362 BULLETIN: MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 
AEGIDAE. 
ROcINELA ARIES Schioedte and Meinert. 
Rocinela aries Schioedte & Meinert, Naturh. tidsskr., 1879-80, ser. 3, 12, p. 
401-408, pl. 18, fig. 7-8. 
Localityx— Panama Harbor. One small specimen, probably im- 
mature. 
RIcCINELA ANGUSTATA Richardson. 
Rocinela laticauda Richardson (not Hansen), Proc. Amer. philos. soc., 1898, 
37, p. 14-15, figs. 5-6. 
Rocinela angustata Richardson, Proc. U. 8. N. M., 1904, 27, p. 33; Bull. 54, 
U.S. N. M., 1905, p. 206-207. | 
Locality.— Lat. 5° 47’ S., long. 81° 24’ W. (Station 4,653). 
Depth.— 536 fathoms. One specimen. 
CYMOTHOIDAE. 
ANILOCRA MERIDIONALIS, sp. nov. 
Body of female about three times longer than wide, 93 mm. wide: 
28 mm. long. Color dark brown with terminal 
abdominal segment and uropoda light brown ss | 
yellow. 
Head a little wider at the base than long, 5 mm.: 
4 mm., triangular in shape, with the apex pro-. 
duced in a process which arches over the antennae 
and is truncate at the extremity. Eyes small, 
round, composite, situated in the postlateral 
angles of the head and separated by a distanec 
of 13 mm. Head not at all immersed in the first 
thoracic segment. The first pair of antennae are 
composed of eight articles and extend to the mid 
dle of the first thoracic segment. The second pai 
of antennae are composed of eleven articles an | 
extend to the posterior margin of the second tho 
racicsegment. The fifth article is the longest, an 
Fig. 3.— Anilocra jg the last peduncular article, although the article 
rit a Seas of flagellum and peduncle are not clearly marked 
The first and fourth segments of the thorax are a little longer tha’ 
