﻿[93] 
  

  

  DECAPODA 
  FROM 
  ALBATROSS 
  DREDGINGS. 
  

  

  697 
  

  

  Serg-estes 
  robustus 
  Smith. 
  

  

  (Plate 
  XX, 
  Fig. 
  6.) 
  

   Specimens 
  examined. 
  

  

  Sergestes 
  mollis 
  Smith. 
  

  

  (Plate 
  XX, 
  Figs. 
  3, 
  3a, 
  4, 
  5.) 
  

   Specimens 
  examined. 
  

  

  New 
  Haven, 
  Conn., 
  December 
  4, 
  1885. 
  

  

  EXPLANATION 
  OF 
  PLATES. 
  

  

  All 
  the 
  figures 
  on 
  Plates 
  I, 
  II, 
  IV, 
  VII, 
  VIII, 
  IX, 
  X, 
  XIII, 
  XIV, 
  XVII, 
  and 
  XVIII; 
  

   Fig. 
  1, 
  Plate 
  III; 
  Fig. 
  2, 
  Plate 
  V; 
  Figs. 
  1 
  and 
  la, 
  Plate 
  VI; 
  Figs. 
  1, 
  la, 
  3, 
  3a, 
  4, 
  6, 
  6a, 
  

   and 
  7, 
  Plate 
  XI; 
  Figs. 
  4 
  and 
  6, 
  Plate 
  XII; 
  Figs. 
  2 
  and 
  3, 
  Plate 
  XIX; 
  and 
  Figs. 
  1. 
  

   2, 
  3, 
  3a, 
  5, 
  and 
  6, 
  Plate 
  XX, 
  were 
  drawn 
  by 
  J. 
  H. 
  Emerton. 
  Fig. 
  2, 
  Plate 
  III, 
  and 
  Fig. 
  

   1, 
  Plate 
  V, 
  were 
  drawn 
  by 
  J. 
  H. 
  Blake. 
  All 
  the 
  other 
  figures 
  were 
  drawn 
  by 
  the 
  

   author. 
  

  

  PLATE 
  I. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  1. 
  — 
  Lispognathus 
  Thomsoni. 
  Dorsal 
  view 
  ot 
  a 
  male 
  from 
  station 
  951, 
  enlarged 
  

   two 
  diameters. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  la. 
  — 
  Lateral 
  view, 
  the 
  peraBopods 
  omitted, 
  of 
  the 
  same 
  specimen, 
  enlarged 
  the 
  

   same 
  amount. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  2.—Anamathia 
  Agassizii. 
  Dorsal 
  view, 
  the 
  peraeopods 
  omitted, 
  of 
  the 
  origi- 
  

   nally 
  described 
  male 
  from 
  the 
  Blake 
  collection, 
  natural 
  size. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  3.— 
  Dorsal 
  view 
  of 
  a 
  female 
  (5693), 
  from 
  station 
  2109, 
  one-half 
  natural 
  size. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  3a. 
  — 
  Ventral 
  view 
  of 
  the 
  front 
  and 
  oral 
  region 
  of 
  the 
  same 
  specimen, 
  natural 
  

   size. 
  

  

  Fig. 
  4. 
  — 
  AnamatMa 
  Tanneri. 
  Dorsal 
  view 
  of 
  one 
  of 
  the 
  originally 
  described 
  males, 
  

   from 
  station 
  1043, 
  natural 
  size. 
  

  

  