Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 May 2009
The species included in the present report have all, with one exception, been taken since the opening of the Laboratory in June, 1888. Twenty-four genera and thirty-six species will be found recorded, and those afford a considerable addition to the previously known Nudibranchiate Fauna of the Sound.
page 173 note * Cf. this Journal, No. II, First Series, p. 185.
page 173 note † See the Director's Report, this Journal, New Series, No. I, p. 5.
page 173 note ‡ Cf, also some remarks by Thompson of weymouth (24).
page 174 note * Descent of Man, 2nd ed., pp. 261, 262, 264.
page 175 note * Darwinism, , London, 1889, p. 266.Google Scholar
page 173 note † Cf. Darwin, Voyage of Beagle, 2nd edit., p. 245, note.
page 175 note ‡ Since the above was in type Mr. Poulton has drawn my attention to his account of the defenative value of “tussocks” in the larva of Orgyia (Trans. Ent. Soc., 1888, p. 589), Which I had quito overlooked. The analogy is remarkably striking.
page 176 note * See Macalister, , Introduction to Animal Morphology, part i, 1876, p. 280.Google Scholar
page 173 note † I need hardly refer to the great suggestive value of Mr. Poulton's numerous papers on the colour, markings, and habits of lepidopterous larvæ and pupæ.