DECAPODS 145 
Distribution.—Port Etches, Alaska, to Puget Sound; 1 Japan. Port 
Etches, Alaska, 12 to 18 fathoms (W. H. Dall), one specimen. Dredged 
by the Addazross in the Straits of Fuca in 40 to 48 fathoms at stations 
2864, 3464, and 3465, and in Puget Sound in 40 fathoms, station 2865. 
Puget Sound (T. Kincaid). 
Puget Sound, Oregon, dredged (Dana). 
McLaughlin Bay, Campbell Island, 10-30 fathoms (Whiteaves). 
Vancouver Island (Smith). 
North of Japan, lat. 44° 27’ oo” N., long. 141° 22/ oo” E. (Miers). 
Family SERGE STIDA. 
Genus Sergestes Milne Edwards. 
KEY TO THE SPECIES OF SERGESTES. 
A. First joint of antennular peduncle only slightly longer than third joint. 
Rostrum spiniform. Cornea larger than eye-stalk. . atlanticus. 
A’. First joint of antennular peduncle considerably longer than third 
joint. Rostrum lobiform. Cornea no larger than eye-stalk, 
Sp. indet, 
SERGESTES ATLANTICUS Milne Edwards. 
Sergestes atlanticus MILNE EDWARDS, Ann. Sci. Nat., xIx, 349, 1830; Hist. 
Nat. Crust., 1, 428, 1837.—HANSEN, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, 949 
and 951. 
Sergestes frisii KROYER, Kongel. Danske Vidensk. Selsk. Skr., 5 Rekke, 
naturvidensk. mathem. Afd., Iv, 235, pl. 1, fig. 1, 1859. 
Sergestes pacificus STIMPSON, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., xu, 45 [114], 
1860. 
Distribution. — North and South Atlantic, North and South Pacific, and 
Indian Oceans: 
North Atlantic: Northward to 42° (Hansen); various localities, from 
off Chesapeake Bay, 2425 fathoms, southward (Bate); Sargasso Sea, 500 
to 700 meters (Ortmann). 
South Atlantic: Off Monte Video, 600 fathoms (Bate); South Equa- 
torial Stream (Ortmann). 
North Pacific: Lat. 27%° N., long. 138° E. (Stimpson); China Sea 
(Hansen); off Japan, 345 fathoms (Bate). Specimens were taken by the 
Albatross, as follows: 
Off Destruction Island, Washington, 516 fathoms, station 3343. 
Off Sea Lion Rock, Washington, 477-636 fathoms, stations 3070, 3072, 
3°73- 
1 The locality ‘‘ California” attributed to Miers is probably an error, as he appa- 
rently considered Puget Sound as on the Californian coast, and the specimens in the 
British Museum which were received from the Smithsonian Institution were undoubt- 
edly from Puget Sound. (See Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1879, 52.) 
