LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 
Grust. 5 
51. Goldi, E. A. Stud, iiber Podophtlialmata Braziliens. Zool. Anz. 
viii. p. 662. 
52. Gotch, F., & Laws, J. P. On the Blood of Limulus polyphemus. 
Rep. Brit. Ass. 1884, pp. 774-776. 
Blood drawn so as not to be in contact with air did not turn blue. 
Analysis given. 
53. Graber, Y. Ueber die Helligkeit und Farbenempfindlichkeit 
einiger Meerthiere. Anz. Ak. Wien, 1885, pp. 48 & 49. 
Experiments on Iclotea and Gammarus. 
54. Griffiths, A. B. Uric Acid Crystals from the Green Gland of 
Astacus fiuviatilis. P. R. Soc. xxxviii. pp. 187 & 188. [Also in J. R. 
Micr. Soc. 1885, p. 805.] 
Obtained uric acid and traces of guanin from this gland. 
55. Guerne, J. de. Le rade de Dunkerque. Rev. Sci. ix. p. 11. 
56. Gulland, G. L. Coxal gland of Limulus and of Arachnida. Q. J. 
Micr. Sci. 1885, xxv. pp. 511-520. 
In the young Limulus the gland is a typical nephridium, such as occurs 
in Peripatus. 
57. Haacke, W. Wollkrabben und ihre Mantel. Zool. Gart. xxvi. p. 37. 
Finds Ascidians on S. Australian Dromice ; and thinks that they are 
derived in larval stages from those on the mother-crab, and regards the 
similarly placed sponges of European forms as similarly derived. 
58. -. Die Farbe der Tiefseekrabben, &c. Biol. Centralbl. v, 
pp. 367-369. 
Regards the red pigment as being at the bottom of all the colours, which 
may be obscured by secondary pigments, but reasserts itself when, as in 
boiled specimens or species from great depths, these latter are removed. 
59. Hadfield, H. W. Loss of Limbs in Stalk-eyed Crustacea. Zool. (3) 
ix. p. 191. 
On the question of lobsters l( shootingtheir claws. 
60. Halliburton, W. D. Chitin in the cartilages of Limulus and 
Sepia. Q. J. Micr. Sci. 1885, xxv. pp. 173-182. 
Finds true chitin in the mesoblastic entosternite, and also in ‘the liver 
of Limulus. 
61. Hartog, M. M. Morphology of Cyclops , and the Relations of the 
Copepoda . Abstracts only in Zool. Anz. viii. p. 301, and J. L. S. xviii. 
p. 332 ; also in J. R. Micr. Soc. v. p. 452. 
Anatomy of C. brevicornis to be treated at length ; in discussion of 
their phylogenetic position, regards Copepoda as the most ancestral of 
Crustacea. 
62. Haswell, W. A. Notes on the Australian Amphipoda. P. Linn. 
Soc. N. S. W. x. p. 95-112. 
Additional notes to former descriptions, and formation of some new 
species. 
