28 Orust. 
CRUSTACEA. 
Tribe 3. Monocarpidea 
Tribe 4. Haplopodea . 
Fam. 
' Thalassocaridce. 
Atylidcu. 
Pontoniidce. 
Caricyphidce. 
A canthephyridce. 
. 7 Palcemonidce. 
Nematocarcinidce . 
Tropiocaridce. 
Stylodactylidce. 
Pasiphceidce. 
Oodeopidce. 
. Hectarthropidce. 
Hudendorf remarks on Eylmann’s systematic arrangement of 
Daphnidce. 
VI. — PALAEONTOLOGY. 
Silurian Ostracoda from Gottland ; Jones. 
Italian Miocene Crustacea ; Bistort. 
VII.— GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. 
Paguridea and Oalatheidea are found at abyssal depths. No Dro- 
midea are found deeper than 500 fath. Raninidce are confined to shallow 
water, and Hippidea are littoral. Henderson, p. 211. 
An account of the geographical distribution of the ‘ Challenger * 
Anomura will be found in Henderson, pp. 197-204, and of the bathy- 
metrical distribution on pp. 205-209. 
On the Crustacea of the Azores, see Barrois. 
Bate reports on about 2000 specimens of Macrura , collected on the 
‘ Challenger ’ expedition, from various regions. 
For an account of the species of Galathea taken on the coasts of 
France, see Bonnier (1). 
Bonnier (2, 3) gives a catalogue of Malacostraca from the Bay of 
Con9arneau. 
For French marine free Copepoda } see Canu (3). 
Chevreux (1) treats of certain Amphipoda collected near Cherchell, 
on the coast of Algeria, without the use of the drag. 
Orche8tia chevreuxi found at Teneriffe ; Chevreux (3). 
For the geographical distribution of French Amphipoda t see Chev- 
reux (4). 
Dad ay treats of the Cladocera of Hungary. 
For the Cytherida of the Ostsee, see Dahl. 
Dollfus (2) gives a preliminary catalogue of French terrestrial 
Isopoda. 
