isn PODS OF NORTH AMERICA. 



Immch is not visible from the dorsal side. Underneath, on the ven- 

 tral side, it is small and elongated, extending only half the length of 

 the terminal segment. 



CUBARIS CINCTA (Dollfus). 



Armadillo cinctus DOLLFHS, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 392. 

 Cubans rinctn* RICHARDSON, Proc. II. S. Nat. Mus., XXIII, 1901, p. 572. 



Locality. Near Layon, West Indies. On rotten wood, dry forest. 



"Body moderately convex, rather wide, depressed on the fore and 

 hind parts of the segments, with a transverse range of tubercles on 

 each segment. Cephalon : prosepistoma nearly plain, fore edge straight. 

 Eyes middling; ocelli about 16. Antennae: first joint of the flagellum 



FIG. 690. CUBARIS CINCTA (AFTER DOLLFUS). a, HEAD AND FIRST TWO SEGMENTS OF THORAX 

 (UPPER SIDE). 6, THE SAME (UNDERSIDE), c, FIFTH AXD SIXTH SEGMENTS OF ABDOMEX AND URO- 



PODA (UPPER SIDE). (I, THE SAME (UNDERSIDE). 



twice as short as the second. Pereion: first segment with a double 

 antero- median tubercle; lateral edges raised; coxopodite distinct and 

 divergent on the third hind part of the edge (underside). Coxopodite 

 of the second segment forming a narrow, quadrangular processus. 

 Pleon, telson: pleotelson as long as wide, with a triangular tubercle 

 near its basis; sides curved; apex one-fourth narrower than the basis. 

 Uropoda: basis nearly straight; endopodite very small, extending 

 hardly to one-sixth the length of the pleotelson; exopodite minute, 

 placed above the middle of the internal edge of the basis (upperside). 

 Color: dark gray, with small lighter lineolse on both sides of the median 

 line (pereion) and three light dots on the pleotelson. Dimensions: 

 Ti by 3imrn." DOLLFUS." 



Proc. Zool. Soc. lA>nrlon, 1896, p. 392. 



