- Thelemark cows of Norway
- Every good mother should be the honored queen of a happy family
The group of bees represents the attitude in which the bees surround their Queen or Mother as she rests upon the comb. - Præanaspides præcursor, One of the Fossil Syncarida, from the Coal-measures of Derbyshire
- Lobster
Lobster - Common Crayfish
Common Crayfish - Barnacles
Barnacles They are attached to a flexible muscular stem and have a flat, three-sided shell. A large number of genera are distinguished according to the number and the greater or lesser development of the limestone plates. Among the most common are Lepas and Otion . About half of all Lepadid species attach themselves to objects moving in water, to the keel of ships, to pieces of wreckage, etc., or to animals that often change places. Anelasma squalicolaeg lives parasitically on Northern Sharks, into whose skin it has penetrated with its stem; With Lepas anserifera and a few other species, the ships are not infrequently overgrown on their return from almost all southern and tropical seas. [As translated online ] - The Tasmanian 'Mountain Shrimp'
- Bees
The figure is a very accurate representation of the Queen, the Worker and the Drone. - Two Species of Caprellidæ
- Restoration of a Trilobite (Triarthrus becki), showing the Appendages
- Common Lobster
Common Lobster - Centipede
- The Norwegian Deep-water Prawn (Pandalus borealis), Female
- A Deep-sea Crab (Platymaia wyville-thomsoni)
- Cirolana borealis
- Polycheles phosphorus, One of the Eryonidea, Female, from the Indian Seas
- Calocalanus pavo, One of the Free-swimming Copepoda of the Plankton
- The Freshwater Jelly-fish of Lake Tanganyika
The Freshwater Jelly-fish of Lake Tanganyika (Limnocnida Tanganyicae), Since its discovery in Tanganyika it has been found also in the Lake Victoria Nyanza and in pools in the Upper Niger basin. - Meganyctiphanes norvegica, One of the Euphausiacea
- Squilla mantis
Squilla mantis - The Phyllosoma Larva of the Common Spiny Lobster
- The Freshwater Jelly-fish of Regent’s Park (Limnocodium Sowerbii)
The Freshwater Jelly-fish of Regent’s Park (Limnocodium Sowerbii) It was discovered in the tropical lily tank of the Botanical Gardens in June, 1880, and swarmed in great numbers year after year—then suddenly disappeared. It has since been found in similar tanks in Sheffield, Lyons, and Munich. Only male specimens were discovered, and the native home of the wonderful visitor is still unknown. - A Well Shrimp (Niphargus aquilex)
- Beach crabs
Beach crabs - Newly-hatched Young of a Crayfish
- Dissection of Male Lobster, from the Side
- The Zoëa Larva of a Species of Sergestes
- The Surinam Toad
- Front Part of Body of a Prawn infected, parasites
- Trypanosoma Ziemanni, from the blood of the little owl
Trypanosoma Ziemanni, from the blood of the little owl. The stages shown in Figs. 52–54 are passed inside the gnat. The spiral and pear-shaped bodies of Fig. 54 pass from the gnat’s proboscis into the blood of the little owl, and grow there into the large forms here figured. A, B, and C are females, destined to be fertilized by spermatozoa when swallowed by a gnat. D and E are male Trypanosomes, which will give rise each to eight fertilizing individuals or spermatozoa as shown in Fig. 56—when swallowed by a gnat. - The Common Lobster (Homarus gammarus,) Female, from the Side
- King Snake
- A Fish-louse (Caligus rapax), Female
- Hyperia galba, Female
- Pouched Frog
- Echidnophaga gallinacea
- Freshwater Shrimp
Freshwater Shrimp - Last Larval Stage of the Common Porcelain Crab
- Mimonectes loveni. A Female Specimen seen from the Side and from Below
- The Nauplius Larva of a Species of Barnacle of the Family Lepadidæ, showing greatly-developed Spines
- Pigeon tick
Pigeon tick ( Argas reflexus ) seen from the back and from the ventral side, enlarged. The top is rusty yellow, the bottom is yellowish-white (as is the edge of the body and legs), unless the food channel is filled with a colored substance. - Front Part of Body of a Prawn infected, parasites
- The Gribble (Limnoria lignorum)
- Nebalia bipes
- Great Sea Spider
Great Sea Spider - Sea crab
Sea crab - Stages in the Life-history of Hæmocera danæ, One of the Monstrillidæ
- A Common Hermit Crab
- Left spiracle of nymph of Argas persicus
- The Common Shrimp (Crangon vulgaris)
- One of the Abdominal Somites of the Lobster, with its Appendages, separated and viewed from in Front
- Thirteen-Spotted Lady Beetle
- Chrysalis of Tomato Worm
- Copilia quadrata (Female), a Copepod of the Family Corycæidæ
- First Larval Stage of Munida rugosa
- Cordylobia anthropophaga
- Wreathed Weaving Spider
The Wreathed Weaving Spider ( Theridium redimitum), which occurs quite commonly, especially in gardens, becomes at most 5 mM. long; this fat little spider inhabits all kinds of low-growing herbs and shrubs; here it spins (fig. 1) a few leaves together by irregularly oriented threads, on which the small animals that make up its food stick to. The mother attaches the spherical, bluish egg sac to a leaf (fig. 2), keeps watch next to it until the young have hatched, and continues to do so for the few days of their cohabitation. These beautiful spiders are very variable in color and drawing. Transparent and almost white in their early youth, spotted black only on the back of the abdomen; towards the end of June, in July and in August, they have taken on a pale yellow color, some plain, others with a stain on the abdomen, which can be pure pinkish red or partially greenish, circular or oval. In addition, the rim and a line across the center of the head-breast, 6 pairs of round dots on the abdomen, the tip of the probes and the shins are black. grab. [As translated from the Dutch by online translator ] - The Sea-slater (Ligia oceanica)
- Common Water Spider
The female lays eggs in a bubble, which, covered with a double layer of silk and deformed into a more or less flat bulb, is hung on a water plant or in the diver's bell and carefully monitored. - Ixodes ricinus; male, ventral aspect