[1921 | 
VI. Vermes 
Vermes. 17 
Fulleborn, 66, 68 & 70 ; Ransom and 
Cram, 169 ; Roubaud and Desca- 
zeaux, 181 ; Stewart, 212. Hosts,. 
Insecta ; Ashworth, 4 ; Breinl, 21 ; 
Cobb, 37 ; Roubaud and Desca- 
zeaux, 181. Vertebrala, general ; 
Travassos, 220. Pisces, Ciurea, 35; 
Steiner, 208; Van Cleave, 227. 
Reptilia, Irwin-Smitii, 99 ; Teodoro, 
219. Aves, Gendre, 72 & 73 ; Irwin - 
Smith, 98. Mammalia, Baylis, 8; 
BouleNger, 19 & 20; Kotlan, 114; 
Lane, 120 ; Leger, 121 & 123 ; 
Riley, 172. 
VARIATION, PHYLOGENY. 
Variation. — Seurat, 191. 
Phylogeny, Classification. — Cobb, 
36 ; Travassos, 220. 
DISTRIBUTION (GEOGRAPHY). 
[Vide etiam “ Parasitism.”] 
General. — Cobb, 37; Skriabin, 193. 
Europe. — Borner, 17 ; Man, 137 ; 
Micoletzky, 151. 
Asia. — Steiner, 206. 
Africa. — Rousseau, 183. 
SYSTEMATIC. 
N EM atiielminthia. 
(a) Nematoda. 
Nematodes, new forms, from Verte- 
brates, Zoological Park, New York, 
hosts and diagnoses ; MacCallum 
Zoopathologica 1 pp. 225-282 text- 
figs. 134-151. 
Nematodes, free-living, Netherlands ; 
de Man Capita Zool. 1 pp. 1-62 14 
pis. 
Nematodes, bursate forms from 
African and Indian elephants, mor- 
phology; Lane Ind. J. Med. Res. 
9 pp. i63— 172 pis. xiii-xvi. 
Nematodes, free-living, from Buko- 
wina and Steiermark, new forms, 
diagnoses, key to species ; Mico- 
letzky Arch. Natgesch. Abth. A 87 
H. 8 & 9 pp. 1-649 figs. 
(n-17041 o) q 
Marine Nematodes, E. Asia ; 
Steiner Zool Jahrb. Abth. Syst. 44 
pp. 195-226 pis. x-xii. 
Nematodes, chiefly free-living, over 
100 new forms diagnosed, key to 
genera : in the following list, all are 
considered as gen. n. et sp. n. (except 
where otherwise indicated) ; Cobb 
Nematology Waverley Press 1920 (re- 
print) pp. 217-343 118 text-figs.: — 
Acanlhonchus viviparus p. 321 fig. 
101. — Aclinonema pachydermatum p. 
338 fig. 117. — Alaimclla cincta p. 233 
fig. 7a, truncata p. 234 fig. 7b. — 
Alaimonema mullicinctum p. 327 fig. 
107. — A mphispira rotundicephala p. 324 
fig. 103. — Anaxonchium litwium p. 
319 fig. 99. — Anoncholaimus mobilis 
p. 312 fig. 93. — Anticyathus tenuicau- 
datus p. 245 fig. 24. — Anticyclus exilis p. 
331 fig. 111. — Antomicron pellucidum 
p. 241 fig. 17. — Aphelenchulus mollis 
p. 301 fig. 81. — Apodontium pacificum 
p. 277 fig. 62. — Aponchium cylindro- 
colle p. 298 fig. 79. — Asymmctrella 
glabra p. 287 fig. 70. — Axonchium 
amplicolle p. 305 fig. 86. — Blattophila 
sphaerolaima p. 271. — Bolbella tenui- 
dens p. 308 fig. 90. — Bolbinium brevi- 
colle p. 240 fig. 16. — Bolbolaimus pellu- 
cidus p. 319 fig. 100 a, punctatus p. 
321 fig. 100 b. — Bolbonema brevicolle 
p. 264 fig. 49. — Cam,pydora demon- 
slrans p. 307 fig. 88. — Campylaimus 
inequalis p. 232 fig. 5. — Calalaimus 
acnminalus p. 308 fig. 89. — Catanema 
exile p. 271 fig. 56. — Cephalobellus 
papilliger p. 245. — Cephalobium micro- 
bivorum p. 270 fig. 54. — Ceramonema 
attenualum p. 264 fig. 48. — Chamber- 
si ella rodens p. 278 fig. 64. — Choronema 
simplex p. 238 fig. 14. — Cinctonema 
tenue p. 244 fig. 22. — Coinonema punc- 
tatum p. 259 fig. 42. — Colpurella fon- 
tinalis p. 257 fig. 39. — Cophonclms 
ocellaius p. 328 fig. 108. — Croconema 
cinctum p. 332 fig. 112. — Crysiallonema 
fuscacephalum p. 282 fig. 67. — Cyar- 
tonema flexile p. 242 fig. 18. — Cynura 
uniformis p. 262 fig. 46. — Cytolaimium 
exile p. 251 fig. 31. — Dactylaimus 
aequalis p. 250 fig. 29. — Daptonema 
fissidens p. 281 fig. 66a, fimbratium p. 
282 fig. 66b. — Dasynema sexalineatum 
p. 253 fig. 34. — Didelta maculatum p. 
252 fig. 33. — Digilonchus uniformis p. 
314 fig. 95. — Doryllium uniforme p. 
303 fig. 84. — Gammanema ferox p. 291 
fig. 74, — Gonionchus villosus p. 315 
a 9 
