Decapod Crustacea of Bermuda, Part II. 161 



This extensive and very valuable work has been published in numbers 

 and is not yet completed. It is abundantly illustrated with autographic 

 plates. The Cumacea, many of which are identical with New England 

 Species, occupy volume iii, 1900. Volumes iv and v are devoted to the 

 Entomostraca. 



Schmitt, Waldo L. The Marine Decapod Crustacea of Cali- 

 fornia; Univ. of California publications in Zoology, vol. 23. 

 470 pages, 50 plates, including 10 charts of distribution. 



Contains descriptions of all the species and good figures of most of 

 them, with details of distribution. An important work. 



Sharp, Benj. Catalogue of the Crustaceans in the Museum 

 of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Pro- 

 ceedings of the Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., for 1893, pp. 104-127 

 (no descriptions). 



This contains the Stomatopoda and Caridea (sens ext), 128 species. 

 Several species are given as from Bermuda (coll. Heilprin). But the two 

 doubtful species (Palcciiionclla tcnitipcs Dana and Pcnccus vclutinus Dana), 

 credited to Heilprin's coll. by Mr. W. Stone, are not included in this list. 



Smith, Sidney Irving. On some Genera and Species of 

 Penaeidse, mostly from recent Dredgings of the U. S. Fish 

 Commission, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. viii, pp. 170-190, 1885. 



Contains two Bermuda species, one of which (Parapenccus goodei) is 

 described as new, from the Bermuda type. The genus Parapetuzus is here 

 first established (p. 170). P. constrictus is also recorded from Bermuda. 



Stebbing, Thomas R. R. Stalk-eyed Crustacea Malacos- 

 traca of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. Trans. 

 Royal Soc. Edinburgh, Vol. L, part 2, No. 9, pp. 253-307, pi. 

 xxiii-xxxii, 1914. 



Contains some oceanic species common at Bermuda. 



Streets, T. Hale. Catalogue of the Crustacea from the 

 Isthmus of Panama collected by J. A. McNeil. Proc. Acad. 

 Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, for 1871, pp. 238-243. 



A brief list of species, partly Atlantic, mostly without definite localities. 

 Several are described as new. 



Verrill, A. E. Geographical Distribution; Origin of the 

 Bermudian Decapod Fauna. Amer. Naturalist, vol. xlii, pp. 

 289-296, cuts, 1908. 



