522 • RANKIN. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



The publications, which include special collections of Crus- 

 tacea from the Bermudas, are as follows : 



J.M.Jones — "The Naturalist in Bermuda," London, 1859. 



A. Heilprin — "The Bermuda Islands," Philadelphia, 1889. 



A. E. Ortmann — " Decapoden und Schizopoden der Plankton- 

 Expedition," 1893. 



The following " Reports of the Challenger Expedition " : 



"The Brachyura," Miers ; "The Anomura," Henderson; 

 "The Macrura," Spence Bate; "The Stomatopoda," Brooks; 

 "The Phyllocarida," Sars. 



In addition to these published lists I have, through the kind- 

 ness of Miss Rathbun, of the U. S. National Museum, received a 

 list of the Crustacea collected by Dr. G. Brown Goode at the 

 Bermudas in '76 and '77, and now in the National Museum. I 

 have also seen several species in the American Museum of Nat- 

 ural History in New York, which were collected by Professor 

 Whitfield. 



MATERIAL STUDIED FOR THIS PAPER. 



In the present paper I have noted for each species, so far as 

 I have been able to determine, its recorded observance by the 

 authorities quoted above, and have likewise indicated those 

 found in the Goode and Whitfield collections. The results of 

 this compilation give a total of 61 species. 



The Amphipoda and Isopoda, several species of which were 

 collected, still await identification. 



Doubtless this total represents very imperfectly the crustacean 

 life of the Bermudas. During the two short seasons spent on 

 the islands by the expedition no particular attention was given 

 to the Crustacea above other forms of marine life ; and the fact 

 that 1 8 species recorded by other investigators were not discov- 

 ered by this expedition, argues for the existence of many more, 

 as yet unrecorded. 



The field of research was limited, being mostly confined to 

 Castle Harbor, at Walsingham, in '97, and to Bailey's Bay on 

 the north shore, in '98, at which two localities the temporary 



