PROCEEDINGS OF UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 227 
Bell (S. inflatus Kroyer); so that it might appear doubtful what species 
Packard included under “ Anonyx ampulla (Phipps)” were it not that 
he says that it was ‘compared with arctic specimens received from 
Copenhagen,” which seems to leave no doubt that he really had in view 
Anonyx nugax, although he subsequently, as indicated above, enumer- 
ates this same species under two other names. 
Anonyx pumulus Lilljeborg. 
““Anonyx producta, fide Boeck,” Packard, Mem. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., p. 301, 
1867. 
I have seen no specimens. The species is placed immediately after 
“ Anonyx Horringii” by Packard, who saysonly “ these two forms were 
found together in fifteen fathoms, sand,” although under the first of the 
two species he has nothing except the remark, ‘A common form, occur- 
ring abundantly on the coast of Maine, in Casco Bay, ten fathoms.” 
Onisimus Edwardsii Boeck (Kroyer). 
Atlantic coast! (Packard’s collection.) This species is not mentioned 
by Packard, but a single specimen of it was sent, with Anonyx nugaz, 
by him to the Museum of Yale College. In the form of the epimeron of 
the third somite of the abdomen, however, this specimen does not 
agree fully with Kroyer’s figure in the Voyages en Scandinavie, nor with 
Boeck’s diagnosis, but with Miers’s description and figure (Ann. Mag. 
Nat. Hist., IV, xx, p. 99, 1877), the acute postero-lateral angle of the 
epimeron being slightly upturned. 
Orchomene minutus Boeck (Kréyer). 
Atlantic coast! (Stearns exped.). Not mentioned by Packard, but all 
the specimens sent to the Museum of Yale College as ‘“Anonyx Hor- 
ringii” are apparently of this species, which occurs upon the New 
England coast, and is sometimes very abundant in Vineyard Sound 
in winter. : 
Tryphosa Horingii Boeck. 
? “Anonyx Horringii, fide Boeck,” Packard, Mem. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., i, p. 
300. 
Boeck undoubtedly had specimens of this species from Packard’s col- 
lection, for he (Skandinaviske og Arktiske Amphipoder, p. 184) distinetly 
mentions it as having been found in Labrador by Packard, but, as just 
noticed, all the specimens sent by Packard under the above name to 
the Museum of Yale College belong to Boeck’s genus Orchomene, so that 
it is very doubtful if the “common form, occurring abundantly on the 
coast of Maine,” was the same species as the specimens sent to Boeck. 
Pontoporea femorata Kroyer. 
Packard, Mem. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., i, p. 300, 1867. 
Gulf coast! (Packard); Atlantic coast! (Stearns exped.). 
