NATURAL HISTORY OF AMERICAN LOBSTER. 
405 
273. Waite, F. C. 
The structure and development of the antennal glands in Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards. 
Bulletin Museum Comparative Zoology, Harvard College, vol. xxxv, no. 7,p. 151-210.pl. 1-6. 
Cambridge, 1899. 
274. 
A large lobster. Science, n. s., vol. iv, p. 230-231. New York, 1896. 
275. Wallengren, H. 
tjber das Vorkommen und die Verbreitung der sogenannten Intestinaldriisen bei den Dekapoden. 
Zeitschrift fur wissenschaftliche Zoologie, bd. 70, p. 321-346, 12 fig. Leipzig, 1901. 
276. Weldon and Fowler, G. H. 
Notes on recent experiments relating to the growth and rearing of food-fish at the laboratory. I. 
The rearing of lobster larvae. Journal Marine Biological Association of the United King- 
dom, n. s., vol. 1, no. 4, p. 367-375. London, 1890. 
277. Wheildon, Wm. H. 
The lobster ( Homarus americanus): The extent of the fishery; the spawning season; food of the 
lobster; shedding of the shell; legislation on the fishery. Proceedings American Association 
for the Advancement of Science, vol. xxii, p. 133-141. 1875. 
278. Whitfield, R. P. 
Notice of two very large lobsters in the collection of the American Museum of Natural History. 
Bulletin American Museum Natural History, vol. xn, p. 191-194, pi. ix. New York, 1899. 
The living weight of the animals described is given as 34 and 31 pounds. 
279. Williams, Leonard W. 
The stomach of the lobster and the food of larval lobsters. Thirty-seventh Annual Report of the 
Commissioners of Inland Fisheries of Rhode Island, p. 153-180, pi. i-x. 1907. 
Gives the first detailed and satisfactory account of the complex mechanism of the lobster’s stomach. 
280. Williamson, H. Charles. 
Contributions to the life-history of the edible crab ( Cancer pagurus Linn.). Eighteenth Annual 
Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, pt. hi, p. 77-142, pi. i-iv. Glasgow, 1900. 
Argument for theory of annual spawning in the European lobster. 
281. - 
Contributions to the life-histories of the edible crab ( Cancer pagurus) and of other decapod Crus- 
tacea; Impregnation; Spawning; Casting; Distribution; Rate of Growth. Twenty-second 
Annual Report of the Fishery Board for Scotland, pt. hi, p. 100-141, pi. i-v. Glasgow, 1904. 
Advances a new theory to explain the attachment of the eggs to the swimmerets of decapods. 
282. 
A contribution to the life-history of the lobster ( Homarus vulgaris). Twenty-third Annual Report 
of the Fishery Board for Scotland for 1904, pt. 111, Scientific Investigations, p. 65-107, pi. i-iv. 
Glasgow, 1905. 
283. Wilson, Andrew. 
The anatomy of the lobster. Science for All, vol. 2, p. 34-41, fig. 1-8 (appendages). London, 1879. 
284. Wilson, E. B. 
Notes on the reversal of asymmetry in the regeneration of the chelae in Alpheus heterochelis . 
Biological Bulletin, vol. iv, p. 197-214. Boston, 1902-1903. 
285. Wood, R. K. 
The lobster. Chiefly a translation from a work of M. Coste to the Minister of the French Marine, 
in “Land and Water,’’ London. Extract in American Naturalist, vol. 11, p. 494-496. Salem, 
1869. 
286. Wood, W. M. 
Transplanting lobsters to the Chesapeake: Experiments upon the temperature they can endure. 
Bulletin U. S. Fish Commission for 1885, vol. v, p. 31-32. Washington, 1885. 
