262 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [556] 
TALORCHESTIA LONGICORNIS Smith. (p. 336.) 
Talitrus longicornis Say, loc. cit., p, 384, 1818. Orchestia longicornis Edwards, 
His. nat. des. Crust., tome iii, p. 18, 1840; De Kay, op. cit., p. 36, Pl. 7, fig. 19. 
Cape Cod to New Jersey, and probably farther south, 
TALORCHESTIA MEGALOPHTHALMA Smith. (p. 336.) 
Orchestia megalophthalma Bate, Catalogue Amphip. Crust., British Museum, p. 22, 
1862. 
Cape Cod to New Jersey, and probably farther south. 
Talitrus quadrifidus, De Kay, (op. cit., p. 36, Pl. 14, fig. 27,) may be 
based on the female of one of the preceding species, but it so is badly 
described and figured as to be indeterminable. 
HYALE LITTORALIS Smith. (p. 319.) 
Allorchestes littoralis Stimpson, Marine Invertebrata of Grand Manan, p. 49., Pl. 3, 
fig. 36, 1853; Bate, Catalogue Amphip. Crust., British Museum, p. 48, Pl. 8, fig. 
2, 1862. 
This species was found at New Haven, Connecticut., by Professor 
Verrill, May 5, 1873, and is one of the inhabitants of rocky shores, piles 
of wharves, &e. I have found it at Provincetown, Massachusetts, and 
it is abundant in the Bay of Fundy. It is undoubtedly abundant on the 
whole New England coast, but its station upon the shore is so high up 
on the beach that it is likely to be overlooked. 
LYSIANASSA, species. (p. 431.) 
A species of this genus, as restricted by Boeck, was several times 
dredged in Vineyard Sound and Buzzard’s Bay. 
Several other species of Lysianassine were taken in Vineyard Sound 
and the neighboring region, but they have not yet been sufliciently | 
studied to be enumerated. The species of this group are much less 
common and the individuals smaller on the coast of Southern New Eng- 
and than they are upon the coast of Maine and farther north. 
LEPIDACTYLIS DYTISCUS Say. (p. 339.) 
Loe. cit., p. 380, 1818. 
Georgia to Cape Cod. 
PHOXUS KROYERI Stimpson. (p. 501.) 
Marine Invertebrata of Grand Manan, p. 58, 1853. 
Rare in Vineyard Sound and usually in deep water. Common in the 
Bay of Fundy. 
UROTHO#, species. (p. 402.) 
A species with long, slender antenne and very large black eyes, 
and apparently belonging to this genus, was taken in great numbers at 
the surface at Wood’s Hole, on the evening of July 3, and on one or 
two other occasions. In life it was whitish, slightly tinged with orange- 
yellow. 
MONOCULODES, species. (p. 452.) 
A single specimen taken at the surface in Vineyard Sound, December 
21, by Mr. V. N. Edwards. 
