844 A. FE. Verrill— The Bermuda Islands. 
and rather slender, chestnut-brown, with reddish brown legs and 
antenne ; segments striated, except anteriorly, subsegmented. 
Thousand-legs ; Milliped. (Julus Moreleti Lucas.) 
Recorded by Bollman, 1889. It is native of the Azores. Adults 
dark brown ; legs reddish brown; young lighter, with a median 
black dorsal line, bordered with yellow, and with a row of black 
spots on each side. Common. 
There are, apparently, other undetermined species of Judus in our 
collection, 
Figure 229a.—Galley-worm ; Milliped. (Julus, sp.) 
39.—Introduction of Terrestrial Isopod Crustacea. 
Eleven species of terrestrial Isopods are recorded by Miss Rich- 
ardson* as in our Bermuda collections of 1898 and 1901. The fol- 
lowing three new species are endemic, so far as known: 
Porcellio parvicornis Rich., fig. 230; Leptotrichus granulatus 
Rich., fig. 231 ; Uropodias Bermudensis Rich. (gen. and sp. nov.). 
Figure 232.—a, Sow-bug or Slater (Porcellio levis); b, b', Pill-bug (Armadilli- 
dium vulgare). 
The following are widely distributed in both hemispheres and 
have doubtless been introduced by commerce. 
Tylos Latreilli Aud. and Say. (Sow-bug or Slater) ; Z' niveus B. L.; 
Porcellio levis Latr. (Sow-bug, Slater. Fig. 232, a) ; Metoponorthus 
* Tsopods of the Bermudas, Trans. Conn. Acad., xi, pp. 299-310, pl. xl, Jan., 
1902. 
