420 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



In Maryland it is very abundant about most all the Chesa- 

 peake Bay region. I have examined examples at Baltimore in 

 the Patapsco River, the Bohemia River, Cape Charles, Old Point 

 Comfort, and Norfolk, near many of which places are important 

 industries. It is also abundant in the Chincoteague Bay region, 

 as on Chincoteague Island, Assateague, Wallops, and further 

 south as at Cedar Island, Parmores Island and Watchapreague 

 Inlet. Mr. W. T. Davis says this crab is still to be found in num- 

 bers in the salt creeks of Staten Island, N. Y. In winter a great 

 many dead are often washed ashore on the south Side. 



Megalops and Zoea of crabs before me, taken in great abund- 

 ance at Point Pleasant and in Great Egg Harbor, are very likely 

 of this species. 



Genus OVALIPES M. J. Rathbun. 



The Lady Crabs. 



Ovalipcs M. J. Rathbun, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXI, 1899, p. 597. Type 

 Cancer ocellatus Herbst, designated. 



Carapace depressed, transverse, dorsal surface without tuber- 

 cles or transverse ridges, front rather narrow and armed with 

 three or four lobes or teeth. Antero-lateral margins of carapace 

 arcuated, armed with five teeth or spines, including lobe at ex- 

 terior orbital angle and lateral epibranchial tooth, which longer 

 than preceding tooth. Orbits rather widely open above, with 

 one or two fissures in superior and one in inferior margin. 

 Ridges of endostome obsolete. Post-abdomen usualy distinctly 

 seven-jointed, or sometimes five-jointed with third to fifth seg- 

 ments consolidated. Eyes of moderate length. Basal joint of 

 antennse short and not dilated, occupies but not wholly filling 

 interior hiatus of orbit and not united at its distal extremity with 

 front. Exterior maxillipeds rather large, ischiumi joint not pro- 

 duced at antero-internal angle, merus obliquely truncated at dis- 

 tal extremity with antero-external angle rounded and not at 

 all produced. Chelipeds (in adult males) subequal, not greatly 

 elongated, palms externally more or less distinctly longitudi- 



