634 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM vol. us 



Distribution: S. herklotsii has been recorded previously from only- 

 three specimens, two from Ghana and one from the Congo, Pre- 

 sumably, however, the St. Helena material referred to S. latus by 

 Melliss, Cunningham, and Colman belongs to this species. It appar- 

 ently occurs in depths of 25 to 70 meters. 



Family Nephropidae 



Enoplometopus antillensis Liitken 



Enoplometopus antillensis Lutken, 1865, p. 265. — Holthuis, 1946, p. 79, pi. 5, 



figs, b, d, e, g, h, i, k, 1; pi. 6, figs, a-e; pi. 7, figs, a, b. 

 Enoplometopus dentatus Miers, 1880, p. 381, pi. 15, fig. 7. 



Material: None. 



Kemarks: Enoplometopus dentatus was described from a mutilated, 

 poorly preserved specimen collected at St. Helena by J. C. Melliss. 

 Holthuis (1946) suggested, with considerable justification but without 

 reexamination of Miers' type-specimen, that E. dentatus is a synonjrm 

 of E. antillensis, a species described from a West Indian specimen and 

 subsequently discovered in the Indonesian region. 



Distribution: West Indies; Banda Island, Moluccas; St. Helena. 

 Probably sublittoral. 



Family Paguridae 

 Subfamily Dardaninae 



Dardanus arrosor (Herbst) 



Cancer arrosor Herbst, 1796, p. 170, pi. 43, fig. 1. 

 Pagurus arrosor. — Cunningham, 1910, p. 121. 

 Dardanus arrosor. — Forest, 1955, p. 90, fig. 19. 



Material: None. 



Remarks: Although there is no reason to doubt Caiman's identifica- 

 tion of the specimens collected and reported by Cunningham (1910), 

 that material should eventually be reexamined in the light of knowl- 

 edge about this and related species that has accumulated since that 

 date. 



Distribution: Eastern Atlantic, Mediterranean, Red Sea, Philip- 

 pines, Japan, and New Zealand, in depths of 20 to 300 meters. 



Dardanus imperator (Miers) 



IPagurus bernhardus. — Melliss, 1875, p. 203. 



Pagurus imperator Miers, 1881, p. 275. — Cunningham, 1910, p. 120, fig. 6. 



Dardanus imperator. — Forest, 1955, p. 90. 



Material: James Bay, West Rocks; Dec. 21, 1959; 1 juvenile. 

 Measurements: Total length of carapace in midhne, 4.8 mm.; 

 length of anterior portion of carapace, 2.6 mm. 



