64 A. REVISION OF THE ASTACIDA. 
more gradually to form the longer acumen. The areola is wider and more 
punctated, the antennal scale broader at the tip. ‘This is the form described 
by Girard under the name of C. montanus. From this form we easily pass 
to one with a still more elongated rostrum, hand and fingers scarcely tuber- 
culated, external finger bearded within at the base, antennal scale truncate 
at the end, with the inner margin straight and parallel to the outer one. 
The epistoma is short and transverse. This form I have called C. Bartoni, 
var. longirostris. It is perhaps the same as Girard’s Cumbarus longulus (see 
p. 66). My specimens come from Eastern Tennessee and West Virginia. 
Three from Cumberland Gap have a well-marked lateral spine on the cara- 
pace. There are so many varieties connecting this one with the more typical 
forms with a short rostrum, that I cannot regard it as a distinct species. 
Even among those with the short quadrangular rostrum there is consider- 
able variation, the upper surface of the rostrum being more or less hollowed 
out and the margins thickened, and the areola of variable width. From one 
locality, Cincinnati, Ohio, come three forms which are readily distinguishable 
from each other. In one of these (M. C. Z., No. 267).the rostrum is sub- 
quadrangular, the antennal scale narrow, and the areola narrow (2 mm. in 
a specimen 75 mm. long) with two longitudinal lines of dots. This comes 
very near the common Eastern form, but the rostrum is more excavated 
above. In another form (M. C. Z., No. 288) the rostrum is also quadrangu- 
lar, but. the areola is broad (4 mm, in a specimen 91 mm. long) and thickly 
sown with dots. The cervical groove is more sinuate, the post-orbital ridge 
shorter. The third form (M. C. Z., No. 245) has a somewhat longer and 
more tapering rostrum, an almost linear areola, antennal scale broad near 
the tip, and a shorter and more conical hand. This form approaches Q. /ati- 
manus, and may be a distinct species from C. Bartoni. 
In specimens from the Mammoth Cave, the antenne are extremely long 
(12 times as long as the body), the antennal scale broad and _ sub-truncate 
at the end; the metacarapace is very long, and a lateral spine is evident. 
The margins of the rostrum are angulated at the base of the acumen, in 
young specimens even toothed. The terminal segment of the telson is oval. 
The largest specimen from the cave, a male of the first form, measures 
* 108 mm. from tip of rostrum to posterior border of telson. 
Fabricius’s description of Astucus Bartowi is as follows : — 
“A. thorace levi, rostro brevi, acuminato, carpis dentatis. 
“ Habitat in America boreali. Prof. Smith Barton. 
