COPEPODS GATHERED BY ALBATROSS—WILSON aa 
the specimens here referred to and figured were taken nor the speci- 
mens themselves could be located in the Albatross material returned 
by the Wilson estate to the National Musum.—W. L. S.] 
SCOLECITHRICELLA TYDEMANI A. Scott 
Scolecithricella tydemani A. Scort, Copepoda of the Siboga-Expedition, monogr. 
29a, pt. 1, p. 93, pl. 30, figs. 10-17, 1909. 
Station 5185. Established upon a single female taken in the Hal- 
mahera Sea by the Szboga and fully described by A. Scott, it was 
later placed in synonymy with Amallothrix ostusifrons by Sars 
(1925, p. 179) but is here validated by the discovery of two females 
from this Albatross station a little farther north, the first record 
of the species since the original discovery. 
SCOLECITHRICELLA VITTATA (Giesbrecht) 
PLATE 18, FIGURES 233, 234 
Scolecithrig vittata GIESBRECHT, Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel, monogr. 
19, pp. 266, 283, pl. 13, figs. 2, 23, 32, 34; pl. 37, figs. 5, 8, 1892. 
Stations 470; 4637; 4700; 4850; Fiji Islands. Identified by Sars 
from the second and third of these Albatross stations and from one 
Monaco station. The female is fully described in the Monaco re- 
port. Giesbrecht’s type came from the Bay of Naples, and the 
Monaco specimen came from the temperate Atlantic; hence this is 
the first record from the Pacific. The male remains unknown. 
Genus SCOLECITHRIX Brady, 1883 
SCOLECITHRIX DANAE (Lubbock) 
Undina danae Lussock, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, new ser., vol. 4, p. 21, pl. 9, 
figs. 6-9, 1856. 
Stations 6; 13; 15; 16; 18; 26; 27; 30; 52-62; 64; 65; 71; 75-82; 
2195; 2396; 3829; 3867; 3878; 3901; 3912; 3930; 3932; 3980; 4009- 
4011; 4037; 4574; 4580; 4588; 4611; 4635; 4638; 4640; 4644; 4646; 
4648; 4659; 4663; 4674; 4684; 4687; 4700; 4706-4708; 4710; 4713; 
4714; 4716; 4719; 4721; 4722; 4724; 4730; 4732; 4734; 4740; 
4751; 4926; 5102; 5129; 5183; 5134; 5155; 5180; 5185; 5186; 5190; 
5223; 5225-5297; 5240; 5246; 52638; 5319; 5320; 5340; 5346; 5410; 
5411; 5415; 5422; 5430; 5553; Sabtan Island, Philippine Islands; Fiji 
Islands; Ellice Islands. Identified by Sars from 32 of these Albatross 
stations and 83 stations; found also at several Challenger, 63 Siboga, 
and 80 Carnegie stations. This is the most widely distributed species 
of the genus. It is often taken in large numbers at consecutive 
stations. 
