432 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [222] 



horny, well developed, as long as the mantle. One of the ventral arms 

 is usually heetocotylized in the male. Arms with suckers, or with 

 claws, or with both. 



Family TEUTHID.E Owen (restricted). (See pp. [69], [75].) 



For a brief synopsis of the previously known genera of this family, 

 see pp. [G9-70]. 



Enoploteuthis*. (See pp. [70], [203].) 



Enoploteuthis Hartiugii Verrill. vPp. [53], [203].) 

 Enoploteuthis Cookii Owen = E. Molina' D'Orb. (Pp. [53], ['203].) 



aToroteuthis VerrilL (See pp. [70], [209].) 



Moroteuthis robusta (Dall) Verrill. (Pp. [65], [209].) 



Gonatus Gray. (See pp. [204], [206].) 

 Gonatus anicenus Gray. (Pp. [204], [200].) 



Lestoteuthis Verrill (See pp. [70], [76], [78], [204], [205].) 



1. Lestoteuthis Fabricii (Licht.) Verrill. (Pp. [76], [79], [206].; 



Family OMMASTEEPHID.F. (See pp. [80], [201].) 

 Ommastrephes. (See pp. [81-83], [202].) 



Ommastrephes (pars) D'Orbiguy, Voy. Am. Merid., 1S35; C6phal. Ace'tab., p. 341. 

 Illex and Todarodes Steenstrnp, Oversigt k. Daaske Vidensk. Selsk. Forhand., 

 1880, p. 90. 



2. Ommastrephes illecebrosus (Les.) "Verrill. (Pp. [83], [202].) 



Stiienoteuthis Verrill. (See pp. [99], [201].) 



3. Sthenoteuthis megaptera Verrill. (P. [100].) 

 Sthenoteuthis pteropus (Steenst.) Verrill. (Pp. [103], [107], [202].) 



4. Sthenoteuthis Bartramii (Les.) Verrill. (P. [112].) 



Architeuthis (Steenst.) Harting, 1881. (See pp. [1-20], [23], [51-65], 



[114], [199].) 



Architenlliiis Steenst., 1856 (no description). 



5. Architeuthis Harveyi Verrill. (Pp. [23-40], [114], [200-201], [219].) 



6. Architeuthis princeps Verrill. (Pp. [41-50], [114].) 

 Architeuthis monachus (Steenst.). (Pp. [24], [51-02].) 

 Architeuthis dux (Steenst.) Gervais. (Pp. [24], [51], [200].) 

 Architeuthis Hartingii Verrill. (Pp. [53], [200].) 

 Architeuthis Bouyeri Verrill. (Pp. [54-57].) 

 Architeuthis (?) Mouchezi Velaiu. (Pp. [63-G5].) 

 Architeuthis grandis (Owen) Verrill. (Pp. [57-59], [200].) 



The number of the foreign species, mostly nominal and imperfectly 

 known, will undoubtedly be much reduced when they become better 

 known. Probably A. dux and A. Bouyeri are identical, but there is as 

 yet no proper zoological description of either. The former has been 

 very briefly described by Gervais, and Harting has published an out- 

 line figure of one of the mandibles. 



