COPEPODS GATHERED BY ALBATROSS—WILSON 317 
3829; 3834; 3867; 3878; 3901; 4010; 4037; 4190; 4667; 4756; 4758; 
4760; 4806; 5030; 5102; 5120; 5129; 5188; 5155; 5180; 5185; 5186; 
5190; 5208; 5209; 5211; 5219; 5223; 5225; 5226; 5231; 5232; 5234; 
5262; 5263; 5801; 5809; 5320; 5338; 5340; 5341; 5342; 5349; 5381: 
5399; 5412; 5414; 5415; 54235; 5424; 5434; 5437; 5507; 5530; 5651; 
Sabtan Island, Philippine Islands; Fiji Islands; Charles Island, 
Galaipagos; Yes Bay, Alaska. 
This well-known species is very widely distributed. It appears in 
the Monaco and Carnegie planktons but strangely was not included 
in the Stboga list. Until recently it bore the specific name elon- 
gatus ascribed to it by Boeck (1865, p. 234), but the name minutus 
had been given 20 years earlier. 
Genus PSEUDOCHIRELLA Sars, 1920 
PSEUDOCHIRELLA DIVARICATA (Sars) 
Gaidius divaricata Sars, Bull. Mus. Océanogr. Monaco, No. 26, p. 10, 1905a. 
Pseudochirella divaricata Sars, Rés. camp. sci. Albert de Monaco, No. 69, p. 
91, pl. 25, figs. 5-7, 1925. 
Station 5129. Established by Sars in the Monaco plankton upon 
specimens from the northern Atlantic, and appearing in the Car- 
negie plankton from the Pacific. 
PSEUDOCHIRELLA OBTUSA (Sars) 
Undeuchaeta obtusa Sars, Bull. Mus. Océanogr. Monaco, No. 26, p. 13, 1905a. 
Pseudochirella obtusa Sars, Rés. camp. sci. Albert de Monaco, No. 69, p. 83, pl. 24, 
figs. 1-4, 1925. 
Stations 16; 4679; 4687; 5120; H. 3789. Identified by Sars from 
the first three of these Albatross stations and from 43 Monaco sta- 
tions, but not appearing in the other planktons. With (1915, p. 
147) reported four females collected by the Danish Jngolf Expedi- 
tion in the northern Atlantic. The first Pacific record was that of 
Sewell (1929, p. 181) who collected the female in the Indian Ocean. 
PSEUDOCHIRELLA SCOPULARIS (Sars) 
Undeuchaeta scopularis SArs, Bull. Mus. Océanogr. Monaco, No. 26, p. 14, 1905a. 
Pseudochirella scopularig Sars, Rés. camp. sci. Albert de Monaco, p. 90, pl. 25, 
figs. 1-4, 1925. 
Stations 4687; 5320. Identified by Sars from the first of these 
two Albatross stations and from two Monaco stations; not appear- 
ing in the other planktons. At the first of the Albatross stations 
the tow was one of the few taken vertically from considerable depths, 
in this case from 2,000 fathoms to the surface. 
