249 



Pandalus borealis, Kroyer. 



" Twenty to thirty miles south east to south east one-half east from Cape 

 Sable, Nova Scotia, 59 to 88 fathoms, fine sand, pebbles and rocks," U. S. 

 Fish Commission, 1877, " two small specimens. About thirty miles south 

 to south by west one-fourth west from Halifax, Nova Scotia, 85 to 110 

 fathoms, fine sand and mud. 1877. '• Massachusetts Bay, off Salem ; Gulf of 

 Maine, Casco Bay ; and Nova Scotia to Greenland ; in from 50 to a little 

 over 100 fathoms (S. I. Smith, 1879 ; op cit, p. 86.) 



HiPPOLYTE Fabricii, Kroyer. 



Salem Harbour, Mass., northward to Labrador and Greenland, in from 5 

 to 64 fathoms. 



"Bay of Fundy, 1864, 1868, 1870, 1872,-5 to 40 fcithoms, but not found 



in so great abundance as in Casco and Massachusetts Bays " Halifax, 



Nova Scotia," U. S. Fish Commission, 1877, "common in IG lo 21 fathoms, 

 stones, sand and red alg;\! ; in 18 to 25 fathoms, shingly, gra\elly, sandy and 

 muddy bottoms ; and 16 fathoms, mud, at the mouth of Bedford Basin; and 

 a single specimen, in company with //. macilenia, in 35 fathoms, very soft 

 mud, in Bedford Basin itself. Also off Halifax, 52 fathoms, sand, mud and 

 rocks, and 57 fathoms, gravel and stones, 1877 " (S. I. Smith, 1879 ; op. cit., 

 p. 64). Gulf of St. Lawrence, opposite Cap des Hosiers lighthouse, six miles 

 from shore, in 125 fathoms, dredged by the writer in 1871. Coast of Labrador, 

 at Domino Harbour, "not common" (Packard); at Forteau Bay, L'Anse au 

 Loup, Henley Harbour, Fox Harbour, and Dead Island,-— Stearns expedition 

 (S. I. Smith). Entrance to Hudson Strait, at Port Burwell, Cape Chudleigh, 

 Bell (S. I. Smith). 



HiPPOLYTE macilenta, Kroyer. 



Cm the western side of the Atlantic the known range of this species is 

 from the outer coast of Nova Scotia to Labrador and Greenland, in from 15 

 to 70 fathoms. It is recorded as having been taken at the following 

 localities: " Bedford Basin, Halifax, Nova Scotia, 26 to 41 fathoms, soft 

 mud, common," L^. S. Fish Commission, 1887. "Also off Halifax, 42 

 fathoms, fine sand; 52 fathoms, fine sand and mud; and 57 fathoms, mud 

 and pebbles (S. I. Smith 1879 ; op. cit., p. 71). Gulf of St. Lawrence, eight 

 miles S.E. of Bona venture Island, in 56 fathoms, and fifteen miles S.S.E. of 

 Bonaventure Island, in 50 fathoms, --dredged by the writer in 1872 ; also 

 between the Bradelle Bank and Miscou Island, in 45 fathoms, and between 

 Grand Pabou and Cap d'Espoir, in 50 and 70 fathoms, dredged by the writer 

 in 1873. Coast of Labrador, — "a rare form, dredged at Square Island at a 

 depth of 15 to 30 fathoms" (Packard). 



