Obituary Notices of Fellows Deceased . 1865. But this suggests a curious need for caution in thatmany generic names owe the commencing syllables Brady-, not to eminentzoologists, but to the Greek ftpaSv, indicating some organic slowness, andvery inappropriate to the scientific activities of George Brady and hisbrother Henry. For the use of the formers name in identifying species, hisfriend A. M. Norman led the way with the Ostracode Gythere Bradii in this, for technical reasons, gave way to another species, the Marquis deFolins Cythere Bradii in 1869. Norman, in 1878, named a CopepodG


Obituary Notices of Fellows Deceased . 1865. But this suggests a curious need for caution in thatmany generic names owe the commencing syllables Brady-, not to eminentzoologists, but to the Greek ftpaSv, indicating some organic slowness, andvery inappropriate to the scientific activities of George Brady and hisbrother Henry. For the use of the formers name in identifying species, hisfriend A. M. Norman led the way with the Ostracode Gythere Bradii in this, for technical reasons, gave way to another species, the Marquis deFolins Cythere Bradii in 1869. Norman, in 1878, named a CopepodGervinia Bradyi, Sars in 1884 another of that group Vndinopsis Bradyi, andThomas Scott a third in 1892 as Tetragoniceps Bradyi, but this, later on, hefound reason to place in a new genus with the long-flowing name ofPhyllopodopsyllus, strictly meaning a leaf-footed flea, the species beingnotable for the large size and leaf-like form of the fifth pair of thoracic feetof the female. In a footnote to Tetragoniceps Bradyi, Dr. Thomas Scottphiltrans01619876. 23


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectproceed, bookyear1922