272 KEPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES [566 J 



Sound, among masses of a large compound Ascidiau, (Amouroucium pel- 

 lucidum,) in eight to ten fathoms, off Nobska Point, are probably this 

 species, but unfortunately females only were obtained, while Say de 

 scribes and figures the male alone. In our specimens, the antennulre 

 and antennae are spotted with very dark purplish-brown, the anterior 

 part of the body almost black, the middle and posterior portions spotted 

 with black, or very dark purplish brown. They are between 4 and 5 1U1U 

 long and inhabit unattached tubes as described by Say. The tubes are 

 regularly cylindrical, quite thin and delicate, black, about 5 mm long, and 

 0.4 mm in diameter, and are carried about by the animal very much as the 

 larva? of some of the Pnryganeidse carry about their tubes in fresh water. 

 In the structure of the caudal appendages, our specimens are quite differ 

 ent from the species usually referred to Cerapus, but I have not thought 

 best to make any changes in nomenclature until the discovery of the 

 male shall make it certain whether our specimens belong to the species 

 described by Say. 



COROPHIUM CYLINDBICUM Smith, (p. 370.) 



Podocerns cylindricus, Say loc. cit., p. 387, 1818, (not of Bate, Catalogue Amphip. 

 Crust. Brit. Mus., p. 256.) 



New Jersey to Vineyard Sound. Very abundant among weeds and 

 hydroids about piles of wharves, and almost everywhere in shallow 

 water. 



Length, about 4 mra . 



SlPHONCECETES CUSPID ATUS Smith, Sp. 110V. (p. 501.) 



Male: Head produced into a long, slender, acute rostrum, and each 

 side between the autennula and antenna into a long lobe rounded at 

 the end where the eye is situated, and contracted toward the base. 

 Antennula reaching about to the middle of the fourth segment of the 

 peduncle of the antenna; segments of the peduncle equal in length; 

 flagellum scarcely longer than a segment of the peduncle, and composed 

 usually of five segments. Antenna a little longer than the body ; third 

 segment of the peduncle a little longer than any segment of the peduncle 

 of the attennula ; fourth segment nearly twice as long as the third ; last 

 segment nearly one-half longer than the third; flagellum a little shorter 

 than the last segment of the peduncle. Legs much like Kroyer s fig 

 ures of 8. typicus, those of the first pair with the carpus twice as long 

 as broad ; propodus slightly narrower and a little longer than the car 

 pus, the posterior edge furnished with long hairs and several stout spines. 

 Legs of the second pair much stouter. Posterior caudal stylets with 

 the terminal process fully as long as the rarnus itself, the ramus as broad 

 as long, the extremity obtusely rounded and furnished with very long 

 hairs. Telson broader than long, transversely elliptical. 



In the female the antennae and second pair of legs are more slender 

 than in the male. 



In alcoholic specimens the antennulie are marked with narrow bands 

 of black or dark brown upon each segment of the flagellum and at 



