Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries . Anjultia alosae orsal Rurface; /<. ventral surface; c, posterior maxilliped; <l, 7 m alow. Gould. Mali. Posterior legs andabdomen. eggs must be considerably larger than those of the other species and comparatively few in number,judging from the ripe females examined. A specimen from near Key West, Fla., taken in April, wasfull of apparently ripe eggs. Probably the species lays a little later than tins around Woods Hole. OF THE WOODS HOLE REGION. L23 Argulus catostomi Dana & Herrick. Female only known. Carapace large, o


Bulletin of the Bureau of Fisheries . Anjultia alosae orsal Rurface; /<. ventral surface; c, posterior maxilliped; <l, 7 m alow. Gould. Mali. Posterior legs andabdomen. eggs must be considerably larger than those of the other species and comparatively few in number,judging from the ripe females examined. A specimen from near Key West, Fla., taken in April, wasfull of apparently ripe eggs. Probably the species lays a little later than tins around Woods Hole. OF THE WOODS HOLE REGION. L23 Argulus catostomi Dana & Herrick. Female only known. Carapace large, orbicular, wider than long, almost covering the swimming legs; posterior sinusbroad, with its sides approximate^ parallel; antero-lateral sinuses scarcely noticeable; chitin rings intin lateral areas very unequal in size, the larger <m< extending forward to the sucking disks, andhaving adeep indentation on its inner margin near the center, into which the smaller one comparatively very small, orbicular, wider than long, cut less than one-third its length;anal sinus narrow; papillae basal. Antenna? compara


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectfisheries, bookyear19