HIGIIKR CRUSTACEA OF NEW YORK CITY 



175 



Length 8 mm, breadth 4 mm. 

 Color very variable, some slaty 

 gray or marked on the back with 

 a whitish, cream-colored or rosa- 

 ceous longitudinal patch bor- 

 dered more or less with black. 

 The eolor is evidently protective, 

 as it matches closely the rocks on 

 which the animals are found. 



Taken at Bartow. Another 

 smaller species, as yet unde- 

 scribed. and apparentlv belonging 



11 - 00 Fig. 46 Sphaeroma quadridenta- 



to this genus, has been found tum (After Harger) 



swimming around in the small pools left by the tide, at City Island 



and on Staten Island. 



3 VALVIFERA 



Uropoda ventral, arching over and protecting the pleopoda, which 

 are delicate and mostly branchial in character. 

 Of the three families one is represented. 



Family idotei dae 

 Antennulae of four segments, the basal segment enlarged and 

 the terminal one clavate. 



Pleon with more or fewer of its seg- 

 ments consolidated into a scutiform tail- 

 piece. 



Idotea marina (Linn.) 



Oniscus m a r i n u s Linnaeus. Fauna 

 Suecica. 1761. p. 500. 



Ste no soma irrorata DeKay. /. c. 

 1844. p.43. pi. 10, ng.42. 



Idotea irrorata Verrill. /. c. 1874. 

 P-569. pl-5. fig.23. Harger. /. c. 1880. p.343, 

 pi. 5. fig.24-26. 



[ do tea m a r i n a Richardson. /. c. 1901. 

 P-540. 



Bod}' with sides nearly parallel. 

 Antennulae short, of four segments. 

 Hauler/ Id ° tea marina (After Antennae longer, with multiarticulate 



