. Decapod Crustacea of Bermuda. Their distribution, variations, and habits. Decapoda (Crustacea). 446 A. E. Verrill—Decapod Crustacea of Bermuda. The left chelipeds and second ambulatory leg are covered with fan- shaped groups of plumose hairs, mostly dark red, but some are Avhitish. Tips of the digits black and spoon-shaped. The left chela is the larger, compressed, and covered with coarse granules. This is from Bermuda, tig. 59. This species appears to be rare in Bermuda. We obtained one specimen in 1898; another in the Yale Museum v/as collected by Dr. F. V. Hamlin about 1877. Its range is
. Decapod Crustacea of Bermuda. Their distribution, variations, and habits. Decapoda (Crustacea). 446 A. E. Verrill—Decapod Crustacea of Bermuda. The left chelipeds and second ambulatory leg are covered with fan- shaped groups of plumose hairs, mostly dark red, but some are Avhitish. Tips of the digits black and spoon-shaped. The left chela is the larger, compressed, and covered with coarse granules. This is from Bermuda, tig. 59. This species appears to be rare in Bermuda. We obtained one specimen in 1898; another in the Yale Museum v/as collected by Dr. F. V. Hamlin about 1877. Its range is from Florida to Brazil. Porto Rico (Benedict as insignis); ?Maceio and Rio Goyanna, Brazil, on reefs (Rathbun as insignis). About a dozen good specimens of this conspicuously colored spe- cies were obtained at Dominica Island by A. II. Verrill, in 1906 (Yale Mus.). The}^ Avere taken in baited fish-traps in 10 to 25 fathoms. They occupied shells of Triton iKiriegatus, Mxtrex, and half-grown Strotnhus Figuie 60.—Dardanns insignis; a, aaterior part of carapace and appendages enlarged ; b, distal part of 2d ambulatory leg of left side, more enlarged. After Saiissure. See also pi. xxvi. This species is pretty closel}^ allied to D. insignis, but is easily distinguished by the armature of the chelne and second left ambulatory leg. The eye-stalks of the latter are also shorter (see tig. 59), not reaching to the end of the antennal aciculum, and the ocular scales are different in form. In D. iiisignis the second left ambulatory leg has no median carina on the outer surface (see fig. 59, and Plate xxvi, 4, 5), the oblique ridges and long rows of small tubercles curve back- ward and meet in "herring-bone" fashion along the convex middle line, on the pi'opodus, but are interrupted by a groove on the dactylus; they are armed with appressed plumose hairs, as in J), Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitall
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