450 



FISHERY BULLETIN OF THE FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE 



which are comparatively common elsewhere have 

 been found thus far in the Gulf area only in the 

 western approaches to the Straits of Florida. It 

 may be of interest that the two species which 

 seem to be most generally distributed in the Gulf 

 {Lysiosquilla scahricauda and Squilla empusa) are 

 the only ones also recorded from West Africa. 

 Of the species with more restricted ranges, 

 Lysiosquilla excavatrix and Squilla neglecta are 

 known outside of the Gulf only from the Carolinas; 

 Odontodactylus havanensis, Squilla intermedia, and 

 Squilla rugosa (subspecies ?) have been recorded 

 from the Bahamas-West Indies region; Squilla 

 prasinolineata [Miers, not Dana] is a Brazilian 

 species not yet found north of Yucatdn; and 

 Odontodactylus nigricaudatus is at present repre- 

 sented only by the type specimen from the Gulf of 

 Campeche. 



LITERATURE CITED 



Anonymous. 



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1894. Report on the Crustacea of the order Stomato- 

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Chace, Fenner Albert, Jr. 



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Faxon, Walter. 



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GiBBEs, Lewis R. 



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 delphia 43 (1) : 176-207, 2 pis. 

 LuNZ, George Robert, Jr. 



1935. The stomatopods (mantis shrimps) of the Caro- 

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 6 figs. 



1937. Stomatopoda of the Bingham Oceanographic 

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 McClbndon, Jesse Francis. 



1911. On adaptations in structure and habits of some 

 marine animals of Tortugas, Florida. Pap. Tortugas 

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 Pearse, Arthur Sperry. 



1932. Inhabitants of certain sponges at Dry Tortugas. 

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1893. List of Crustacea collected. In: Barton Warren 

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1920. Stalk-eyed crustaceans of the Dutch West Indies. 

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