108 FAUNA OF NEW ENGLAND. 



COPEPODA. EUCOPEPODA. 



CYCLOPIDAE. 



Mass. — Cambridge. Very abundant in the blind ditches con- 

 nected with Glaciahs Pond. 



352. Cyclops phaleratus Koch. 



Cyclops phaleratus Koch, Deutschlands Cnistaceen, Myria- 

 poden und Arachniden, 1^38, Heft 21, pi. 9 and corresponding 

 text. ■•Regexsbueg." 



Cydops phahratii.s (subgenus Paracyclops^ E. B. Forbes, 

 BuU. 111. state lab. nat. hist., 1897, vol. 5, p. 59, pi. 20, lig. 3. 



Mass. — Glacialis Pond, Cambridge. Abundant. 



358. Cyclops eloxgatus Claus.^ 



Cyclops elongatus Claus, Die freilebenden Coj^epoden, 1863, 

 p. 97.pl. 11, figs. 1 & 2. Xeighboehood of Cassel. 



Mass. — Caminidge, sparingly in a rain-pool near the Museum 

 of Comparative Zoology (Cragin). 



CORYCAEIDAE. 



Free-s-wimming copepods. 



854. Sapphifjxa ge:\ima Dana. 



Sapphirina gemma Dana, Crust. U. S. expl. exped., 1853, pt. 

 2. p. 1252; atlas, 1855, pi. 88, figs. 1 & 2. "Lagulhas Bank, 

 SOUTH OF Cape of Good Hope." VTheeler, Bull. U. S. fish 

 comm. for 1^99 (1900 i. vol. 19. p. 191, text fig. 28. 



Mass. — Off Gay Head: Gulf Stream. 70 miles south of Mar- 

 thas Vineyard, with chains of Salpa cordiformis. 



1 Not listed in E. B. Forbes's Revision. 1897. nor given in synonymy. 



