360 niinois State Laboratory of Natural History. 



FAMILY ONISCID^ * 



I. AOTONisous Harger. 



1. A. BLLiPTicus Harger. Amer. Jour.^ ile.i ce, 3rd ser., 

 XV, 373 (1878); Proc. U. S. Nat. Museum, ii, 157 (1879); Rep. 

 U. S. Fish Com. for 1878, 309. 

 Hab. — Connecticut (Harger). 



II. Allonisous Dana. 



1. A. PERCONVEXtJS Dana. Proc. Phila. Acad., vii, 176 

 (1854). 



Hab. — California (Dana). 



III. Armadillo Latr. 



1. A. sPECiosus Stuxberg. Ofversigt a£ Veteusk.-Akad. 

 Forhandl., 1875, No. 2, 62. 

 Hab. — California (^Stuxberg). 



IV. Armadillidium Brandt. 



1. A. piLULARE Stuxberg. Ofversigt af Vetensk.-Akad. 

 Forhandl., 1875, No. 2, 63. 



Armadillo j^Hularis Say. Jour. Phila. Acad., i, 432 (1817). 

 — Gould. Invertebrata of Massachusetts, 336 (1841). — DeKay. 



Nat. Hist. N. Y., vi, 54 (1844). 



tfaf/. —Massachusetts [Oould), New York (DeKay), Pennsylvania 



(San). 



V. LiGIA Fabr. 



1. L. dilatata Stimpson. Proc. Boston Soc. N. H., vi, 

 88 (1857); Boston Jour. Nat. Hist., vi, 507 (1857). 

 Hah. — Washington Territory (Stimpson). 



2 L. occiDENTALis Dana. Crustacea, ii, 742 (1853). 

 Hab. — California (Dana). 



* A few forms of Oniscidx are found only at or iieur the sea coast, 

 and should properly take ratik among the marine species. The entire 

 family, however, af- known from America is indexed here. 



