86 S. I. Smith — Crustaceans of the Atlantic Coast. 



ments of the abdomen, those on tlie tiist three segments connected 

 by a transverse dorsal band of the same, which, however, was nar- 

 rowly interrupted in the middle on the first two segments. Flagella 

 of the antennae and antenniil» annulated with wide alternate, bands of 

 light red and white. Teeth of the rostrum dark brownish. Cepha- 

 lotlioracic legs white, annulated Avith pale red or flesh-color. Caudal 

 lamellai mottled wdth gray. 



In the other specimen, 37"'"' long, from 10 fathoms, shells, mud and 

 stones, Flagg's Cove, Grand Menan, the carapax w'as flesh-color 

 specked and mottled with light red, dorsal teeth and rostrum thickly 

 specked wdth darker red, and the posterior boi-der with two spots of 

 the same color. The first three segments of the abdomen with broad 

 interrupted transverse bands of light red ; the posterior segments and 

 caudal appendages mottled and specked with the same. Flagella of 

 the antennula^ and antennne, and the cephalothoracic legs as in the 

 other specimen. 



Pandalus borealis Kroyer. 



Massachusetts Bay !, about twelve miles east-southeast from Salem, 

 45 to 50 fathoms, mud, ISYV, and also in 1878, — very abundant. 

 (4ulf of Maine!, off* Cape Ann, 40 to 98 fathoms, mud, 1877, 1878,— 

 very abundant, particularl)^ in a region about fourteen miles southeast 

 from Cape Ann, in from 50 to about 1 00 fathoms. East of Jeflfrey's 

 Ledge!, 114 fathoms, soft mud, 1873. Gulf of Maine!, about forty 

 miles east of Cape Ann, 160 fathoms, 1877. OfiT Casco Bay!, 

 eighteen to twenty miles southeast from Cape Elizabeth, 48 to 68 

 fathoms, mud, 1873, — common. Twenty to thirty miles southeast to 

 southeast one-half east from Cape Sable, Nova Scotia!, 59 to 88 

 fathoms, tine sand, pebbles and rocks, 1877, — tw^o small specimens. 

 About thirty miles south to south by west one-fourth west from Hal- 

 ifax !, Nova Scotia, 85 to 110 fathoms, fine sand and mud, 1877. 

 Greenland (Kroyer). Bering Sea (Brandt), Norway! (G. O. Sars), 

 and south to the Cattegat (Goes). 



According to notes made by Professor Verrill in 1877, this species 

 when living is " thickly sprinkled with small red stellate spots, which, 

 from closer aggregation, make the tail deeper in coloi* than the rest 

 of the body. Plagella of the antennula? annulated with very nar- 

 row white rings alternating with very broad red bands. Flagella of 

 antennae deep red. Spermaries purplish red, the outei- membrane 

 golden. Ovaries blue. Eggs ultramarine blue." 



