1SOPOD3 OF NORTH AMERICA. 



651 



CUBARIS GRENADENSIS ( Budde-Lund). 



Armadillo greinnlt'tiaix I>rm>K-Luxi), Kntoinol. Moddelel., IV, 1893, p. 115. 



DOLLFUS, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, pp. 392-393. 

 Cubaris grenadervri.* RICHARDSON, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXIII, 1901, p. 572. 



. Becquia Island; Grenada; Balthazar, West Indies. 

 Ravine, damp ground, under rotting- leaves; 250-feet cocoa orchard, 

 under rotting leaves. 



"Body much convex, nearly smooth. Cephalon: prosepistoma 

 slightly convex, fore edge feebly arched in the middle. Eyes rather 

 large; ocelli about 16. Antenna' short; first joint of the flagellum 



FIG. 694. CUBARIS GRENADENSIS (AFTER DOLLFUS). a. HEAD AND FIRST TWO SEGMENTS OF THORAX 



(UPPER SIDE), b, THE SAME (UNDERSIDE). C, FIFTH AND SIXTH SEGMENTS OF ABDOMEN AND URO- 



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



three times shorter than the second. Pereion : first segment with a 

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

 and divergent on the half hind part of the edge (underside). Coxopo- 

 diteof the second segment forming a toothlikeprocessus. Pleon, telson: 

 pleotelson as wide as long, with a blunt double tubercle near its basis; 

 sides curved; apex nearly as wide as the basis; endopodite reaching to 

 two-thirds the length of the pleotelson; exopodite minute, placed near 

 the middle of the internal edge of the basis. Color: dark gra} T , with 

 a light median line and light lineolpe on the sides; antennae whitish. 

 Dimensions: 1-t by 6 mm." DOLLFUS/' 



Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, pp. 392-393. 



