10 Crust. 
CRUSTACEA. 
3. Seas of Northern Europe. 
Throndjems Fjord. 19 species of Crustacea enumerated by V. Storm, 
Nor. Selsk. Skr. 1880, p. 73. 
Firth of Forth. Crustacea enumerated by Leslie and Herdman ; 
P. Phys. Soc. Edinb. vi. 
Slcagerrach, Bohuslan. Hyperia medusarum (Mull.), 10 species of 
Copepods and several larvm of Copepods and Balanids caught in com- 
paratively large numbers during December, 1880, and January, 1881, in 
herring-nets, and 13 species of Decapods and Amphipods dredged in the 
same months from the bottom at 12-130 fath. ; F. Trybom, OEfv. Ak. 
Forh. 1881, No. 3, pp. 36, 37, & 40. 
Kiel. 23 species of Copepods, including several new, enumerated ; 
W. Giesbreciit, Zool. Anz. iv. pp. 254-258. 
Southern Coast of Devon and Cornwall. Some notes on its Crustacea^ 
by C. Spence Bate and J. Brooking Howe, Rep. Brit. Assoc. 1881, 
p. 109. 
Roscoff. 50 species of Podophthalmd, 35 Isopoda, 8 Lccmodipoda^ and 
24 Amphipoday enumerated by Y. Delage, Arch. Z. expdr. ix. 
pp. 152-157. 
4. Mediterranean. 
R. Neumann gives several special localities, e.g.y Palma in Mallorca, 
Palermo, and Spezzia, for a number of brachyurous and macrurous 
Decapods from the Heidelberg Museum, in the pamphlet cited above. 
Trieste. 35 species of Amphipoda enumerated by O. Nebeski, Arb. 
z. Inst. Wien, hi. pt. 2, pp. 31-46 ; 4 species of Bopyridce by R. Walz, 
Zool. Anz. iv. p. 159. 
5. Atlantic. 
The Penccidcc and Sergestidce of the ‘Challenger* Expedition, enume- 
rated by C. Spence Bate, Ann. N. H. (5) viii. pp. 172-196. 
South Coast of New England. 50 very interesting species of Crustacea, 
of which 14-17 are new, and others hitherto only known from the Straits 
of Florida, or from other still more remote localities, e.g., the genera 
Lyreidus and Nephropsis have been dredged off the South Coast of New 
England in 64-325 fath. ; S. T. Smith, P. U. S. Nat. Mus. iii. pp. 413-452 
abstract in Ann. N. H. (5) vii. pp. 143-146. 
A. Milne Edwards continues to review, describe, and figure the 
species of crabs from both coasts of America [c/. Zool. Rec. xvi. Crust. 
p. 11], having examined the materials in the Paris Museum, and those 
obtained by the American ‘Hassler’ and ‘Blake’ Expeditions. The 
present part discusses the second half of the Cancridce, and give some 
additions to the Oxyrrhyncha. It is very remarkable that most genera 
have analogous species on both coasts ; two species of Trapezia, which 
are very common in the Red Sea and Indian Ocean, have been also 
found on the West Coast of Mexico and Central America. Mission 
