Abstract
ALMOST before the shadow of 1883 had passed away, the “Record of the Zoological Literature of the Year 1882” made its appearance, and the circumstances attending its publication are, as the editor informs us, without precedent in the nineteen years during which this important and most valuable annual has been issued. The sudden death on the Niger of Mr. W. A. Forbes, the late recorder of the literature relating to the mammals, was soon followed by the loss of the help of Mr. Howard Saunders in the arduous work concerning the recording of the literature of the birds. These severe losses have been supplied by Mr. Oldfield Thomas and Mr. R. B. Sharpe. In the records of the fishes Mr. Boulenger has had the assistance of Mr. R. Ogilvie-Grant. Mr. Ridley has handed the recording of the Protozoa over to Mr. W. Saville Kent, and the Myriapod literature has fallen to Mr. I. D. Gibson-Carmichael. It thus happens that of the recorders who, just twenty years ago, assisted Dr. Günther in the arduous undertaking of bringing out the first volume of this work, but one, Dr. E. von Martens, still responds to the editor's call, though happily all of the first recorders still survive to overlook and appreciate the labours of their successors.
The Zoological Record for 1882.
Being Vol. XIX. of the Record of Zoological Literature. Edited by Edward Caldwell Rye, &c. (London: Van Voorst, 1883.)
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Our Book Shelf . Nature 29, 500–501 (1884). https://doi.org/10.1038/029500b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/029500b0