[145] CEPHALOPODS OF NORTHEASTERN COAST OF AMERICA. 
it is probable that those of similar age keep together in schools for 
mutual safety. 
12. Among the adult specimens of var. pallida, taken November 16 
and December 7, at Astoria, there are several young ones, from 75™™ to 
120™™ in length, with rudimentary reproductive organs. These may, 
perhaps, be the young of the year, hatched in June. 
Distribution. 
This species is found along the whole coast, from South Carolina to 
Massachusetts Bay. 
It is the common squid from Cape Hatteras to Cape Cod. In Long 
Island Sound and Vineyard Sound it is very abundant, and is taken in 
large numbers in the fish-pounds and seines, and used to a large extent 
for bait. It is comparatively scarce, though not rare, north of Cape 
Cod. The young were trawled by usin many localities in Massachusetts 
Bay, in 1878. Large specimens were taken in the pounds at Province- 
town, Mass., August, 1879. It was taken in considerable quantities, in 
breeding condition, in the fish-pounds at Cape Ann, near Gloucester, 
Mass., May, 1880 (var. borealis). It has not been observed north of 
Cape Ann. Its southern limit is not known to me, but it appears to 
have been found on the coast of South Carolina. 
In depth, it has occurred from low-water mark to fifty fathoms. The 
eggs have often been taken by us in the trawl, in great abundance, at 
many localities along the southern shores of New England, in five to 
twenty-five fathoms. 
It is known to be a very important elements in the food-supply of the 
blue-fish, tautog, sea-bass, striped-bass, weak-fish, king-fish, and many 
other of our larger market fishes. 
In the Gulf of Mexico this species appears to be replaced by another 
species (Loligo Gahi D’Orbigny). Of this we have several specimens, 
collected on the west coast of Florida, at Egmont Key, near Tampa 
Bay, by Col. E. Jewett and Mr. W.T. Coons. This species is closely 
allied to L. Pealei, but has a\more slender form, with the caudal fin 
shorter and narrower in proportion to the length of the mantle. The 
pen has a shorter and broader shaft, and a narrower and more oblong 
blade, which has parallel, thickened, and darker-colored portions be- 
tween the midrib and margins (Plate X XVII, fig. 5). The tentacular 
suckers have their horny rings more coarsely and equally toothed, there 
being only a partial alternation of larger and smaller teeth. 
Along our southern coast, from Delaware Bay to Florida, a much 
shorter and relatively stouter species (Loligo brevis Blainy.) occurs, which 
might be mistaken by a careless observer for the present species. In ad- 
dition to its shorter body, it has very different large tentacular suckers, 
with the teeth on the horny rim coarser and all of similar form and size. 
Its pen is also shorter and relatively broader, and different in strueture 
(Plate XX XT, figs. 4-6). 
