362 



bulletin: museum of comparative zoology. 



AEGIDAE. 

 RociNELA ARIES Schioedte and Meinert. 



Rocinela aries Schioedte & Meinert, Natui'h. tidsskr., 1879-80, ser. 3, 12, p. 

 401-403, pi. 13, fig. 7-8. 



Locality.— Fanama, Harbor. One small specimen, probably im- 

 mature. 



RiciNELA ANGUSTATA Ricliardson. 



Rocinela laticauda Richardson (not Hansen), Proc. Amer. philos. soc, 1898, 



37, p.* 14-15, figs. 5-6. 

 Rocinela angustata Richardson, Proc. U. S. N. M., 1904, 27, p. 33; Bull. 54, 



U. S. N. M., 1905, p. 206-207. 



Locality.— Lat. 5° 47' S., long. 81° 24' \Y. (Station 4,653). 

 Depth. — 536 fathoms. One specimen. 



CYMOTHOIDAE. 



Anilocra meridionalis, sp. nov. 



Body of female al)out three times longer than wide, 9| mm. wide: 

 28 mm. long. Color dark brown with terminal 

 abdominal segment and uropoda light brown or 

 yellow. 



Head a little wider at the base than long, 5 mm. : 

 4 mm., triangular in shape, with the apex pro- 

 duced in a process which arches over the antennae 

 and is truncate at the extremity. Eyes small, 

 round, composite, situated in the postlateral 

 angles of the head and separated by a distance 

 of 1| mm. Head not at all immersed in the first 

 thoracic segment. The first pair of antennae are 

 composed of eight articles and extend to the mid- 

 dle of the first thoracic segment. The second pair 

 of antennae are composed of eleven articles and 

 extend to the posterior margin of the second tho- 

 racic segment. The fifth article is the longest, and 

 Fig. 3. — Anilocra [^ the last pcduucular article, although the articles 

 meridio7iaiis. 8. X ^^ flagellum and peduncle are not clearly marked. 

 The first and fourth segments of the thorax are a little longer than 



