Crustacea of Bermuda, Part II. 179 



Thor, 124, 134 



Squillidae, 63. 



Stenopidae, 36. 



Stenopidea, 34, 36. 



SU'impus, 36. 



Synalpheidae, 35, 60. j Urocaris, 141. 



Synalpheus, 67, 86-121. Virbius, 124. 



Thallassinidea, 5, 33. 



, , . 

 Tozeuma, 124, 126. 

 Trachypenaeus, 40, 45. 

 Trichohranchiata, 4, 5. 



ADDENDA. 



Through the courtesy of Dr. W. G. VanName, assistant Curator, I have 

 been able to examine, in the American Museum of Natural History of New 

 York, an additional species of Macrura from Bermuda, and also two other 

 interesting species, as follows : 



Palitmrcllus xnndlticlii Von Martens, Naturf. Berlin, 1878; Sitz. Berlin 

 Ges., 1878. DeMan, Siboga Exp., Decapoda, Part iii, p. 31, igi6.=Syn(i.vc.<; 

 liybridicu Bate, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist, Ser. 5, vol. 7, p. 20, with figs., 

 1881. 



One specimen, about 132 mm. long. Bermuda, from the stomach of a 

 grouper, Louis Mowbray, coll. 



Paniilirus lavicauda (Latr.) M.-Edw., 1837. DeMan, op. cit., p. 34.= 

 P. ornatus Pocock (t. DeMan), No. 3298, S. E. coast of Florida; No. 3691, 

 Key West, Louis Mowbray. Previously from Cuba and Barbados. 



Differs from P. argus in having no transverse suture on the abdominal 

 somites and single acute lateral lobes, also much shorter antennular peduncle. 

 Sides of abdominal segments are dark greenish brown with numerous small 

 roundish spots of light yellow ; frontal horns and eye-stalks barred trans- 

 versely with dark brown and yellow; legs conspicuously striped with dark 

 greenish brown and light yellow, paler beneath. 



P. giittatiis. See above, p. 17. A fine example from Turks Island. The 

 back of carapace, abdomen, antennal stalks, and legs above, are covered 

 with conspicuous round spots of pale yellow on a dark green ground-color. 



