106 BULLETIN 97, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



Material examined. 



"Southern coast"; in Saxicava arctica (Linnaeus) = 

 distorta; 1 female holotype, dried and in very bad shape (Mus. Phila. 

 Acad.). 



Tampa Bay, Florida; 1901; Fish Hawk; 1 female (25648). 



West end of Santa Lucia Bay, northwest Cuba; with mollusks; 

 2 to 5 fathoms; May 15, 1914; Henderson and Bartsch, Tomas 

 Barrera Exped.: 1 female ovig. (48595). 



FABIA CANFIELDI, new specie*. 



Plate 24, figs. 5 and 7. 



Raphonotus subquadratus RATHBUN, Harriman Alaska Exped., vol. 10, 

 1904, p. 186 (part: specimen from Monterey). 



Type-locality. Monterey, California; in folds of the keyhole 

 limpet, Lucapina crenulata; Dr. C. A. Canfield; 1 holotype female, 

 Cat. No. 3445. 



Diagnosis. Legs of second pair unlike, right much longer than 

 left. First leg stoutest. Propodites of legs, except second right, 



thickening toward distal end. 

 Fingers deflexed. 



Description of female. Cara- 

 pace of unique specimen very soft 

 and so crushed as to be for the 

 most part beyond description. 

 Front devoid of hair and with 

 FIG. 57. FABIA CANFIEUM, FEMALE HOLO- a short, longitudinal median de- 



TYPE, OUTEE MAXILLIPED, X 21. nrPCClftn 



Second segment of palp of outer maxilliped very small, shorter and 

 narrower than first segment, and having the narrow terminal seg- 

 ment attached at about its middle. 



As in subquadrata the palm increases in width to the distal end, 

 the fingers are longer and inclined downward a little, the lower 

 margin of the propodus being more markedly sinuous than in sub- 

 quadraia; fingers not gaping, hairy along inner surface, a prehensile 

 tooth at middle of dactyl and a smaller one at base of propodal 

 finger. 



Legs subcylindrical, naked, relative lengths 2. 3. 1. 4, the second 

 leg on right side one-third longer than on left; first leg stouter 

 than the others ; propodites slightly curved, but, while having nearly 

 parallel margins, they are a trifle stouter at distal end ; an exception 

 is that of second right leg which tapers to distal end ; dactyli short, 

 slender-conical, and little curved up to the hooked, horny tip, except 

 the second right one, which is quite straight up to the tip and is also 

 the longest. 



