92 
S. I. Smith — Crustaceans of the Atlantic Coast. 
ence, III, vii, p. 411, 1874. Also by Whiteaves, American Journal of Science, 
III, vii, pp. 213, 214, 1874; and Report on further deep-sea dredging operations 
in the Gulf of St. Lawrence [in 1873], p. 16, [1874?]. 
Very abundant at the surface in Vineyard Sound!, January 8, 
1875, and January 14, 1876 (V. N. Edwards). Massachusetts Bay!, 
48 fathoms, mud, 1877. Off the coast of Maine!, 102, 105 and 107 
fathoms, mud and gravel, and mud, 1873, 1874. Bay of Fundy!, at 
the surface, 1864, 1868, 1872; dredged in 40 to 50 fathoms, rocky, 
1868; and found in the stomachs of pollock and hake, 1872. Gulf of 
St. Lawrence !, 50, 70, 210 and 220 fathoms (J. F. Whiteaves). Green- 
land (Reinhardt, Ltitken). Spitsbergen and Finmark (Goes). Lofo- 
ten Islands!, Norway (G. O. Sars). 
The specimens taken in Vineyard Sound in winter are very slightly 
smaller and apparently more slender in form than the northern spe- 
cimens taken in summer and autumn, but seem to differ in no other 
respect. Specimens from the Bay of Fundy agree perfectly with 
Kroyer’s figures referred to above, and with specimens received 
directly from Prof. G. O. Sars and labeled by him T. inermis Kroyer. 
Specimens sent several years earlier from the same locality by Prof. 
Sars to the Smithsonian Institution, as a specimen of the food of 
Gadus virens , and labeled T. neglecta Kroyer, appear, however, to 
be the same species, and do not agree with Kroyer’s figures of T. neg- 
lecta. It was an examination of these specimens which led me to 
label specimens of our species T. neglecta f for Prof. Verrill and Mr. 
Whiteaves. 
In life this species is at once distinguished from the J\ r orvegica by 
its much fainter coloring. It is exceedingly translucent, the sides of 
the carapax and abdomen, and the bases of the cephalothoracic and 
abdominal appendages are only slightly tinged with red. The nerv- 
ous system and the peculiar sense organs, however, are brightly col- 
ored as in the Norvegicci, and these together with the eyes are all 
that is easily visible as the animal swims gracefully about near the 
surface of the water. 
Erythrops G-oesii G. 0. Sars. 
My sis erythrophthalma Goes, Crustacea marina Suecise, (Efversight af Kongl. Ve- 
tenskaps-Akademens Forkandlingar, 1863, p. 178 (18), 1863. 
Nematopus Goesii G. 0. Sars, Beretning om en i Sommeren 1865 foretagen Reise 
ved Kysterne af Christianias og Christiansands Stifter (e.vtr. Nyt. Mag. Nat.), 
p. 15, 1866. 
Erythrops Goesii G. 0. Sars, Carcinologiske Bidrag til Norges Fauna, Mysider, part 
