ATLANTIC AND CARIBBEAN PYCNOGONIDA—HEDGPETH 239 
Phozichilus spinosus STEPHENSEN, 1935, p. 30. 
Chilophozus spinosus GiuTay, 1937, p. 89. 
Endeis spinosa Marcus, 1940b, pp. 73-75, fig. 9, a~-e—Hrparrtu, 1948b, p. 48. 
RECORDS OF COLLECTIONS 
Bermuda, 1877. G. Brown Goode coll., 1 female (Y. P. M.). 
Bermuda, north shore of St. George Island, June 9, 1936, F. A. Chace, Jr., 
coll., 1 female (M. C. Z.). 
Bermuda, H. Pratt coll., 1 female. 
Bermuda, from sargassum, on hydroids, March 17, 1917, W. J. Crozier coll., 
1 male, 1 female. 
Bermuda, Nonsuch Wharf, Aug. 10, 1937, William Beebe coll., 1 female. 
Fish Hawk station 8841, Aug. 22, 1920, off Plantation Point, Chesapeake 
Bay, 12.8 fathoms, 1 female. 
Huntington Island Buoy, 11 miles off coast of South Carolina, March 7, 1935, 
T. B. Christiansen coll., 1 female. 
Tortugas, Fla., June 20, 1905, surface tow, L. J. Cole coll., 1 female (olive-green 
and light yellow-green). 
Tortugas, Fla., Apr. 15, 1906, surface, Gulf Stream, L. J. Cole coll., 1 female. 
Tortugas, Fla., Apr. 22, 1906, surface tow, L. J. Cole coll., 1 female. 
Tortugas, Fla., May 9, 1906, in floating gulf weed, L. J. Cole coll., 1 male 
(ov.), 1 female. 
Tortugas, Fla., June 5, 1906, 5 fathoms, L. J. Cole coll., fragments. 
Loggerhead Key, Fla., northwest of lighthouse, Aug. 4, 1924; 5-10 feet, W. L. 
Schmitt coll., 1 female. 
Shoals north of Loggerhead Key, Tortugas, Fla., 1924, 10-48 feet, W. L. 
Schmitt coll., 1 female. 
North end of Loggerhead Key, Tortugas, Fla., July 14, 1925, W. L. Schmitt 
coll., 1 male. 
Tortugas, Fla., July 28, 1926, from live car under wharf, C. R. Shoemaker 
coll., 1 male, 1 juv. 
Tortugas, Fla., Aug. 18, 1926, from rope hanging in water near wharf, C. R. 
Shoemaker coll. 5 females. 
Johnson-Smithsonian Expedition, station 16, Feb. 3, 1933, north of Puerto 
Rico, lat. 18°31’ N., long. 66°10’15’’ W., 38 fathoms, tangles, 1 male (with 
Pentanymphon geayt Bouvier). 
Haiti, Mar. 25, 1927. [Identified from a water-color painting of an ovigerous 
male, forwarded by William Beebe; the specimen is lost or mislaid.] 
Guayanilla Playa Wharf, Ensenada, Puerto Rico, June 25, 1915, on wharf 
piles 0-5 feet, R. W. Miner and R. C. Osburn colls., 1 male, 1 female. 
These specimens vary in extent from 3+ cm. (Bermuda) to less 
than 8 mm. (Chesapeake Bay), but none of them are as large as 
E. charybdaea. The ovigerous male taken from floating sargassum 
at Tortugas is about 2.5 cm. in extent. According to Timmermann 
and Giltay, the specimens taken from sargassum in midocean are of 
the smaller variety, and the relatively large size of these pelagic 
specimens is of interest, suggesting that we are not dealing with 
physiological races or similar specific subdivisions, or at least that 
the differences are not correlated with habitat. 
Distribution.—Sparingly along the European coast from Norway 
(about lat. 62°30’ N.) to France; in the Mediterranean and Black 
