A. M Yerr'dl — Additio)is to the Fawia of the Bermudas. 19 



yellowish white, or about the color of the shell-sand in which it 

 lives. 



Tozeuma Carolinensis Kingsley. 



Tozeunia Carolinensis Kingsley, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Philad., 1878, pp. 90, 

 328, 1879, p. 413, pi. xiv, fig. 8 ; Amer. Naturalist, xxxiii, p. 715, fig. 8, 1899. 



A small, slender and delicate shrimp. Rostrum long, flat, and nar- 

 row, its edge nearly straight above, without teeth, above or below 

 but with a fine spinule at the base, back of the eyes ; at tij:), which 

 is subacute, there are fine spinules, and hair-like ones below. 



Chelipeds much shorter than the other legs, with a short swollen 

 claw and a short, round, carpus. Second pereipods much longer and 

 more slender, with a small chela and a short carpus. 



Other legs long and slender, not chelate ; eye-stalks are short, 

 swollen at base. 



Dredged in three fathoms, on a soft weedy bottom, in Castle 

 Harbor, May, 1901. 



Thor Floridanus Kingsley. 



Thor Floridanus Kingsley, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., 1878, p. 95; op. 

 cit., 1879, p. 421, pi. xiv, fig. 6; Amer. Naturalist, xxxiii, p. 718, fig. 20, 

 1899. 



A small, stout-bodied, smooth shrimp, with large conspicuous 

 black ej'es, on stout stalks, and a short rostrum, not quite reaching 

 the tips of the eyes, and having four or five acute denticles on the 

 sloping upper edge ; but none below. The anterior feet are stouter 

 and shorter than the next pair, with small, rather short chelae. 

 Those of the second pair are decidedly longer and filiform, with 

 minute chelae and a very slender, 5-jointed carpus. The other legs 

 are of about the same length, but stouter and subequal. 



The body and legs are translucent whitish with minute specks of 

 orange-red ; eye-stalks, antennal scales, and outer maxillipeds tinged 

 with orange in formalin (this color was not noted in the living 

 specimens). Eggs rather large, not very numerous, orange in 

 formalin. 



Dredged in " The Reach," in two to three fathoms, shell-sand and 

 mud. May 5th, 1901. Two females with eggs. 



Gnathophi/llicm Americamim Guerin. 



Gnathophylhun Americanum Guerin, in La Sagra's Hist. I. Cuba, vol. vii, p. 



XX ; atlas, vol. viii, pi. ii, f . 14, 1857. 

 Verrill, Amer. Journ. Sci., vol. xi, p. 328 (note), April, 1901 ; Pontonidce, sp.^ 



these Trans., x, p. 579. 



