EUCOPIA SCULPTICAUDA. 189 



localities belong either all to E. major or some to E. major and others either to a 

 hitherto undescribed species or that they are j-oung specimens of E. scidpticauda 

 Faxon. 



7. Eucopia sculpticauda Faxox. 



1893. Eucopia sculplicawla Faxon, Bull. Mus. Coin]). Zoul., 24, p. 218. 



1895. EucojjiascidpUaiuilii F.-vxox, .Mem. Mus. Coiiip. Zool., 18, p. 219, pi. K, fig.-^. 2, 2(1; pi. ;J3, fig.-^. 



1-ld. 

 190o. Eucopia inlcrmnlin H. J. Hansen, Bull. Mus. Orean. JMonaco, no. 30, p. 5, fig.s. 2-3. (Young). 

 1905. Eucopia sculplicaitila II. J. Han.sen, Bull. Mus. Ocean. Monaco, no. 30, p. 0-7; fig. -1. 



Sta. 4645. Nov. 8,1904. Lat. 3° 37.0' S., long. 89° 43.1' W. 1955 fms., trawl. 1 adult female. 



Sta. 4C4S. Nov. 9,1904. Lat. 4° 43' «., long. 87° 7.5' W. 300 fms. to surface. 1 young specimen. 



Sta. 4652. Nov. 11, 1904. Lat. 5° 44.7' S., long. 82° 39.5' W. 400 fms. to surface. 4 specimens 



(1 female with marsupium, 3 young specimens). 



Sta. 4657. Nov. 13, 1904. Lat. 7° 12.5' S., long. 84° 9' \V. 300 fms. to surface. 2 young specimens. 



Sta. 4664. Nov. 17. 1904. Lat. 11° 30.3' S., long. 87° 19' \V. 300 fm.s. to surface. 2 young specimens. 



Sta. 4667. Nov. IS, 1904. Lat. 11° 59.5' S., long. 83° 40.4' W. 300 fms. to surface. 1 young specimen. 



Sta. 4676. Dec. 5,1904. Lat. 14° 28.9' S., long. 81° 24' W. 300 fms. to surface. 1 young specimen. 



Sta. 4715. Jan. 2,1905. Lat. 2° 20.4' S., long. 90° 19.3' W. 300 fms. to surface. 1 young specimen. 



Sta. 4721. Jan. 15,1905. Lat. 8° 7.5' S., long. 104° 10.5' W. 2084 fms., trawl. 2 adult females. 



Sta. 4724. Jan. 17, 1905. Lat. 11° 13.4' S., long. 109° 39' W. 1841 fms., trawl. 1 adult female. 



Remarks. — As already mentioned in the ''Siboga" paper E. intermedia 

 is only the 3'oung, differing from large or adult specimens in having the telson 

 scarcely or not at all constricted a little before the tip and without any network 

 of ridges on a portion of its surface, furthermore by ha\'ing the first ]3air of 

 thoracic legs somewhat less thick than in the adult, Ijut yet much thicker than 

 in the three other species of the genus. 



As seen in the list, five females with marsupium have been captured. The 

 smallest female (from Sta. 4652) is only 30 mm. long, the largest (from Sta. 4724) 

 is 49 mm., the three other respectively 31.6 mm., 34.5 mm. and 36.5 mm. Faxon 

 has mentioned a female measuring 66 mm. in length. 



Distribution. — Faxon established E. sculpticauda on some specimens from 

 the tropical Pacific (the Galapagos, the Gulf of Panama, off' Central America); 

 Ortmami (1905) enumerated two specimens from the Hawaiian Islands. It has 

 been taken by the "Investigator" in tlie Bay of Bengal, by the Prince of ^Monaco 

 in various places within tlie triangular area between Gibraltar, the .Azores, and 

 the Canary Islands; finally West of the Hebrides and Southwest of Iceland 

 at Lat. 62° 25' N., long. 28° 30' W. (Ingolf-Exp.). 



It is interesting that all the specimens captured by the ".Vlbatro.'^s" at 

 the six Stations in depths from 300 fms. to sin-face are not full grown, while 

 one adult female is from 400 fms. to surface and the four other adult tVniales 

 from much greater depths to surface. This seems to confirm m_\- ol)S('i-\'ations 



