MARINE ISOrODA OF NEW ENGLAND, ETC. 331 



liaK the width of the preceding segments, bearing near the anterior dor- 

 sal margin two small conical tubercles ; pleon slightly longer than the 

 three preceding segments together, but not narrower, forming somewhat 

 more than one-fourth the length of the body, elongate-suboval, the breadth 

 scarcely equaling half the length, with a median, rounded, dorsal crest, 

 but little elevated, and bearing in front of this near the anterior margin 

 a small conical tubercle. 



Propodus shorter than the carpus in the first pair of legs, equal to it 

 in length in the second pair, which in the males (pi. II, fig. 11 e) have 

 the carpus thickened, and armed, on the inferior margin, with stronger 

 spines than in the females ; thu'd and fourth pairs of legs about thrice the 

 length of the body, with the three basal segments, basis, ischium, and 

 merus, very short and robust ; the last three very much elongated and 

 filiform ; the propodus longer than the carjius, both armed with many 

 short spinules arranged longitudinally ; dactylus about one-fifth as long 

 as the propodus, slightly curved, naked, very minutely serrulate along 

 the convex margin. Last three legs (pi. II, fig. 11 f) with the carpus 

 and propodus elongate- subelliptic, both segments strongly ciliated, the 

 propodus a little shorter than the carpus. 



Abdominal operculum in the female (pi. II, fig. 11 g) with a longitu- 

 dinal, elevated, acute median crest, flattened medially in the males. 

 Uropods slightly more than one-third the length of the pleon, composed 

 of two subequal segments. Laminae of the incubatory pouch in the 

 females attached to the anterior four thoracic segments ; the three poste- 

 rior pairs large ; the third and fourth suborbicular ; the second elongate ; 

 the first much smaller, bifid at the apex. 



Length 8-10"™ ; antennae 40-50°^'^ ; third and fourth pairs of legs 24- 

 30°™. Color, light yellowish, or grayish, in alcohol ; lighter below. 



The specimens that I have had an opportunity of examining were all 

 more or less imperfect, and I have therefore, in both the generic and 

 specific descriptions given above, made free use of the admirable and 

 exhaustive description of this genus and species by M. Sars,* and the 

 figiTres of the species on plate II were coi^ied from the same author, 

 having been drawn by his not less distinguished son, G. O. Sars. 



This species like its allies is an inhabitant of deep water on muddy 

 bottoms. Three specimens, the only ones that I have personally ex- 

 amined, were taken by the Fish Commission in the Bay of Fundy ! be- 

 tween Head Harbor and the Wolves, in 60 ftithoms muddy bottom, 

 August 16, 1872. It has been dredged by Mr, Whiteaves in the Gulf 

 of St. Lawrence in 125 to 220 fathoms; by the Valorous Expedition 

 in Baffin Bay in 100 fathoms (Norman) ; in 25, to 50 fathoms off Cape 

 Napoleon, Grinnell Land, by the Arctic Expedition (Miers) ; between 

 Norway and Iceland in from 220 to 417 fathoms; Christiania fiord, 

 200 to 230 fathoms (G. O. Sars) ; Christiania Sound 50 to 60 fathoms, 



* Bidrag til Kundskalj om Cliri3tiama-:Qor<len9 -Fauna, 1868, pp. 70-95, pis. vi-vii. 

 (Nyt Magazin, ) 



