DISTRIBUTION, MORPHOLOGICAL. Gen. Sub. 51 
Zacharias (852).—Cause of differences in the winter plankton of large 
and small lakes; Zacharias (853).—Quantitative variations in the 
plankton of Lake Leman; Yung (849 & 850).—Plankton of Lake 
Neuchatel; Fuhrmann (255).—Zooplankton of Swiss Lakes; Burck- 
hardt (97). 
Study of Northern Plankton; Aurivillius (29 & 30).—Seasonal 
distribution of some Atlantic plankton-organisms; Cleve, P. T. (126).— 
Plankton of some lakes in Lule Lappmark, Sweden; A. Cleve (125).— 
Northern Plankton; P. T. Cleve (127-129).—Plankton-methods; Fuhr¬ 
mann (253).—Criticism of Plankton-technique; Fuhrmann (254).— 
Plankton of, Messina ; Lohmann (474).—Plankton investigations and 
practical problems; Reighard (650).—Plankton and the investigation of 
it; Walter (807).—Criticism of Hensen’s methods of plankton investiga¬ 
tion ; Yung (849). 
Invertebrates of Singapore; Bedford (50). — Zoological exploration in 
Trans-Caucasia and Trapezund; Derjugin (169).—Papuan Fauna; Hagen 
(302).—Explorations in East Central Africa ; Kirby (399).—Further 
India, a zoo-geographical sketch ; Kobelt (404).— Fauna of meridional 
sub-region ; Kobelt (405).—Fauna of New Guinea; Matschie, see 
Krieger (417).—Animal life of Oresund; Lonnberg (469).—Life-zones 
and crop-zones of the United States; Hart Merriam (528).—Observations 
in the South Sea; Pfeil (611).—Popular account of the first German 
Deep Sea expedition; Raabe (632).—Arctic zoology; Romer (663), 
Schaudinn (687).—An attempt to correlate geological peculiarities in the 
Monts Lyonnais with peculiarities of the fauna ; Roux (673).—Three 
months on a coral island; Schauinsland (690).—In the Australian Bush, 
translation; Semon (716).—Possible origin of British coleopterous fauna; 
Sharp (720),—Funafuti, the study of a coral atoll; Sollas (734).—The 
Danish Ingolf-Expedition; Wandel (808). — Contributions to regional 
faunistic survey of Nebraska; Ward (811).—On the origin of the fauna of 
Celebes; translation of an article published in 1894; Weber (818).— 
Travels in East Africa; Wickenburg (834). — General account of a 
zoological expedition to the South Seas ; Willey (836).—Continuation of 
“ Wissenschaftliche Meeresuntersuchungen ” (844). 
Fauna of salt marshes of Lorraine; Florentin (240).—Life on the high 
plateaux; Herrera & Lope (338).—European cave fauna; Absolon (5), 
Verhoeff (789).—Cave Animals; Eigenmann (200-202).—Subterranean 
animals; Vire (796 & 797). — On the ‘fauna’ of frog-spawn, — a long list ; 
Thon (766).—Fauna of the grave ; Motter (557). 
3. Morphological. 
a. Taxonomy and Anatomy. 
Critical notes on morphological methods; Driesch (180).—Physiological 
morphology, illustrated in Cerebratulus lacteus ; Wilson, C. B. (837).— 
Fundamental nature of organic - structure; Reinke (651).—Sources of 
error in phylogenetic inquiry; Philippi (612).-—Organic symmetry; 
Anderson (15), Schultze (702, 704).—Animal symmetry; Masterman 
(505).—Symmetry and asymmetry; Reh (647).—Metamerism; Busquet 
(100).—Archimeric segmentation and the classification of the Coelomata; 
Masterman (504). 
Origin of Vertebrate notochord and pharyngeal clefts; Masterman 
(503).—Morphology of vertebras, the vertebral theory; Ivuss (419).— 
Translation of work on anatomy of central nervous system in Vertebrates; 
Edinger (195).—Structure of Vertebrate brain; Haller (303).—Mor- 
