnia in twelve. Several other Cladocera 
occurred more rarely, but most of them are really littoral or ground- 
living, rather than pelagic. The pelagic Copepoda of the Carinthian 
lakes comprise species of Cyclops and Diaptomus. 
African and Asiatic. 
Algerian Crustacea ; Blanchard & Richard. 
A new Diaptomus from the Congo ; de Guerne & Richard. 
Entomostraca from Japan and China. 
Leptodora from Japan ; Fritze. 
Crustacea from the China Sea ; Pocock (l). 
Nearctic. 
N. American Crayfishes ; Faxon. 
Palaeozoic Ostracoda from N. America, &c. ; Jones (1, 3). 
Amphipoda from S. Georgia ; Pfeffer (3). ^ 
N. American palaeozoic Crustacea ; Vogdes. 
Australasian and Oceanic. 
Ostracoda from the South Sea Islands ; Brady (2). 
New Zealand Crustacea ; Thomson, G. M. 
Freshwater Crayfish from New Zealand ; Chilton. 
Marine and freshwater Crustacea from Port Jackson ; WiiitelegGE. 
