372 CRAYFISHES. 
CAMBARUS SLOANIT Bundy. 
Four specimens, males of the second form, collected by Mr. W. P. Hay 
between Paoli and Wyandotte, Ind. (U. 8. N. M., No. 19,776), and determined 
by Mr. Hay as C. sloanii, differ in some important regards from the types of 
C. sloanii from New Albany, Ind.: The tip of the inner ramus of the gonopods 
is not deflected inward so strongly, the rostrum is longer, with a longer acumen, 
the large claws are distinctly narrower, with relatively longer fingers, and the 
outer row of spines on the lower face of the merus of the cheliped is reduced to a 
single terminal spine. These specimens perhaps represent a new species or sub- 
species, but in the absence of the first form of the male and the female I refrain 
from naming it. 
CAMBARUS AFFINIS (Say). 
New localities:— Mary.Lanp: Sam’s Creek, Frederick Co. (U. 8. N. M.); 
Little Pipe Creek at Union Bridge and near New Windsor, Carroll Co. (U.S. N. 
M.); Northwest Branch near Hyattsville, Prince Georges Co. (U. 8. N. M.). 
Vireinta: Orkney Springs, Shenandoah Co. (U.S. N. M.). MaAssacHusErts: 
Bancroft’s Pond, Brown’s Pond and Spring Pond, Peabody, Essex Co. (M. C. Z.); 
Mansfield Pond, Great Barrington, Berkshire Co. (M. C. Z.); ° 
This species, whose real home is in the rivers that flow into the Atlantic 
in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia, is now well established 
in the town of Peabody, Essex Co., Mass. How or when it got there I do not 
know. The first report of it came to me in 1901 when the late J. H. Sears 
brought me a specimen 90 mm. long, which he had caught in Bancroft’s Pond, 
Peabody, on the 4th of August of that year. In Sept., 1911, Dr. John C. Phillips 
secured a good many (43) specimens from Spring Pond, Brown’s Pond and Ban- 
croft’s Pond in Peabody, some of them attaining a length of 98 mm.! Dr. Phil- 
lips’s collector searched for crayfishes in the following ponds in Essex County 
with negative results:— Hood’s, Stephens, Four-Mile, Stiles’s, Spofford’s and 
Perley Pond in Boxford, and Chebacco, Beck’s, Round and Gravelly-Ponds in 
Hamilton. 
On the 14th of June, 1912, I captured a female C. affinis, with young under 
her ‘abdomen, in Mansfield Pond, Great Barrington, Berkshire Co., Mass. 
1'The largest specimen of C. affinis in the Museum of Comparative Zoélogy, a female from Havre de 
Grace, Md., No. 180, collected in 1854, measures 124 mm. from the tip of the rostrum to the end of the 
telson. This is the individual figured, slightly lengthened, on Plate 5 of Hagen’s Monograph of the North 
American Astacidae. 
