.1. /Y. !'.///// I ),',;i i>n<l Criixf<ici'<t of He nn inln. :!'.)" 



OXYRHYNCHA = MAIOIDEA. (See p. 305.) 



Family INACHUXZE. s/>i,lr Crabs. 



Basal joint of antenna' narrow. Orbits incomplete, sometimes 

 absent; eyes not completely retractile. Chelipeds feeble; legs often 

 long; rostrum well developed. 



Stenorhynchus Sagittarius (Fabr. ). Rathbun. 



r siti/iftiiriitK Fabr., Ent. Syst., ii, 44',', 1 71)3. 

 i'i aiiiiittin-iii- Bosc. Hist. Crust., ii, p. 253, 1801. Latreille, Gen. Crust., 



i, p. 38, 1806. 

 l.i'l>l(>l><></i stiitt<iria Leach, Zm'il. Miscell., ii, p. 16, pi. Ixvii, 1815. Latreille, 



Encycl. Meth., Insects, pi. 2!)9, fig. 1, 1818. Desm., Consid. Crust., p. 155, 



pi. xvi, fig. 2, 1825,. Latr. in R. Anim., Cuvier, ed. ii, p. 64, 1829. Guerin, 



Iconog. Reg. Anim., pi. ii, tig. 4. Von Martens, Cuban Crust., Arch. 



Nature, p. 79, 1872. Smith, Ann. Rep. U. S. Fish Com. for 1885, p. 16. 



H. Milne-Edw. , Hist. nat. Crust., i, p. 276, 1874; Atlas, reg. anim., Cuv., 



Crust., pi. xxxvi, fig. 1. A. M.-Edw. , Mission Sci. Mex., part v, vol. i, p. 



172, 1878; Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., viii, p. 6, 1880. M. J. Rathbun, Proc. 



U. S. Nat. Mus., xvii, p. 44, 1895 (distr.). 

 Leptopodia ornata Guilding, W. Ind. Crust., Trans. Linn. Soc., p. 335, 1825 



(t. Edw.). 



Leptopodia lanceolata Brulle, Hist. Nat. Canaries, Crust., fig. 1, 1844 (t. Ed\v.). 

 Stenorhynchus Sagittarius M. J. Rathbun, Ann. Inst. Jamaica, i, p. 4, 1897 ; 



Decapod Crust. West Africa, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxii, p. 293, 1900; 



Brach. and Macr. Porto Rico, p. 53, 1901. Verrill, these Trans., vol. x, p. 



577, 1900 (Bermuda). 



PLATE XXII, FIGURES 1-1(7. 



A specimen of this species was contained in the local collection of 

 the late J. T. Bartram, of St. Georges. While Mr. Goode was in 

 Bermuda, 1877, he made a drawing of Mr. Bartram's specimen and 

 sent it to Professor S. I. Smith for identification. There is no other 

 Bermuda record. Probably the specimen referred to was obtained 

 through the deep-water fisheries or in lobster-pots. 



Its range is from Cape Hatteras to Florida and throughout the 

 \Vrst Indies, to Rio Janeiro, Brazil ; Madeira ; Cape Verde ; and 

 r.marv Is.; Mediterranean and West Africa. 



Off Cape Hatteras, ll-L'7 fathoms, Albatross dredgings, 1885 

 (Smith). \\Yst Indies, Blake Exp., dredged in L J 7-1L"> fathoms. 

 West Indies, Albatross dredgings, '.i-130 fath. (Rathbun). Dominica 

 Island, 100-140 fathoms (A. II. \Vrrill, !'.OG, Yale Univ. Mus.). 

 Porto Rico, f>-70 fathoms ( I Jathbuii). It has been recorded from 2 

 to 814 fathoms. 



