41 Prot. 
Subject Index. — Plankton. 
0419 
On the division and nuclear relations 
of “ amicronucleate ” Paramoecia re- 
sulting from artificial division ; Lewin, 
286. — Regeneration of Paramoccium 
after cutting ; formation of monsters ; 
Calkins, 68. 
Le mode de division du Strombidium 
sulcatum Ch. et Lach; Faurd-Fremiet, 
167. 
Conjugation of closely related in- 
dividuals of Stylonychia ; Bait sell, 30. 
Cell-division and cell-regeneration in 
Uronychia transfuga ; Calkins, 67. 
Behaviour of the micronucleus of 
Infusoria ( Uronychia , Stylonychia) in 
regeneration ; Lewin, 285. 
ETHOLOGY. 0419 
Biology, habits, behaviour. 
On the biology of edaphic (earth- 
inhabiting) Rhizopoda; Francd, 181. 
Mode of life of certain Amoebae 
from dysentery and liver-abscesses ; 
their association with particular micro- 
organisms ; Liston & Martin, 290. 
Protozoa occurring in the soil ; the 
Ciliates exist in an encysted condition ; 
Goodey, 198. 
Biological notes on Monocystis ro- 
strata ; relation of the life-cycle to 
seasonal periods ; Mulsow, 334. 
On the production, life and death 
of the crescents of the parasite of 
pernicious malaria; Thomson, 474. 
On the appearance of various Flagel- 
lates in different infusions and scums ; 
Alexeieff, 12. 
Sijnura , conditions of growth in 
Lake Cochituate, Massachusetts ; 
Parker, 355. 
Notes on the behaviour of the Try- 
panosome ( T . noctaae), Halteridium 
and Leucocytozoon of the little owl ; 
Minchin & Woodcock, 330. 
Sur la survie du Trypanosoma brucii 
dans qnolquos milieux d’origine biolo- 
gique ot non biologiquo ; Fleig, 170. 
Biologischo Studio fiber Ceratium 
tripos var. subsalsa Ostf. ; Apstein, 
18. 
Notes on the bionomics of Infusoria 
(seasonal variation, manner of dis- 
persal, etc.) ; Enriques, 147. 
A note on learning in Paramoccium ; 
Day & Bentley, 124. 
Habits and reactions of the Ciliate, 
Lacrymaria ; Mast, 304. 
The Protozoan plankton of the 
ocean, particularly Dinoflagellates, 
Radiolaria and Tintinnoidea, with 
especial reference to their numerical 
abundance; Hensen, 219. 
Plankton. 
Nordische Ciliata mit Ausschluss der 
Tintinnoidea; Hamburger & Budden- 
brock, 210. 
Dinoflagellates in plankton, Second 
Norwegian Arctic Exped. 1898-1902; 
Gran, 199. 
Marine plankton from the East- 
Greenland Sea (W. of 6° W. long, and 
N. of 73° 30' N. lat.) collected during 
the “Danmark Expedition” 1906- 
1908. I. Flagellates. II. Foramini- 
f era, Radiolaria, Tintinnoidea ; Osten- 
feld, 351. 
North Sea, Protozoa, chiefly Dino- 
flagellates ; Mielck, 325. 
Plankton, South end Isle of Man, 
seasonal occurrence of Geratium, Peri- 
dinium and Noctiluca ; Herdman & 
Scott, 221. 
Die far bigen Flagellaten des Kieler 
Hafens; Biittner, 64. 
The marine Flagellate Phacomonas 
pelagica in fresh water ; Pascher, 358. 
Dber Nannoplanktonten des Sfiss- 
wassers ; Pascher, 359. 
Das Phytoplankton des Sfisswassers 
mit besonderer Berficksichtigung des 
Vierwaldstattersees ; Bachmann, 28. 
Adriatic, Coccolithophoridae, with 
Syracosphacra lohmanni n. sp. ; Brunn- 
thaler, 61. 
Adriatic, Istrian and Dalmatian 
coast, Dinoflagellates ; Schroder, 415. 
Radiolarion aus dor Adrift ; Stiasny, 
451. 
Adriatic, mostly Dalmatian coast, 
Foraminifera in plankton ; Stiasny, 
450. 
Adriatic (Ragusa), on a Copepod, 
Tolcophrya steueri n. sp. ; Schroder, 
416. 
