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(Data pie newer ts ce tle Seay ts x Family Portunide. 19. Genus Portunus. Ls Vite. maneUsit ) (SEMApPSGE enteral at. wee ee eke Et Family Pilumnide. 20. Genus Cycloxanthops. 32. C. novemdentatus (Lock.)...... Seay Se NN 21. Genus Lophopanopeus. aay bellusi€Stimpsoed) ieee dc Petia sal Poe CMS ae Savi heath Rath bias ia wen) >, CNA GALE ERS ENG x 5 Pe enemies (LOCK Me at i cea. 8 ewe x 36. Io. diemensis’ Rathbaae seed: Basis) OS eres eas 22. Genus Xanthias. 27. Xe, \taylorin(Stimpsom)iis)). 05. > PRAY aie gs x Io TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY Family Pinnotheride. 23. Genus Pinnotheres. 38. Ps nudus Holaess Widieadecat es OR svete! Aether x 24. Genus Raphonotus. 39. R. subquadratus (Dana)........ Hee ihe lai whedon ve b 25. Genus Pinnixa. 40. P. occidentalis Rathbun........ fis a besten eee 41. P. californiensis Rathbun........ My EES Ohne x 42. P: tubicola \Holmeszniey ad oie a ios Biahisierkete x 48: Ps littorpias | Piola hei' 6 6 9/k.0 Ghia Venki teas A ayaa x 4a: P. longipes '(oek daly bin ee aes Mees Weisla es ane x 45:'P. daba (Dama) bo eweweecks = ORE UNI RO aeTe x 26. Genus Scleroplax. 40; >, seremavaleitey, BL At L1G) o se hecg ie ainsi id dc nea teiouvgiae lg x 27. Genus Cryptophrys. 477 Gu concharam \Rattibtiaiy odie eee ne x 28. Genus Opisthopus. 48. O. transversus Rathbun........ TE HSA PERE 1 x Family Grapside. 29. Genus Pachygrapsus. 49. P. exassipes Randall... 23...) eA on ONS Peta 8 x 30. Genus Hemigrapsus. 50.iy mudas (Dama ye Meeks > A Mem ntaL Pa x 5i. il. oregonsis (Danay ene cce. p aen aah BE | x 31. Genus Planus. ? 52. (P. minutus (Linnzus))..... ws KEY TO ORDER DECAPODA If KEY To THE SUBORDERS OF THE ORDER DECAPODA. a. Rostrum seldom reduced or absent, if well developed almost invariably compressed. Body always compressed. First abdominal seg- ment not much smaller than the rest. First antenna generally bears a scale at base; second antennal scale generally large. Legs slender (except sometimes a stout chelate limb or pair of limbs which may be any one of first three) with basipodite and ischiopodite never fused, only one fixed point in the carpo-pro- podal articulation. Abdominal limbs 1-5 always present in full number, well developed, and used for swimming. Natantia aa. Rostrum often reduced or absent, depressed if present. Body not compressed, generally depressed. First abdominal segment dis- tinctly smaller than the rest. No scale on first antenna; that on second antenna never large, generally small or absent. Legs stout, the first usually, the others never, stouter than their fel- lows; basipodite and ischiopodite al:nost always fused in the first pair, generally in others, two fixed points in the carpo-pro- podal articulation. Abdominal limbs 1-5 often reduced or absent, not used for swimming. Reptantia KEY TO THE TRIBES OF THE SUBORDER REPTANTIA. a. Carapace not fused with epistome; last thoracic sternum free, its legs reduced, often chelate, always differing from the third pair. Abdomen large and extended or reduced and loosely folded under carapace, generally (except in Lithodide) with biramous appendages on the sixth segment. Antenne (second) well de- veloped, situated external to eye, with long flagella and often a movable scale. Anomura aa. Carapace fused with epistome at sides and nearly always also in middle; last thoracic sternum fused with others, its legs never chelate, seldom markedly different from the others. Abdomen much reduced, symmetrical, closely folded beneath thorax, never with biramous appendages on sixth segment (only in Dromide is the sixth pair present even in a rudimentary condition). Antennz (second) situated internal to eys, seldom with long flagella, never with movable scale. Brachyura I2 TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY Key TO THE FAMILIES OF THE TRIBE BRACHYURA. a. Second antennez long (flagellum equal to more than half the width of the carapace) ; first antennz without special fossettes, first ab- dominal legs of female present, uropods rudimentary or absent, female openings in coxe of legs, gills numerous. Subtribe DROMIACEA, Fam. Dromuidae aa. Second antenne short (never equal to half the width of the carapace) first antennz usually lodged in special fossettes, first abdominal legs of female wanting, uropods never present, female openings in sternum (rarely in cox), gills few. b. Buccal frame triangular, narrowed forward; efferent branchial channels opening at middle of endostome. Subtribe OXYSTOMATA c. Last I or 2 pairs of legs reduced in size and articulated higher than preceding pairs, so as to lie on dorsal surface of body. Fam. Dorippidae cc. Legs normal in size and position. d. Maxillipeds closing the buccal cavern; the palp hidden by the triangular merus. Fam. Leucosudae dd. Maxillipeds not completely closing the buccal cavern; the palp always exposed. Fam. Calappidae bb. Buccal frame quadrate; efferent branchial channels opening at sides of endostome. Subtribe BRACHYGNATHA c. Carapace usually triangular, with pointed or spined rostrum; the branchial region inflated, the hepatic region small; orbits usually incomplete. Superfam. Oxyrhyncha d. Basal antennal joint very small and short, not reaching farther forward than posterior margin of orbit; hard basal joint of antennule reaching orbit and forming part of inferior margin. Chelipeds much longer and more massive than other legs. Fam. Parthenopidae dd. Basal antennal joint well developed, reaching at least to anterior margin of orbit, of the lower margin of which it forms the greater part; basal antennular joint usually soft and concealed in fossette, never reaching orbit. Chelipeds not markedly longer or more massive than other legs. Fam. Inachidae KEY TO FAMILIES OF BRACHYURA 13 cc. Carapace without rostrum, usually broad, never with the hepatic region greatly reduced; orbits generally well enclosed. Superfam. Brachyrhyncha d. Carapace generally broader than long, wide and regu- larly arcuated in front; lateral margins markedly convergent behind. Frontal region not markedly broad, generally produced horizontally in lobes or teeth. e. Antennules folded longitudinally, front with several teeth one of which is median; outer maxilli- peds overlapping the endostome. Fam. Cancridae ee. Antennules folded transversely or obliquely trans- versely, front with or without median tooth; outer maxillipeds not overlapping endostome. f. Last pair of legs usually modified for swim- ming, with the last two joints very broad and paddle-like. Anterolateral border sharply marked off from postero-lateral. Front with or without median tooth. Fam. Portunidae ff. Last pair of legs not modified for swimming. Antero-lateral border of carapace not sharply marked off from postero-lateral. Front gen- erally divided by a median notch. Fam. Pilumnidae dd. Carapace usually quadrilateral; lateral margins nearly parallel. Frontal region usually broad, bent down- wards and without teeth or sharp lobes. e. Carapace often more or less membranaceous; front, orbits and eye-stalks usually very small; buccal frame arcuate in front. Species small, generally commensal. Fam. Pinnotheridae ee. Carapace hard and firm; front, orbits and eye-stalks not markedly small; buccal frame quadrate in front. f. Front usually markedly broad; eye-stalks of moderate size. Fam. Grapsidae ff. Front of moderate width or very narrow; eye- stalks often greatly elongated. Fam. Ocypodidae 14 TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY Tribe BRACHYURA. Subtribe DROMIACEA. Superfamily DRoMIIDEA. Family DROMIID. No representative of this family has been recorded, as far as I] am aware, from the west coast of North America north of the Mexican boundary. Hypochoncha panamensis is recorded by Faxon* from the west coast of Panama, but beyond this I do not know that any of the Dromiide have been reported from Mexico or Central America. It is therefore no inconsiderable addition to our western crustacean fauna to record a new Dromid from Monterey Bay. Two specimens were ob- tained in the summer of 1906 while dredging in shallow water, and although special effort was made during the two following summers to obtain more material these remain the only examples. The species proves to be a very close relative of Dromidia antillensis Stimpson, and further knowledge of its distribution may show it to be one of the numerous pairs of species found on opposite sides of the isthmus. Genus DROMIDIA Stimpson. Dromidia Stimpson, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., p. 63, 1858 (Type—Dromidia hirsutissima (Lamark) ). Stimpson in defining this genus says,t “In the sternum of the female the copulatory sulci are produced, and approximated at their extremities in a more or less tuberculiform projection situated between the bases of the chelipeds.” According to Miss Rathbun this description should be modified, as the sulci do not always end in a single tubercle. In the speci- men here described the sulci end in distinct tubercles, and it is interesting to observe that in the most closely related form, D. antillensis, the single *Faxon, Memoirs Harvard Mus. Comp. Zool., xviii, 237. + Stimpson, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1858, 225.—Report on the Crustacea collected by the North Pacific Exploring Expedition, Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, No. 1717, 170. DROMIDA 15 tubercle there present shows, according to Henderson,* “a slight trace of bifurcation in front.” Dromidia segnipes sp. nov. Plate I, figs. 1-2. Carapace pubescent, markedly convex, and about as long as wide. Stimpson describes Dromidia antillensis, the most closely related form, as “somewhat longer than broad” and gives the following measurements: “length of carapax, 1.30; breadth, 1.28 inch.” The specimen at hand is considerably smaller and is broader than long, measuring 15 by 15.7 mm., but these relative proportions may be found to vary with age, as Hender- son * gives the measurements of an immature D. antillensis 13.5 long by 13.8 mm. wide. Front tridentate, the inner angles of the orbits more prominent than the rostral point, so that the front seems divided by a deep rounded notch when seen from above. In D. antillensis these teeth are stated to be subequal. Supraorbital teeth considerably smaller and more acute than those of front. External angle of orbit prominent and bounded by a marked fissure, as in D. antillensis. The antero-lateral margin of the carapace is four-toothed as in D. antillensis but the teeth are obscured to superficial examination by the pubescence. The most posterior, located just behind the cervical groove, is acute and directed forward; the next anterior to this is the most promi- nent and forms the greatest width of the carapace, it is also acute; the next is smaller but still acute; these alone are visible from above. The most anterior is very low and rounded, resembling more the tubercle at the angle of the buccal cavern than the preceding teeth. In D. antillensis the three anterior teeth are said by Stimpson to be “subspiniform,” and by Benedict + to be “little more than enlarged granules.” The tooth pos- terior to the cervical groove is also stated to be less acute than the others, which is not the case in the specimen at hand. The pubescence of the carapace is somewhat longer and more dense in the frontal region and sparser in the branchial regions. On removing the pubescence the carapace is seen to be glabrous and definitely, though not deeply areolated. The cervical groove, the most prominent of the markings, runs from a point just anterior to the last antero-lateral tooth nearly to the middle of the posterior margin of the carapace, where it be- * Henderson, Challenger Anomura, Part Ixix, 12. + Benedict, U. S. Fish Commission Bull. for 1900, ii, 132. 16 TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY comes indistinct. The lateral margins of the cardiac region anterior to the cervical groove are marked by distinct sulci, external to which are low elevations, the anterior border is marked by a much less definite sulcus concave in front. In the type (male) which was carrying what was ap- ‘arently a sand-encrusted ascidian, nearly all of the carapace lateral and posterior to the cervical groove, with the exception of the intestinal region, is membranaceous ; while in the second specimen, a female, only the sub- branchial region is uncalcified. Antenne prominent, the basal portion four-jointed, the basal joint wider than long, the green gland opening at its inner margin between two acute inwardly projecting tubercles, the second joint the longest, project- ing far enough to be slightly visible from above, the last two joints small, subequal, inserted in a deep rounded notch in the antero-internal angle of the preceding joint, the flagellum sparingly ciliated, more than half the length of the carapace. Lower orbital margin ending in a prominent ob- tuse tooth next the basal portion of the antennz. Basal joint of the anten- nule large, reaching about to insertion of last two joints of the antenna, last two joints subequal ; the last with two unequal brushes of hairs at the tip; in the normal position the last two joints are almost entirely concealed. Endostome with a low ridge on either side bounding the efferent branchial channels. External maxillipeds stout, the ischium slightly wider at the distal end and armed on the inner margin with a row of 7 or 8 conical, corneous-tipped spines, the merus rectangular, slightly shorter than the ischium, distally truncated, very slightly rounded, both corners square. Palp articulated to inner side of merus near tip, entirely visible when in normal position ; exognath nearly reaching tip of merus, tapering but little. Chelipeds hairy except tips of fingers, stout, ischium small without prominent armature, merus trigonal, all the angles denticulated, a wide transverse sulcus above paralleling the distal margin, carpus short and stout, denticulated at anterior angles, hand without any conspicuous spines or tubercles. In these characters it does not differ widely from Stimpson’s description of D. antillensis. The tips of the fingers are calcareous, of a light flesh color, markedly excavated at the tip and armed with large tri- angular teeth which interlock at the tip but gape pronouncedly at the base. Ambulatory legs hairy, less stout than chelipeds but hardly “slender” as in D. antillensis. The last pair are unfortunately missing in both spec- imens ; of those remaining the first and second are the largest and differ little in size, they are unarmed with the exception of the dactyls which terminate in strong, curved, corneous spines and are further armed with three or four straight corneous spines on the lower margin. The third DROMIIDZE 17 ambulatory leg is much smaller, reaching scarcely to the tip of the carpus of the preceding pair, the dactyl is more sharply curved and lacks the secondary spines, the inferior distal angle of the propodus is provided with a nearly straight spine which may be opposed to the dactyl, thus making the appendage subcheliform. The last pair were apparently en- tirely dorsal in position. Abdomen of male seven-jointed, much constricted between the first and second segments and widest at distal end of second, from which it tapers evenly to the seventh, which is obtusely triangular. First segment the shortest, second, third, fourth, and fifth subequal, sixth and seventh increasingly longer. The penultimate joint is said to be long and slender in D. antillensis. The rudimentary uropods are present in a slight notch between the sixth and seventh segments, barely visible from the outside. Abdomen of the female seven-jointed, much constricted between the first and second segments, and widest at the third, from which it tapers gradually to the seventh, which is evenly rounded. The median portion is raised, forming a rounded ridge, the whole evenly pubescent. The uropods are present as in the male. The sternal sulci extend from the base of the third pair of legs to the center of the sternum of the chelipeds, where they end in closely approximated but distinct low tubercles. Ab- dominal appendages present on all the segments. Color in alcohol, yellowish tan, tips of chelipeds flesh color; color in life similar. MEASUREMENTS MALE (TYPE) FEMALE Length of carapace 15.0 mm. 15.7 mm. Width of carapace 15.7 T0;3 Length of antennal flagellum 11.0 10.0 Type No. 478, cotype No. 479, Invertebrate Series, Leland Stanford Junior University Zoological Museum. 18 TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY Subtribe OxysToMATa. Family DORIPPID/E. Genus CLYTHROCERUS A. Milne Edwards & Bouvier. Clythrocerus A. Milne Edwards & Bouvier, Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, v, 387, 1809 (Type—Clythrocerus nitida A, Milne Edwards). Clythrocerus planus (Rathbun). Cyclodorippe plana Rathbun, Amer. Nat., xxxiv, 519, 1900. Clythrocerus planus Rathbun, H. A. E., x, 168, 1904. “Catalina and possibly Monterey....under 50 fathoms ”’ (Rathbun). In the American Naturalist the footnote giving the type locality is erron- eously attached to C. nitida A. Milne Edwards, an Atlantic form. I have seen no specimen of this species. Family LEUCOSIIDA. Genus RANDALLIA Stimpson. Randallia Stimpson, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., vi, 85, 1857; Journ. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., vi, 471, 1857 (Type—Randallia ornata (Stimpson) ). Key to species. a. Carapace of adult nearly smooth, young with unequal smooth tubercles, size large. R. ornata aa. Carapace of adult covered with nearly equal minutely spinous tuber- cles, size small. R. bulligera Randallia ornata (Randall). Plate I, fis, 2. Ilia ornata Randall, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., viii, 129, 1839. Randallia ornata Holmes, Occas. Papers Calif. Acad. Sci., vii, 100, 1900, and synonymy.—Rathbun, H. A. E., x, 170, 1904. Represented in the collection by a few adults brought in by Chinese fisherman, and several immature specimens about 10 mm. long. CALAPPIDZZ 19 Randallia bulligera Rathbun. Randallia bulligera Rathbun, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxi, 614, pl. xliv, fig. 6, 1808. —Holmes, Occas. Papers Calif. Acad. Sci., vii, 101, 1900.—Rathbun, H. A. E., x, 170, 1904. I have placed in this species two small specimens dredged from ten fathoms, measuring 8x9 mm. and 6.2x7.2 mm. respectively, which, though they do not tally in all points with the descriptions given by Holmes and Rathbun, agree in certain features and seem to be fairly distinct from specimens of R. ornata of the same size. The most marked difference is in the tubercles, which in these specimens are set close together and are fairly uniform in size, though with a few smaller ones interspersed, and present when dried and examined by a lens a thick coat of minute spines. When wet these spines are not noticeable and tend to give the tubercle a “pearly” appearance, so that they might easily be called “smooth” as in Holmes’s description. In the young of ornata the tubercles are more scattered and of unequal sizes and show no spines. The pollex of the cheliped in ornata is about equal to the length of the palm, while in these specimens it is shorter. I can see no other prominent differences and as the specimens fail to show the prominent trilobing of the margin of the efferent branchial channels and the relative position of the posterior prom- inences mentioned by Rathbun and Holmes, I have felt some hesitation in calling them bulligera. Randallia bulligera has been reported from Magdalena Bay and from off San Diego, but not previously from Monterey Bay. Family CALAPPID/E. Genus MURSIA Desmarest. Mursia Desmarest, Consid. sur les Crust., 108, footnote, 1825.—Milne Edwards, Hist. Nat. Crust., ii, 109, 1837. } Thealia Lucas, Ann. Soc. entom. France, ser. 1, viii, 577, 1839 (Type—Mursia crist- amana de Haan). Mursia gaudichaudii (Milne Edwards). Platymera gaudichaudii Milne Edwards, Hist. Nat. Crust., t. ii, 180, 1837—Holmes, Occas. Papers Calif. Acad. Sci., vii, 99, 1900, and synonymy.—Rathbun, H. A. By xy E70; L904: 20 TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY I have had the opportunity of examining two specimens, both males, in the possession of W. F. Allen, who said that they were obtained in con- siderable numbers by fishermen seining in moderately deep water on a muddy bottom off the mouth of the Salinas River. These agree well with Holmes’s description, but possess a pair of very prominent tubercles on the sternum of the segment bearing the chelipeds, not mentioned by him. I have followed Miss Rathbun* in uniting Platymera with Mursia. *U. S. Fish Commission Bulletin for 1903, 888. INACHIDZ 21 Subtribe BRACHYGNATHA. Superfamily OxyRHYNCHA. Family PARTHENOPID. Genus HETEROCRYPTA Stimpson. Heterocrypta Stimpson, Ann. Lyc. Nat. Hist. N. Y., x, 102, 1871 (Type—Hetero- crypta granulata (Gibbes) ). Heterocrypta occidentalis (Dana). Plate II, figs. 4-5. Cryptopodia occidentalis Dana, Am. Journ. Sci. (2), xviii, 430, 1854.—Rathbun, Am. Nat., xxxiv, 516, 1900. Heterocrypta occidentalis Holmes, Occas. Papers Calif. Acad. Sci., vii, 44, 1900, biel synonymy.—Rathbun, H. A. E., x, 170, 1904. Represented in the collection by a considerable number of specimens, all dredged from moderate depths—ten to fifteen fathoms. The rostrum in the younger specimens is, rather more acute than in the adult and there is also considerable pubesence along the angles of the chelipeds and especially in the branchial and frontal regions, sometimes covering the greater part of the carapace, while the carapace of the adult is commonly smooth. As shown in the figures, the middle of the posterior margin of the carapace is more prominently rounded in the female than in the male. Color in life: tips of tubercles white, ridges bearing tubercles light purplish, remainder of carapace mottled with numerous minute spots of white and purplish, giving a pink effect which often closely approaches white. Ambulatory legs usually a light yellow. Color in alcohol not markedly different. Family INACHIDA. Specimens of all the species of Inachidz here treated, 11 in number, have been available for examination, and considerable pains has been 22 TRUE CRABS OF MONTEREY BAY taken in the construction of keys, as this family usually proves trouble- some to the novice, chiefly, it would seem, because of the characters made use of in keys, which are commonly, and almost necessarily, in- accessible or indefinite. The degree of completeness of the orbit, though undoubtedly one of the most obvious of certain modifications involving the greater part of the head region, is generally used in a comparative manner as “more” or “less complete,” which except to the person familiar with the forms is little better than useless. When present the orbit seems to be formed by the development of the pre- and post-ocular spines and by the expansion of the basal antennal joint. Of these the post-ocular spine is the most important; absent or distant from the eye in forms like Podochela and Erileptus, it becomes, in Chionoecetes and allied species, cup-shaped, and into this cavity the eye is retracted. I have attempted to make use of this character in the generic key, which follows in part that of Miss Rathbun on this group.* in eG Pa ¥ "is ~ + Sv & a EF i MN ’, ou A ie) x) PuateE II. Fig. 4. Heterocrypta occidentalis (Dana). 9, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Fig. 5. Heterocrypta occidentalis (Dana). é, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Fig. 6. Podochela hemphillu (Lockington). é, x2. Monterey Bay, Cal. + s in a“ ot at Ben Prare:- Tif, Fig. 7. Erileptus spinosus Rathbun. é, x3. Catalina Island, Cal. Fig. 8. Dasygyius tuberculatus (Lockington). 6, x2. Monterey Bay, Cal. Fig. 9. Epialtus productus Randall. ?, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. rec a eerie ng ey SS Signet a NE ae ey Sa Fig. Fig. 2 EO, afd by 12. Prate IV. Pugettia gracilis Dana. é, nat. size. Sitka, Alaska. Pugettia richu Dana. é, nat. size. “West coast North America” (U. S. Nat. Museum specimen). Mimulus foliatus Stimpson. é, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Mimulus foliatus Stimpson. ?, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. ts , ae Se mee LATE v. ay aK raat . Menken ay, ca | Fi ig. 1 5. Loxorhynchus crispatus Stine, Fi | ee x oe eran’ biel ea | ae ie ne eng ous MK mm? NARS Sa AL WER PLaTeE VI. Fig. 16. Chorilia longipes Dana. é, nat. size. Albatross station No. 4351, Cal. coast off Point Loma. Fig. 17. Scyra acutifrons Dana. é, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. rf 4 Oe i \ ny Fig. 18. Rhodia parvifrons (Ran ss, nat. size. Monterey Ba hionoecetes tanneri Rath é, nat. size. , A Fig. 19. * ri r Ce Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. 20. 21. 22. 23. Ay PLATE VIII. Cancer productus Randall. Immature, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Cancer productus Randall. Immature, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Cancer productus Randall. Immature, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Cancer productus Randall. Immature ¢, nat. size, showing the strip- ing of the carapace often present in young individuals. Monterey Bay, Cal. Cancer productus Randall. Adult ¢, x%. Monterey Bay, Cal. 2: ¥ iw — y : Aa iide | Gi wea iaitys et CB ea ieee Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. PLATE IX. 25. Cancer magister Dana. Egeg-bearing 9, x ¥%. San Francisco, Cal. 26. Cancer gracilis Dana. Immature, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. 27. Cancer gracilis Dana. . Immature, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. 28. Cancer gracilis Dana. 6, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. ia) Ri aber er Cancer gibbosulus (de Haan). Mapa at - §, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. hi Wi ' Fig. 30. Cancer jordani Rathbun. is i | g, nat. size. Monterey Bay, aly . _ Fig. 31. Cancer antennarius Stimpson. vik Adult e, x ey roe) Hee Cal. 7 mits » eet 5, ieee es, —— S=5 Fig. 32. PLATE XI. Cancer antennarius Stimpson. 9, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. The extreme pubesence here shown is not typical of the species. Cancer anthonyi Rathbun. $, x¥%. San Diego, Cal. Cancer oregonensis (Dana). @, nat.size. Orca, Prince William Sound, Alaska. SN OS 4 an rt a Sa Fig. 35. Fig. 36. Fig. 37. Fig. 38. Fig. 30. Prags ) XTT: Portunus xantusi (Stimpson). 6, nat. size. San Diego, Cal. Cycloxanthops novemdentatus (Lockington). é, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Lophopanopeus bellus (Stimpson). $, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Lophopanopeus heathii Rathbun. 6, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Lophopanopeus diegensis Rathbun. $, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Prate XIII. Fig. 40. Xanthias taylori ( Stimpson). - Q, nat. size. Monterey Bay, calc) i UF ig. 41.0 Pachygrapsus crassipes sea ay é, nat. size. Capuinrs ces 2 - ‘ y Lanta nel te ry Vu «4 Barn Ava P 7 t ‘ i t a f y ¥ eK - “ . ; ; ‘ ? 4 \ rq ea? PLATE UXIV: Fig. 42. Hemigrapsus nudus (Dana). 6, nat.size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Fig. 43. Hemigrapsus oregonensis (Dana). $, nat. size. Monterey Bay, Cal. Fig. 44. Planes minutus (Linnaeus). Egg-bearing @, nat. size. From floating sea turtle near the Galapagos Islands. We Bt VAR le Srv Ty STRAT at raat ATTEN TOT Tri All he ie fo a jadnnpbllll ht ahlihee CSp ie PT RN 4 a , ft 2 * 5 fe oS ERT sa ape oe ecpunfine RPRED Se aRAAAS iA, Ste NY tea ue | Sanat eee Saas ® “* # r v 4 ta 4 at sAaaeast ; “ 2 e 2 2 Paps y i 2 y. ss La ™ © Pag 6 a =. - 7. . a jens ~sa9RRa hy Qa Aan. ° ~ AN YA Nga ated aan a aan Ee Page tes Naa any , Mae. Peed N Waa Uy, Vgyas ie yr e ° A 2 r 4 abaes ve = a SARRRA RA anf: a 008A Renn? zi 22M eee - re 4 4 eae Pe Ra RA ae f. 2 NAN gy 2m (PA am ~_ fs — _ oat p s r fw | ~. a id bones t, RE sae? 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