COPEPODS GATHERED BY ALBATROSS—WILSON 257 
LUCICUTIA SIMULANS Sars 
Lucicutia simulans Sars, Bull. Inst. Océanogr. Monaco, No. 377, p. 11, 1920; Rés. 
camp. sci. Albert de Monaco, No. 69, p. 216, pl. 58, figs. 9-13, 1925. 
Station 5437. Established by Sars in the Monaco report upon 
specimens of both sexes from the western Mediterranean and not 
appearing in the other lists. Accordingly, this is the first record 
since the original discovery, as well as the first from the Pacific Ocean. 
LUCICUTIA TENUICAUDA Sars 
Lucicutia tenuicauda Sars, Bull. Inst. Océanogr. Monaco, No. 101, p. 18, 1907; 
Rés. camp. sci. Albert de Monaco, No. 69, p. 212, pl. 57, figs, 7-11, 1925. 
Stations 1; 49; 3799 ; 3800 ; 3803; 3834; 4010; 4011; 5120; 5185; 5227; 
523813; 5233; 5240; 5246; 5263; 5437; 5451. These Albatross stations 
constitute the first Pacific records for the species, which otherwise is 
known only from two Monaco stations in the temperate Atlantic, 
whence Sars obtained his original material. 
Genus MACANDREWELLA A. Scott, 1909 
MACANDREWELLA AGASSIZI, new species 
PLATE 14, Ficures 160-172 
Found off Funafuti, Ellice Islands, and identified by Sars as a 
new species of A/acandrewella but not specifically named. 
Female.—Metasome elliptical, narrowed at both ends; head with 
the frontal lens as usual; rostrum composed of a bifurcate base tipped 
with slender filaments. Head fused with the first segment, but the 
fourth and fifth segments completely separated, the posterior cor- 
ners of the latter armed with a stout curved spine, which reaches back 
to the center of the genital segment. 
Urosome one-fourth as long as the metasome and 4-segmented ; gen- 
ital segment somewhat asymmetrical, a little more protuberant on the 
left side and extending farther back on the right side. The dorsal sur- 
face is strongly elevated along the midline and near the posterior 
end is armed with a stout spine which extends back over the first 
abdominal segment at an angle of 45 degrees. This spine is conspicu- 
ous in both dorsal and lateral views and easily identifies the species. 
The three abdominal segments diminish in length distally, and the 
second is narrower than either of the others. The caudal rami are 
wider than long and divergent, each with four setae, the second inner 
one on the left ramus elongated. 
The first antennae reach the posterior margin of the genital seg- 
ment; the exopod of the second antenna is not quite twice as long as 
the endopod, the end segment one-half longer than the second segment. 
Chewing blade of the mandible narrow with three small inner teeth 
