S. I. Smith — Crustaceans of the Atlantic Coast. 
55 
Homarus Americanus Milne-Edwards. 
New Jersey ! (1871) to the Gulf of St. Lawrence ! (Whiteaves) and 
reported as rare at Henley Harbor (just north of the Straits of Belle 
Isle), coast of Labrador, by A. S. Packard, Jr. 
Axius serratus Stimpson. 
Plate X, figures 4, 4 a. 
The original specimen described by Hr. Stimpson (Proceedings 
Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., iv, p. 222, 1852) is preserved, in a dried state, 
in the collection of the Peabody Academy of Science, Salem. 
Stimpson states that it was taken, by Mr. S. Tufts, of Lynn, in 20 
fathoms, off Situate, a town upon the southern shore Massachusetts 
Bay. The only specimen I have seen is a partially digested one 
found in the stomach of a flounder ( G lyp toceph alus cynoglossus ), 
taken about five miles southeast from Cape Ann, 42 fathoms, mud, 
August 15, 1878. The species will very likely prove to be identical 
with the European S. stirynchus. 
The specimen figured is the one originally described by Stimpson. 
Calocaris Macandrese Bell. 
History of British Crustacea, part v, p. 233, fig., 1847. — Goes, Crustacea decapoda 
podophthalma marina Sued®, (Efversight af Kongl. Yetenskaps-Akad. Forhand- 
lingar, 1863, p. 167 (7). — G. 0. Sars, Hardangerfjordens Fauna, part i, Christiania 
Yidenskabs-Selskabs Forhandlinger, 1871, p. 259 (16); Om en hidtil lidet kjendt 
mferkelig Skegtstype af Polyzoer, Christiania Yidenskabs-Selskabs Forhandlinger, 
1873, pi. 9, fig. 1. — Whiteaves, American Journal of Science, III, vol. vii, p. 
212 (3), 1874. — Report on further Deep-Sea Dredging Operations in the Gulf of 
St. Lawrence [in 1873], p. 17, [1874?]. 
Gulf of St. Lawrence, 190 fathoms, mud, twenty miles southwest of 
the southwest point of the island of Anticosti (Whiteaves). On the 
European coast it has been found in deep water about the British 
Islands and on the coasts of Scandinavia. I have seen no specimens. 
Crangon vulgaris J. C. Fabricius ex Linne. 
Fort Macon!, North Carolina (Coues, Packard). New Jersey! 
1871. South shore of Long Island!, 1870. Abundant along the 
whole New England coast, from low-water mark to 30 fathoms or 
more, but somewhat less numerous north of Massachusetts Bay. 
Stellwagen’s Bank!, 34 fathoms, sand, 1873. Massachusetts Bav !, 
off Salem, 20 fathoms, rocks and gravel, and 48 fathoms, soft mud, 
1877. In the region of George’s Bank!, 28, 30 and 45 fathoms, sand, 
1872. Halifax !, Nova Scotia, abundant and very large at or near 
low water, and dredged in 1(3 and 18 fathoms, on bottoms of sand, 
