VII.- 'I'm. Maki.vk AM) TbBBESTBIAL ISOPODS OK I M K BEBMUDAS, 

 Willi DeSCBIPTIOMS OF Nl-.w GeNEBA AND SPECIES. 



liv Habbiei Richabdson. 

 [Collaborator, Smithsonian Institution. | 



). The Marine Tsopods of the Bermudas, with descriptions of 

 thirteen New Species and three New Genera. 



There La almost no literature relating to the Marine IsopocU of the 

 Bermudas. 



In L80] [yes* described and figured a new speciee of Cymodocea 

 from the Bermudas [C. bermudensis), which has since been referred 

 to the gen m- Dynanu n< , 



Several species <>\ wide-spread distribution have been recorded 

 from the Bermudas, as for example, Idotea marina (Linnaeus), speci 

 mens of which are in the Smithsonian Institution. It was taken in 

 abundance by the Fale party in L901, in Hamilton Harbor. 



Spence Batef mentions, without any description, ;i speciee of 

 Bgpyrus from the Bermudas, parasitic on Latreutes ensiferus 

 (Milne-Edwards), which is without doubt, identical with Bopyroides 

 latreuticola Gissler, found on the same host at Beaufort, North 

 ( Carolina. 



The material for the present paper ie the result of three expedi- 

 tions to the Bermudas ; one in 1816-1, when Prof. George Brown 

 Goode collected a number of [sopods ; one in L898, undertaken by 

 Prof. A. E. Verrill and party ; and another in the spring of 1001, 

 by Prof. A. E. Verrill and Mr. A. II. Verrill. 



These collections contain both known and unknown sped 

 Among the known species are to \»- mentioned specimens of Dyna- 

 mene bermudensis Ives, and Idotea marma (Linnaeus), already 

 recorded from the Bermudas. 



Also specimens of CoraUana quadricomis Hansen, Aleirona 

 krebsii Hansen, NerocUa acuminata Schicedte and Meinert, Dyna- 

 meru perforata Moore, and Cilicma caudata (Say), common to West 



' Proc. Philad. Acad. Nat. 8ci., 1891, p. L94. 



\ Report of the Scientific Beeult* of the Exp. Voyage of B. Iff. 8. Challenge] 

 xxiv. p. 582, 1888. 



