REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 



129 



Richardson, Harriet — Continued. 



In this paper, despite its title, are 

 described a new genus and three new 

 species of Uajidae. Two of the spe- 

 cies come from Bering Island, while 

 the type-locality of Tlolophryxus 

 calif orniensis is in southeastern 

 Alaska, a cotype from Santa Bar- 

 bara Channel furnishing the specific 

 name. Two of the species are para- 

 sitic on Macrura, the other on a 

 Schizopod. 



Richardson, Harriet. The parasitic 

 isopod Leidya distorta (Leidy) 

 found on a new liost. 



Proc. U. S. Xut. Miis., XXXIV, 

 No. 1593, Apr. 6, 1908, pp. 

 23-26, figs. 1-5. 

 Describes specimens of Leidya dis- 

 torta from Bermuda parasitic on 

 Puchygrapsus trans icrsus (Gibbes). 



■ Description of a new isopod of 



tlie genus Eurycope from Martlias 

 Vineyard. 



Proc. U. S. Xat. Mus., xxxiY, 



No. 1598, Apr. 17, 1908, pp. 



67-69, figs. 1-3. 



Eurycope truncata, described from 



deep water off Marthas Vineyard and 



off Georges Bank. 



Stebbing, Thomas R. R. A new am- 

 phipod crustacean, Orcliestoidea biol- 

 leyi, from Costa Rica. 



Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., xxxiv, 



No. 1609, May 15, 1908, pp. 



241-244, pi. XII, figs. 1, 2. 



Based on specimens collected at 



Punta Arenas by Prof. P. Biolley. 



Discusses also the Costa Rican Hya- 



JeJla faxoni Stebbing and its allies, 



and corrects the definition of the 



family Talitridae in " Das Tier- 



reich." 



Stimpson, William. Report on the 



Crustacea (Bruchyura and Ano- 



mura ) collected by the North Pacific 



Exploring Expedition, 1S53-1S5G. 



Smithsonian Misc. CoUs., xlix. 

 No. 1717, Sept. 7, 1907, pp. 

 1-240, pis. i-xxvi. 

 A posthumous publication of a re- 

 port prepared by Doctor Stimpson 

 for the Navy Department prior to 

 1871. Brief preliminary descriptions 

 of all the genera and species had 

 been published in the Proceedings 

 of the Academy of Natural Sciences 

 of I*hilade!phi:i. A few species are 

 missing from the 358 originally 



Stimpson, William — Continued. 



described. The introductory note 

 and the explanatory footnotes are 

 supplied by Miss Mary J. Rathbun. 



^'errill, a. E. Decapod Crustacea of 

 Bermuda ; I. Brachyura and Ano- 

 mura. Their distribution, varia- 

 tions, and habits. 



Trans. Conn. Acad. Arts and 



Sciences, xiii, Jan. -Apr. 1908, 



pp. 899-474, pis. ix-xxviii. 



Reprinted as a separate, Apr., 



1908. 



Two species and 4 varieties are 

 described as new. 



Wilson, Charles Branch. North 

 American Parasitic Cor>epods belong- 

 ing to the family Callgidae. Parts 3 

 and 4. A revision of the Panda- 

 rinae and the Cecroplnae. 



Proc. U. 8. Vflt. Mus., xxxiii. 

 No. 1573, Dec. 31, 1907, pp. 

 323-490, pis. xvii-xLiii, figs. 

 1-18. 

 The sixth paper in the series 

 based upon the parasitic copepods 

 in the U. S. National Museum. It is 

 a careful revision of the two fam- 

 ilies named. Twenty species are 

 described, of which one is new to 

 science. The males of _gight other 

 species are definitely located, four 

 of them being new to science. The 

 difficult genus Nogaus is analyzed 

 and its component parts referred 

 to their proper genera. A complete 

 life history is presented by using 

 different stages of development from 

 different genera, 



North American parasitic cope- 

 pods : new genera and species of 

 Caliginae. 



Proc. U. 8. Xat. Mus., xxxiii. 

 No. 1580, Feb. 28, 1908, pp. 

 593-627, pis. xLix-LVi. 

 Based on work carried on in 1905 

 at the laboratory of the Bureau of 

 . Fisheries at Beaufort, N. C. Five 

 new and two previously known spe- 

 cies of Calignae are described, two 

 new species forming types of new 

 genera. At the end of the paper is 

 given an alphabetical list of fishes of 

 Beaufort which were hosts of para- 

 sitic copepods, with the names of 

 the latter, many of which are still 

 to be described. 



