116 
S. I. Smith — Crustaceans of the Atlantic Coast 
tude 39° 54’, west longitude 73° 15' (Josephine Expedition, G. O. 
Sars). Salem Harbor!, Massachusetts, 5 fathoms, 1873. Off Cape 
Ann !, 35 fathoms, sand, and 54 fathoms, sand and mud, 1878. Casco 
Bay!, 1873: 3 fathoms, mud, — both males and females; males also 
taken at the surface in the evening. Off Casco Bay, about twenty 
miles east-southeast from Cape Elizabeth, 50 fathoms, mud, 1873. 
Bay of Fundy !, 1872, abundant in 1 to 4 fathoms, very soft mud, — 
both males and females. 
Eudorella pusilla G. o. Sars. 
Eudorella pusilla G. 0. Sars, (Efversight Kongl. Yetenskaps-Akad. Forhandlingar. 
Stockholm, 1871, p. 79; Kongl. Svenska Yetenskaps-Akad. Handlingar, ix, no. 
13, p. 46, pis. 16, 17, tigs. 76-94, 1871. — Smith, Invertebrate Animals of Yine- 
yard Sound, Keport U. S. Commissioner Fish and Fisheries, part i, p. 954 (260), 
1874. 
Off Shinnecock Bay, Long Island, 18 fathoms (Josephine Expedition, 
G. O. Sars). Block Island Sound !, 17 fathoms, sand and mud, 1874, 
— common, both males and females. Massachusetts Bay !, off Glou- 
cester, 25 fathoms, sand and gravel, 1878. Casco Bay!, 3, 16, 17 
fathoms, mud; 9 fathoms, sand and mud, 1873. Bay of Fundy !, 
1872, very abundant in 1 to 4 fathoms, very soft mud; also in 10 to 
15 fathoms, mud. Gulf of St. Lawrence!, 1873 (Whiteaves). 
Eudorella deformis G. 0. Sars. 
Leucon deformis Kroyer, Naturbistorisk Tidsskrift, II, ii, p. 194, pi. 2, tig. 4, 1846; 
in Gaimard, Voyages en Scandinavie, en Laponie, etc., pi. 5 A, fig. 3, 1849. 
Eudorella (?) deformis G. 0. Sars, Kongl. Sevenska Yetenskaps-Akad. Handlingar, ix, 
no. 13, p. 50, pis. 19, 20, figs. 101 to 118, 1871 : Archiv for Mathematik og 
Naturvidenskab, Kristiania, ii, p. 345, 1877 (no ?). 
Off Shinnecock Bay, Long Island, 18 fathoms (Josephine Expedi- 
tion, G. O. Sars). Massachusetts Bay !, off Gloucester, 25 fathoms, 
sand and gravel, 1878. Greenland (Kroyer). Iceland (G. O. Sars). 
West coast of Norway (G. O. Sars). 
Eudorella integra, sp. nov. 
An aberrent form, more like E. deformis than any other described 
species of the genus, perhaps generically distinct from the typical 
species of Eudorella. 
Female. The cephalothorax is about as long as the abdomen ex- 
clusive of the uropods, and regularly and strongly arcuate dorsally. 
