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F, TYDEMAN PUBLICS PAR MAX WHREBER Chef de l’expédition. . Introduction et description de l’expédition, Max Weber. . Le bateau et son équipement scientifique, G. F, Tydeman. . Résultats hydrographiques, G. F. T'ydeman. . Foraminifera, (F. W. Winter }). . Xenophyophora, F. BE. Schulze. . Radiolaria, M. Hartmann. . Porifera, G. C. J. Vosmaer et I. Ijima'). . Hydropolypi, A. Billard *). . Stylasterina, S. J. Hickson et Mile H. M. England. . Siphonophora, Miles Lens et, van Riemsdijk. . Hydromedusae, O. Maas. . Scyphomedusae, O. Maas. . Ctenophora, Mile F. Moser. *XIII. Gorgonidae, Alcyonidae, J. Versluys, S. J. Hickson, (C. C, Nutting et J. A. Thomson '). *XIV. Pennatulidae, S. J. Hickson. ‘ *XV. Actiniaria, P. Mc Murrich *). *XVI. Madreporaria, A. Alcock et C. J. van der/Horst'). * XVII. Antipatharia, A. J. van Pesch. XVIII. Turbellaria, L. von Graff et R. R. von Stummer. XIX. Cestodes, (J. W, Spengel +). *XX, Nematomorpha, H. F. Nierstrasz. *XXT. Chaetognatha, G. H. Fowler. XXII. Nemertini, (A.A. W. Hubrecht +) et MmeG. Stiasny. XXIII. Myzostomidae, R. R. von Stummer. *XXIV1, Polychaeta errantia, R. Horst +). . Polychaeta sedentaria, M. Caullery et F. Mesnil. . Gephyrea, C. Ph. Sluiter. . Enteropueusta, J. W. Spengel. *XXVIdis. Pterobranchia, S. F. Harmer. XXVIL. Brachiopoda, J. F. van Bemmelen. *XXVIII. Polyzoa, S. F. Harmer '). *XXIX. Copepoda, A. Scott *). *XXX. Ostracoda, G. W. Miiller. *XXXI * XXXII XXXII *XXXIV XXXV *XXXVI . Cirripedia, P. P. C. Hoek. . Isopoda, H. F. Nierstrasz *). . Amphipoda, Ch. Pérez. . Caprellidae, P. Mayer. . Stomatopoda, H. J. Hansen. . Cumacea, W. T. Calman, *XXXVII. Schizopoda, H. J. Hansen. *#XXXVIII * XXXIX *XL XLI . Sergestidae, H. J. Hansen. . Decapoda, J. G. de Man, J.B. W. Thle et J.J. Tesch"). . Pantopoda, J. C. C. Loman. . Halobatidae, J. Th. Oudemans. *XLII. Crinoidea, L. Déderlein et Austin H. Clark. *XLIII. Echinoidea, J. C. H. de Meijere. *XLIV. Holotharioidea, C. Ph. Sluiter. *XLV, Ophiuroidea, R. Kohler. *XLVI. Asteroidea, L. Déderlein *). . Solenogastres, H. F. Nierstrasz. . Chitonidae, H. F. Nierstrasz. . Prosobranchia, M. M. Schepman. . Prosobranchia parasitica, H, F. Nierstrasz et M, M, . Opisthobranchia, R. Bergh. . Heteropoda, J. J. Tesch. . Pteropoda, J. J. Tesch. . Lamellibranchiata, P. Pelseneer et Ph. Dautzenberg ‘), *LIV. Scaphopoda, Mile M. Boissevain. LV. Cephalopoda, L. Joubin. *LVI. Tunicata, C. Ph. Sluiter et J. BE. W. Ihle. *LVII. Pisces, Max Weber. LVI . Cetacea, Max Weber. *LIX. Liste des algues, Mme A. Weber'), *LX . Halimeds, Mile BE, 8. Barton. (Mme E. S. Gepp). *LXI. Corallinaceae, Mme A, Weber et M. Foslie, *LXIL. Codiaceae, A. et’ Mme E, S. Ge p. LXII, Dinoflagellata. Coccosphaeridae, j. P. Lotsy. LXIV . Diatomaceae, J. P. Lotsy. *LXV. Deposita marina, O. B. Boggild. LXVI. Résultats géologiques, A. Wichmann. (Schepman. Wee He peg i : / ‘ vaftase ns yann nv UNTV ETA ten TMG pec TUF TR La) OSTEO TT rc eUo urAeUU TNCLATOTOTA ‘qELSEP aS PEeSELES SEREE EERE EE EEE CO Siboga-Expeditie DBCAPODA OF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION 7 . ON A COLLECTION OF MACRUROUS DECAPOD*CRUSTACEA OF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION, CHIEFLY PENAEIDAE AND ALPHEIDAE Dr. J. G. DE MAN lerseke (Holland) |‘ With 4 plates Monographe XXXIX a‘ of: DITKOMSTEN OP ZOOLOGISCH, BOTANISCH, OCEANOGRAPHISCH EN GEOLOGISCH GEBIED verzameld in Nederlandsch Oost-Indié 1899—1900 aan boord H. M. Siboga onder commando van Luitenant ter zee re kl. G. F. TYDEMAN UITGEGEVEN DOOR Dr. MAX WEBER Prof. in Amsterdam, Leider der Expeditie (met medewerking van de Maatschappij ter bevordering van het Natuurkundig Onderzoek der Nederlandsche Kolonién) weonisnig / K901007 * ALVEaILUSANI —_—<_ > — BOEKHANDEL EN DRUKKER]IJ BK. J. BRILL LEIDEN Fe ee ae Se TOA I OE EAE FOE 7 PERE EER OE ® Les numéros avec un astérique ont déja paru; ceux marqués 1) seulement en partie Déja paru: a - al’ouvrage Citi an Monsen 1¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLIV) C, Ph. Sluiter. Die Holothurien der Siboga-Expedition. Mit 10 Tafeln. f 6— f 9 — . 2 Livr. (Monogr. LX) E. S, Barton. The genus Halimeda. With 4 plates. 3¢ Livr. (Monogr. I) Max Weber. Introduction et description de l’expédition. Stations et 2 cartes . 4¢ Livr. (Monogr. II) G. F. Tydeman. ‘Description of the ship ‘and appliances used for scientific exploration. With 3 plates and illustrations. 5¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLVII) H. F. Nierstrasz. The Solenogastres ¢ of the ‘Siboga-Exp. With 6 plates. f 6¢ Livr. (Monogr. XIII) J. Versluys. Die Gorgoniden der Siboga-Expedition. I. Die Chrysogorgiidae. Mit 170 Figuren im Text. 7¢ Livr. (Monogr. XVIa) A. Alcock. Report on the Deep-Sea “Madreporaria « of ‘the Siboga- Expedition. With 5 plates. 8e Livr. (Monogr. XXV) C. Ph. Sluiter. ‘Die. Sipunculiden und Echiuriden der Siboga-Exp. Mit 4 Tafeln und 3 Figuren im Text. g¢ Livr. (Monogr. VIa) G. C. J. Vosmaer and - np H. Vernhout. The Porifera of thie Siboga- Expedition. I. The genus Placospongia. With 5 plates. Aver’ Liste des ” 1o¢ Livr. (Monogr. XI) Otto Maas. Die Scyphomedusen der Siboga-Expedition. “Mit 12 Tafela. ' 11¢ Livr. (Monogr. XII) Fanny Moser. Die Ctenophoren der Siboga-Expedition. Mit 4 Tafeln. , 12¢ Livr. (Monogr. XXXIV) P. Mayer. Die Caprellidae der Siboga-Expedition. Mit 10 Tafeln. , 13¢ Livr. (Monogr. III) G. F. Tydeman. Hydrographic results of the Socata awe With 24 charts and plans and 3 charts of depths . . U 14¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLIII) J. C. H. de Meijere. Die Echinoidea der Siboga- -Exp. Mit 23 Tafeln. 7 1s¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLVa) René Koehler. Ophiures de l’Expédition du Siboga. 1¢ Partie. Ophiures de Mer profonde. Avec 36 Planches. : ‘i 16e Livr. (Monogr. LII) J. J. Tesch. The Thecosomata and Gymnosomata of the Siboge- Expedition. With 6 plates. . 4 17¢ Livr. (Monogr. LVIa) C. Ph. Sluiter. Die Tunicaten der ‘Siboga-Expedition. I. Abteilung. Die socialen und holosomen Ascidien. Mit 15 Tafeln. . . . 18e Livr. (Monogr. LXI) A. Weber—van Bosse and M. Foslie. The Corallinaceae of the Siboga- Expedition. With 16 plates and 34 textfigures 1g¢ Livr. (Monogr. VIII) Sydney J. Hickson and Helen M. ‘England. The Stylasterina of the Siboga Expedition. With 3 plates. 20¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLVIII) H. F. Nierstrasz. Die Chitonen der ‘Siboga-Exp. Mit 8 Tafeln. 21¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLV4) René Koehler. Ophiures de l’Expédition du Siboga. 2e Partie. Ophiures littorales. Avec 18 Planches. 22 Livr. (Monogr. XX VIdis) Sidney F. Harmer. The Pterobranchia of the Siboga-Expedition, with an account of other species. With 14 plates and 2 text-figures, 23¢ Livr. (Monogr. XXXVI) W. T. Calman. The Cumacea of the Siboga Expedition. With 2 plates and 4 text-figures 24¢ Livr. (Monogr. LVIa) C. Ph. Sluiter. Die Tunicaten der Siboga-Expedition. Supplement zu der I. Abteilung. Die socialen und holosomen Ascidien. Mit 1 Tafel. 25e Livr. (Monogr. L) Rud. Bergh. Die Opisthobranchiata der Siboga-Exped. 26¢ Livr. (Monogr. X) Otto Maas. Die Craspedoten Medusen der Siboga-Exp. Mit 20 Tafeln. , Mit 14 Tafeln. 27¢ Livr. (Monogr. XIII a) J. Versluys. Die Gorgoniden der Siboga-Expedition. II. Die Primnoidae. Mit 10 Tafeln, 178 Figuren im Text und einer Karte. . . , 28e Livr. (Monogr. XXI) G. Herbert Fowler. The Chaetognatha of the Siboga Eapedi ; With 3 plates and 6 charts. . 29¢ Livr. (Monogr. LI) J. J. Tesch. Die Heteropoden der Siboga-Expedition. 30° Livr. (Monogr. XXX) G. W. Miller. Die Ostracoden der Siboga-Exped. Mit 9 Tafeln. Mit 14 Tafeln. 31¢ Livr. (Monogr. IVéis) Franz Eilhard Schulze. Die Xenophyophoren der Siboga-Exped. Mit 3 Tafeln . 32¢ Livr. (Monogr. LIV) Maria Boissevain. The Scaphopoda of the "Siboga ‘Expedition. With 6 plates and 39 textfigures 33¢ Livr. (Monogr. XXVI) J. W. Spengel. Studien iiber die Enteropneusten der Siboga-Exp. Mit 17 Tafeln und 20 Figuren im Text. » 34¢ Livr. (Monogr. XX) H. F. Nierstrasz. Die} Nematomorpha der Siboga-Exp. Mit. 3 Tafeln. 35¢ Livr. (Monogr. XIIIc) Sydney J. Hickson und J. Versluys. Die Alcyoniden der Siboga- Exped. I. Coralliida, II. Pseudocladochonus Hicksoni. Mit 3 Tafeln und 16 Figurenim Text. , < 36¢ Livr. (Monogr. XXXIa) P. P. C. Hoek. The’ Cirripedia of the Siboga Expedition. A. Cirripedia pedunculata. With 10 plates . 37¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLIla) L. Déderlein. Die gestielten Crinoiden der Siboga-Expedition Mit 23 Tafeln und 12 Figuren im Text . 38¢ Livr. (Monogr, IX) Albertine D. Lens and "Thea van Riemsdijk. The ‘Siphonophores of the Siboga Expedition. With 24 plates and 52 textfigures 39¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLIX'a) M. M. Schepman. The Prosobranchia of the Siboga Expedition. » ” Part I. Rhipidoglossa and Docoglossa, with an Appendix by Prof. R. BERGH. With g plates and 3 textfigures. 40¢ Livr. (Monogr. XL) J. C. é. Tafeln und 4 Figuren im Text. ate Livr. (Monogr. LVIc) J. E. W. Ihle. Die Appendicularien der. Siboga- “Expedition. “Mit 4 Tafeln: und 10 Piguren im Text . 42¢ Livr. (Monogr. XLIX?) M. M. Schepman ‘und H. F Nierstrasz. Parasitische Proso- branchier der Stboes Expedition. Mit 2 Tafeln . Loman. Die Pantopoden der Siboga-Expedition. Mit 5 1.80 » 2.70 4 10.20 * —— » 5:90 7 18.80 SutA < * 2) ae ze ae! ae ES ere ee” 1 ie SM a (ee ee) | Se Oe ey ted “= 7a yee 2 eee ae | ? , With the compliments of Dr, J. G. de MAN. Terseke, Zeeland, Holland. PibwwwexPOOACOF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION BARS Vi ON A COLLECTION OF MACRUROUS DECAPOD CRUSTACEA OF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION, CHIEFLY PENAEIDAE AND ALPHEIDAE uA Siboga-Expeditie XXXIXa! DECAPODA OF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION PART Vv ON A COLLECTION OF MACRUROUS DECAPOD CRUSTACEA OF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION, CHIEFLY PENAEIDAE AND ALPHEIDAE BY LIB Ra RY DUNKS SF SIASTASEA D2eG. DEMIAN INVERTEBRATE Ierseke (Holland) . ZOOLOGY Crustacea With 4 plates aN TNS ty, Ss , 274808. —=§@%<3— J tire, LATER Evel See lo, ie, PUBLISHERS AND PRINTERS EID EN — 1922 TO THE MEMORY ta OF HIS HIGHLY ESTEEMED AND BELOVED PARENTS ; \ THIS WORK IS DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR = “i : Toe ~% @ ON A COLLECTION OF MACRUROUS DECAPOD CRUSTACEA OF THE SIBOGA EXPEDITION, CHIEFLY PENAEIDAE AND ALPHEIDAE BY Dr. J. G. DE MAN, Ierseke. With four Plates. INT ROD UCEION: This paper deals with a ‘Collection of Macrurous Decapod Crustacea of the Siboga Expedition, which were sent to the author in the second half of 1916 and in January 1917; it consists chiefly of species belonging to the Penaeidae and Alpheidae. The Collection contains 38 species, among which 2 new species and 2 new varieties; one of the most interesting is no doubt the rare Szcyonella inermis (Paulson), of which a young male and a young female were collected. Preliminary descriptions of the new species and varieties were already published in 1920 in: Zodlogische Mededeelingen uitgegeven vanwege ’s Rijks Museum van Nat. Historie te Leiden, Deel V, Afl. 3, p. 103—107. The figures have been made by the author, excepting the figures 3—3d (PI. I), 13, 134 (PI. II) and 18—18é (Pl. IV), that. were drawn by Mr. J. F. Oxses of the Hague. SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE XXXIX at. I to LIST. GESEECIES: Gennadas clavicarpus de Man. — Synalpheus hastilicrassus Cout. var. acanthi- Haliporus aequalis Bate. telsoniformis de Man. Solenocera pectinata (Bate). Synalpheus sp. Penacopsis intermedia (Kish.) var. anchista | Alpheus Hailstonet Cout. var. daetabzlis de Man. de Man. Alpheus Hailstonet Cout. var. Penaeopsis sp. ; Alpheus paradentipes Cout. Parapenaeus fissurus (Bate). . Alpheus acuto-femoratus Dana. Parapenaeus sp. Alpheus consobrinus de Man. Stcyonta parvula de Haan. Alpheus frontalis H. M.-Edw. Szcyonia laevis Bate. Alpheus bidens (Oliv.). Sicyonella inermis (Paulson). Alpheus anchistus de Man. Ogyrides Sibogae (de Man). Alpheus lepidus de Man. Athanas Naifaroensis Cout. Alpheus Bastardi Cout. Athanas parvus de Man. Alpheus euchirus Dana. Athanas Stebbingit de Man. Processa aeguimana (Paulson). Athanas Djiboutensis Cout. Nikowdes Sibogae de Man. Arete Iphianassa de Man. ‘ Aegeon orientalis Henderson. Alpheopsis sp. Scyllarus sp. Synalpheus amboinae (Zehntner). | Enoplometopus dongirostris de Man. Synalpheus jedanensis de Man. | Synalpheus paraneomerts Cout. var. praeda- | | dunda de Man. | — Family PENAEIDAE. Gennadas Bate. 1. Gennadas clavicarpus de Man. Pl. I, fig. 1. Gennadas clavicarpus J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a, Part I, Family Penaeidae, IQII (text) p. 19, 1913 (plates) Pl. I and II, figs. 3—32. Stat. 148. August 10. 0°17'.6S. 129°14'.5 E. Halmaheira Sea. 1855 m. Bottom fine, grey and green mud. 2 young specimens. Stat. 185. September 12. 3°20'S., 127°22'.9 E. Manipa-strait. From 1536 m. to surface. 5 specimens, of which one male is almost adult, the others very young and mutilated. Stat. 203. September 19. 3°32’.5S., 124°15’.5 E. Banda Sea. jas. 1 young male and 3 still younger specimens. Stat. 243. December 2. 4°30'.2 S., 129°25'E. West of Banda Islands. From a depth of 1000 m. to surface. 3 young specimens. The largest of all the specimens is the male from Stat. 185, which is 31,4 mm. long (carapace 7,9 mm., abdomen 23,5 mm.). At the base of the rostrum the:rostral carina is very slightly elevated, in the shape of a minute rounded prominence. Antennary angle of the cara- pace acute, infra-antennary angle obtusely pointed. The branchiostegal spine, which in the type specimen, a female, was described as small, appears in this male (Fig. 1) as a spine of moderate size; the deep groove, that from the apex of the antennary angle runs backward and obliquely downward, unites with another that proceeds from the branchiostegal spine and then runs farther backward almost to the level of the post-cervical groove, curving downward posteriorly. The gastro-frontal groove runs first upward towards the rostral tooth, but, reaching the rostral crest, it curves backward. The truncate, slightly concave tip of the telson bears between the movable spines at the angles, which in this specimen are lost, three pairs of feathered setae ; those of the 1% or submedian pair are the longest, 0,46 mm. long, those of the 2"! are a little shorter, the setae of the outer pair still shorter, 0,3 mm. long. The petasma apparently agrees with the third male from Stat. 230, described by me l.c. p. 22, though in this male the two laminae were not yet in contact, while in the male from Stat. 185 it is well-developed. Instead of the two large rounded lobes on the distal border, visible in fig. 3/ (l.c.), one observes two triangular prominences, the acute tips of which are curved forward; of the two narrow teeth or prominences that occur at either side of the 4 petasma, that tooth which is placed next to the triangular prominence, is the longer, shows the same width along its whole length and is curved laterally outward; the other shorter tooth is curved forward and acute at the tip. The other specimens are all much younger and mostly mutilated. 2. Haliporus aequalis Bate. Haliporus aequalis Sp. Bate, J. G.de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a, Part I, Family Penaeidae, IQII (text) p. 32, 1913 (plates), Pl. II, fig. 8, 8a. Stat. 212. September 26. 5°54’.5 S., 120° 19.2 E. (West of Saleyer-island). 462 m. Bottom fine grey and green mud. 1 female. This female bears a Bopyrid in the right branchial chamber. Unfortunately the rostrum is broken at the anterior end of the eyes; the carapace from the orbital to the posterior margin is 20 mm. long, the abdomen 48 mm., so that, when supposing that the rostrum has reached to the far end of 2°¢ antennular article, the entire length has been 76 mm. The 3" abdominal tergum is obtusely carinated on its posterior half, the carina fading away anteriorly; the 4't—6' terga are sharply carinated. The telson reaches to the posterior 6 of the inner uropod and to a little beyond the middle of the outer. The lower (shorter) antennular flagellum, 25 mm. long, is one-fourth longer than the carapace, rostrum excluded, and a little more than twice as long as the peduncle; distance between the tip of the antennular peduncle and that of the antennal scale one and a half as long as 3*¢ article. The 3'¢ legs reach nearly by the chela beyond the antennal scale, those of the 4* pair, 60 mm. long, are 3-times as long as the carapace without the rostrum and project by the dactylus, the propodus and five-sixths of the carpus beyond the antennal scale; the peraeopods of the 5‘ pair, finally, are 74 mm. long and reach beyond the antennal scale by the dactylus, the propodus and seven-eighths of the carpus. 3. Solenocera pectinata (Bate). Pl. I, fig. 2. Solenocera pectinata (Sp. Bate), J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a, Part I, Family Penaeidae, IQII (text), p. 45, 1913 (plates), Pl. Ly; fig. II. Stat. to March 8. 7°25'S., 113°16 E. Madura-strait. 56 m. Bottom grey mud with some radiolariae. I young male. Stat. 7. March 11. 7°55'.5S., 114926 E. Near reef of Batjulmati (Java). 15 m. and more. Bottom coral and stones. I young male. Stat. 142. August 5/7. Anchorage of Laiwui, coast of Obi Major. 23 m. Bottom mud. 2 young specimens. Stat. 166. August 22. 2°28'.5 S., 131°3..3 E. Midway between Ceram and New Guinea. 118 m. Bottom hard, coarse sand. 4 young specimens. 1 female collected in 1910 by Mr. KLEIWEG DE ZWAAN at Gunung Sitoli, Nias. The female from Nias is 45 mm. long, almost adult. The rostrum (Fig. 2) is 1 + 8-dentate and reaches almost to the corneae of the eyes; the epigastric tooth has nearly the same size as the 1° rostral tooth, the following rapidly decrease in size, so that the four anterior teeth 5, that are nearly equal, are very small and hidden by the short plumose setae on the upper border; the apex of the anterior tooth is a little farther distant from the tip of the rostrum as from the apex of the penultimate tooth. Lower margin convex, only slightly emarginate near the tip; except near the base the lower margin is fringed with long feathered setae, that reach far beyond the tip. Antennular flagella 14 mm. long, just as long as the carapace with the rostrum together; in the full-grown specimens, collected by the Siboga Expedition between the islands of Wowoni and Buton and that were 50 resp. 54 mm. long, these flagella were as long as the carapace without the rostrum. The 3" abdominal tergum appears indistinctly angular on the posterior half, while the anterior is regularly rounded, but it cannot be said to be carinated. The external maxillipeds reach by a little more than the dactylus beyond the antennal scale. The peraeopods of the It pair reach to the far end of the antennal peduncle, those of the 2™4 to the distal extremity of the antennal scale, while the legs of the 5'* pair project by the dactylus and half the pro- podus beyond that extremity. The young male from Madura-strait is 29 mm. long. Rostrum 1 + 7-dentate, less broad in a lateral view than in the preceding specimen. The 3'¢ abdominal tergum appears distinctly carinated, except quite anteriorly, the carina, however, is obtuse and less prominent than on the 4'» somite. The external maxillipeds reach only by one-third of their ultimate joint beyond the antennal scale. The peraeopods of the 1*t pair extend as far as the antennal peduncle, those of the 2.4 reach by the fingers, the very long legs of the 3"¢ pair by the chela and half the carpus, the legs of the 4" pair by the dactylus and one-third of the propodus, those of the 5', finally, by the dactylus and almost the whole propodus beyond the antennal scale. The young male from Stat. 7 agrees with the preceding one. The two from the coast of Obi Major are 16 or 17 mm. long and the four from Stat. 166 are nearly of the same size. 4. Penacopsis intermedia (Kishinouye) var. anchista de Man. Pl. I, fig. 3—3d. Metapeneus ensis? A. Alcock, Catal. of the Indian Decapod Crustacea. Part III Macrura. Fasc. I. The Prawns of the Peneus Group. Calcutta 1906, p. 24° Penaeus intermedius K. Kishinouye, Journal of the Fisheries Bureau, Vol. VIII, N° 1. Tokyo 1900, p. 21. Penaeopsis intermedia (Kish.) var. anchista, J. G. de Man, in: Zoolog. Mededeelingen, uitgeg. vanwege ’s Rijks Mus. v. Nat. Hist. te Leiden. 1920. Deel V, Aff. 3, p. 103. 1 male and 1 female from the Kei-islands, Wertheim Expedition. 2 females from Ternate. I very young specimen collected by Mr. RUTTEN at Balikpapan, East Borneo. Stat. 323. (Siboga Exp.). February 24/25 1900. Sangkapura-roads, Bawean-island. 12 m. Bot- tom mud. 1 young female. I young male collected July 1915 by Dr. P. BUITENDIJK at Pulu Weh. Penaeopsis intermedia (Kish.) was established upon two apparently adult females, long 12 cm., from the province of Tosa, Japan. Our specimens from the Indian Archipelago now fully agree with the description of this species and with the figure, in which, however, the 6 thoracic legs and other appendages are not figured, except as regards the rostrum which is obliquely directed upward and the telson, in which the anterior of the 3 lateral spinules is very small, much smaller than the two posterior that are subequal but also apparently smaller than in the typical c¢termedia. They are therefore described as a variety, but, of course, when the appendages and the petasma should afterwards prove to differ, then the variety should be raised to the rank of a species as Penaeopsis anchista. The largest specimen is one of the females from Ternate, which is 80 mm. long, the other being a little smaller; the male (Fig. 3) from the Kei-islands is 77 mm. long, the female has nearly the same size, but the other specimens are much younger, especially the young specimen from Balikpapan, the length of which is 16 mm. In the larger female from Ternate and in the young male, long 52 mm., from Pulu Weh, the rostrum is armed in addition to the isolated epigastric tooth with 11 teeth, in the male from the Kei-islands and in the young female, long 45 mm., from Stat. 323 with 1o and in the three other specimens with 9 teeth: in the typical Pen. intermedia the rostrum bears 8 teeth in addition to the epigastric tooth. This epigastric tooth is smaller than the posterior or 1% tooth of the rostrum and stands on the anterior third of the carapace. The rostral teeth stand to the tip, the two posterior stand on the carapace and from the 5‘ or 6' they regularly decrease in size. The rostrum is obliquely directed upward, in the younger specimens the distal half runs straight forward, so that the line uniting the apices appears slightly arched; in the largest specimen the rostrum reaches _a little beyond the 2™¢ joint of the antennular peduncle, in the other female from Ternate almost to the distal end of this joint, in the male from the Kei-islands to the middle, in the female just beyond the middle of the 24 joint, in the young male from Pulu Weh to the middle, in the young female from Stat. 323 almost to the middle of this joint, while in the very small specimen from Balikpapan it extends only to the corneae of the eyes; the rostrum proves thus to be the longer, the older the specimen is and, when this variety should obtain the length of 12 cm. like the typical species, it will probably, like in the latter, be equal in length to the antennular peduncle. Post-rostral crest low, though distinct, running nearly to the posterior margin of the carapace, bounded on each side by shallow, setae-grown parts of the surface. Post-ocular angulation acute, almost spiniform. Post-antennular (antennal) spine moderate, continued back- wards as a ridge that does not reach to the hepatic spine. Hepatic spine smaller than the post-antennular; from the hepatic spine a well-defined, setae-grown groove, the cervical groove, runs obliquely upward and backward to near the post-rostral ridge; below the hepatic spine this groove is continued as a crescentic crease running towards the rounded, unarmed, antero-lateral angle of the carapace, which it, however, does not reach. From the hepatic spine no ridge or crest runs backward, the surface appearing here quite smooth, but between the upper part of the cervical groove and the posterior margin of the carapace still three setae-grown grooves occur, exactly like in the typical species; the anterior of these grooves runs S-like and unites dorsally with the cervical groove, the following is bifurcate, one branch running downward and slightly forward, the other backward, the posterior groove, finally, runs obliquely, between the cardiac and branchial region, but without reaching the posterior border »+ amp ugail is of the carapace. There is also a rather deep post-antennular groove, that runs into the cervical groove near the hepatic spine and a short post-ocular groove, that begins just below the 1° tooth of the rostrum, curving backward. Abdomen twice as long as the carapace, rostrum included. First, second and third tergum smooth and rounded; one observes, however, on the 1%t tergum of the male from the Kei-islands a transverse, shallow, setae-grown groove, just behind the middle, parallel with the posterior. margin, narrowing laterally but not continued on to the pleura; in the other specimens it is less conspicuous. The 4" tergum is obtusely carinated, the carina defined on either side by a setae-grown shallow groove and bifurcate at the posterior end; in the specimens from the Kei-islands and in the larger female from Ternate the anterior third part of the tergum is still rounded, but in the younger female from Ternate the subdorsal grooves hardly reach beyond the middle, so that the two anterior fifths are rounded, and in the younger individuals the crest is still more reduced, appearing only posteriorly. Fifth and sixth terga sharply carinated, the former bifurcate at the posterior extremity, the latter terminating in a small acute tooth; measured along the upper edge the 6t* somite appears a little more than one and a half as long as the 5'* and nearly one-third longer than the greatest width. In the male from the Kei-islands (Fig. 34) and in the larger female from Ternate, indeed, the 5‘ somite is 6 mm. long, the 6 10,5 mm. long and 7,75 mm. broad. Telson in the female a little longer than the 6'" somite, in the male hardly so; it is grooved in the middle line, the groove being narrow and extending to the 2°4 lateral, spinule, and on each side two other grooves are found. In the typical Penxacopsis intermedia the three lateral spinules of the telson are long and nearly of the same size, while the posterior almost reaches to the tip; in the indian specimens (Fig. 3c) the posterior spine extends only to the middle of the distance between the place of insertion and the tip, the 2"4 is slightly shorter, but the anterior or 1‘ spine is the smallest of all, measuring only half the length of the posterior. Antennular peduncle a trifle shorter than the antennal scale, reaching as far forward as the antero-lateral spinule of the latter; flagella subequal, the longer upper one almost half as long as the peduncle, measured from the orbital margin. External maxillipeds reaching to the far end of the antennal peduncle and as long as the peraeopods of the 1° pair; spine of the ischium a little shorter than that of the preceding joint. The peraeopods of the 2™4 pair reach in the male from the Kei-islands to the middle of the 2.4 antennular article, while those of the 3" reach with the fingers beyond the antennal scale; in the larger female from Ternate they are a trifle shorter; spine at the base of 34 pair half as long as that at the base of 224. The legs of the 4 pair reach in the male almost to the far end of the antennal peduncle, those of the 5'" to the middle of 2"¢ antennular article, the 5t* without exopodite. The petasma (Fig. 3a) is symmetrical and ends at either side in an acuminate spout, while one observes two rounded lobes between the spouts. Figure 3d represents the thelycum. The specimens, taken near Port Blair in the Andamans, that were referred by Prof. Atcock with doubt to Penxacopsis ensis (de Haan), probably did belon r to this new variety of Penxaeopsis Oo > antermedia. 8 In the Leiden Museum at present still only one type specimen of DE Haan’s Peneus ensis is preserved (W. bE Haan, Fauna Jap. Crust. p. 192, Pl. 46, fig. 2). Dr. R. Horst of this Museum sent me with his usual courtesy upon my request the following information about this type specimen. In /. exs’s an obtuse, though quite conspicuous crest runs from the hepatic spine to the posterior border of the carapace (a posteriore (spina) costa obtusa ad marginem posticum producta); the peraeopods of the 1° pair are bispinose, like in Pen. intermedia and the new variety, the spine of the ischium is, however, much smaller than that at the base; there is a quite distinct flattened keel on the 3'¢ abdominal tergum and the 4'® to 6 are sharply carinated, while one observes moreover a crest on the posterior half of the 24; of the three lateral spinules of the telson the two posterior are rather long, like in the typical ¢z/ermedia, the anterior only half as long;.in P. ensis, finally, the rostrum is slightly directed upward. It is thus evident that P. ensés is a different species, chiefly distin- guished by the obtuse crest, which from the hepatic spine runs backward, and by the stronger carination of the abdomen. 5. Penacopsis sp. Pl. 1, fig. 4—4 46. Stat. 166. August 22. 2°28'.5S., 131°3'.3 E. Midway between Ceram and New Guinea. 118 m. : Bottom hard, coarse sand. 5 very young specimens. I do not succeed in determining these specimens, because they are too young, so that neither petasma nor thelycum are developed. It is a species of the Akayebi-group and most closely related to or perhaps identical with Pex. daréatus (de Haan) = Pen. Akayedi (Rathb.) from Japan. The largest specimen measures about 27 mm., the others are still younger. In all the specimens (Fig. 4) the rostrum, which is obliquely turned upward, reaches to the far end of basal antennular article, but we know that in such young individuals it is much shorter than in. the adult; the rostrum is slender, tapering, straight and in all the specimens 1+ 6-deatate, the 6 teeth are equidistant, reach to the tip and from the 34 decrease in size. Epigastric tooth a little smaller than the 1* rostral tooth. First abdominal tergum rounded, the 24 shows in the largest specimen and in another, but not yet in the rest, a trace of a low carina on the anterior half, the 3 and following terga are conspicuously carinated, the carina of the 3'¢ slightly broader than those of the following. Sixth somite (Fig. 4a) much elongate, in the largest specimen it is 4,6 mm. long, as long as the carapace from the orbital to the posterior margin, and 2'/,-times as long as broad proximally; it is more than twice as long as the 5" and a little longer than the telson which is armed with one fixed and three movable spines at either side, while at least on the posterior half (Fig. 44) much smaller spinules are implanted on the lateral margins between the three large spines and in front of them. In the youngest specimen the telson, 3 mm. long and 1 mm. broad proximally, appears even 3-times as long as broad, and the telson is here 2,56 mm. long. Telson much shorter than the uropods. We may there- fore conclude that in adult specimens the 6‘ somite will be twice as long as broad, which fact in Pen. barbatus (de Haan) seems to be indeed the case, according to the figure 2 on Plate VI of KisHINovuye’s paper of 1900, representing the Pex. veludénus of this author, which is identical with Pex. darbatus and Pen. Akayebi (M. J. Rarusun, in: Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. XXVI, 1902, p. 39). neers & bred 9 Antennular peduncle a little shorter than the antennal scale, 3" article half as long as 2™4, The external maxillipeds reach in the largest specimen but one to the distal extremity of 2™4 antennular article, in the other still younger specimens they are a little shorter. The 1 legs reach in the largest specimen just beyond the antennal peduncle and are bispinose, both the basi- and the ischiopodite being armed with a spine; legs of the 2"! pair unispinose, those of the 34 unarmed. The 5' legs, that bear an exopodite, extend almost to the far end of 2™4 antennular article. We may therefore conclude that the sea between Ceram and New Guinea is inhabited either by Pex. daréatus (de Haan) or by a closely allied species. 6. Parapenaeus fissurus (Bate). Penaeus fissurus C. Spence Bate, Report Challenger Macrura, 1888, p. 263, Pl. XXXVI, fig. 1. Parapenaeus fissurus J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a, Part I, Family Penaeidae, IQII (text), p. 79, 1913 (plates), Pl. VIII, fig. 25a, 0. Stat. 306. February 8. 8°27'S., 122° 54'.5 E. Lobetobi-strait. 247 m. Bottom sandy mud. 1 male. This male that carries a Bopyrid in the left branchial chamber, is 110 mm. long. As a rare exception the rostrum reaches, like in the young male long 100 mm. from Stat. 302 (I. c.), to the middle of the 3'¢ joint of the antennular peduncle, which is just as long as the antennal scale; the rostrum is somewhat curved upward at the tip and bears besides the epigastric tooth five rostral teeth like in fig. 25a (l.c.), of which the foremost is almost 3-times as far distant from the apex of the rostrum as from the apex of the penultimate tooth. I observe, however, still the almost microscopical trace of a 6 tooth a little farther distant from the apex of the rostrum than from that of the foremost tooth; such a trace is also visible in fig. 25a of my work. 7. Parapenaeus sp. Pl. I, fig. 5. Stat. 47. April 8/12. Bay of Bima, near south fort. 55 m. Bottom mud with patches of fine coral sand. I very young specimen. In its outer appearance this specimen much resembles Paraf. Luvestigatoris Alc. & Anderson (A, Atcock, Catal. Indian Decap. Crust. Part HI. Macrura. Fasc. 1. Calcutta. 1906, Pl. VI, fig. 17), but it differs at first sight by the branchiostegal spine being very small and placed at the antero-inferior angle of the carapace. This specimen is 16,1 mm. long, that just reaches beyond the eyes, is 1 + 6-dentate, the epigastric tooth, the apex of which is the carapace, rostrum included, being 4,4 mm. long, the abdomen 11,7 mm. The rostrum as far distant from the 1*t rostral tooth as the latter from the 3", has nearly the same size as the 1*t tooth of the rostrum; the length of the rostral teeth, i. e. the distance between their apices, regularly decreases from the 2"¢ to the last, the distance between the apices of the 1* and the 2™4 tooth is, however, a little shorter than that between those of the 2™4 and 3'4; the 6th is as far distant from the tip of the rostrum as from the apex of the penultimate tooth and the line uniting the apices of the six teeth curves slightly downward. The rostrum, 1,2 mm. long, appears 4-times as long as broad at its base. Posterior to the rostrum the carapace is SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE XXXIX at. 2 IO rounded, Antennal spine well-developed, hepatic spine rather large; the longitudinal suture extends almost to the posterior margin of the carapace and the transverse suture is quite distinct. First, second and third abdominal terga rounded, fourth obtusely carinated, fifth and sixth sharply, the carina of the 6‘ terminating in a sharp tooth; the 6'" somite, 3 mm. long, has an elongate form, being 3-times as long as broad in the middle. Telson one-sixth shorter than 6'* somite, 2,5 mm. long and armed, besides with a single pair of fixed marginal spines, with 2 pairs of small articulating spines in front of the former. The telson reaches to the posterior fourth of the inner uropod, outer uropod only a trifle longer than inner; telson longitudinally grooved in front of the fixed marginal spines. Antennular peduncle a little shorter than the antennal scale, reaching as far forward as the antero-lateral spine of the latter. The external maxillipeds reach as far forward as the basal joint of the antennular peduncle, to the middle of the antennal scale. The peraeopods of the 1* pair reach to the anterior margin of the carapace and are bispinose, the spine at the far end of the ischium twice as large as that at the base; those of the 2"¢ pair project to the middle of the eyes, those of the 3" just beyond them, both unarmed at base, peraeopods of the 4 pair just as long as those of the 3'4. 8. Szcyonia parvula de Haan. Sicyonia parvula de Haan, J.G.DE MAN, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a, Part I, Family Penaeidae, IQII (text) p. 117, 1913 (plates) Pl. X, fig. 4o—40d. Stat. 109. July 5/6. Off Pulu Tongkil, Sulu-archipelago, plankton, at night. 1 young female. This specimen is 15,5 mm. long (carapace 5,2 mm., abdomen 10,3 mm.) and agrees very well with the cited description, excepting only the rostral teeth. The rostrum, which near the base appears, in a lateral view, a little more than one and one-third as broad as at the denticulate tip, being here 0,33 mm. broad, near the base 0,46 mm., differs from the young female, collected at Stat. 164 (l.c. Fig. 40), by the rst rostral tooth being placed a little more backward, so that there are three teeth on the carapace; five teeth stand on the upper margin of the rostrum, of which the anterior one is strongly curved downward and projects a little beyond the acute tip of the rostrum that is also curved downward, while the tooth of the lower margin extends likewise a little beyond the tip. The apex of the 3" cara- pacial tooth (which in Fig. 40 is placed above the orbital margin) is a little more than one and a half as far distant from the 1° rostral tooth as the latter from the 2°4; the distances between the apices of the following teeth regularly diminish in length. The two posterior teeth on the carapace are placed as in Fig. 4o. The longitudinal, slightly curved ridges that define the abdominal pleura superiorly, are well-developed on the 24, 3", 5th and 6'* somites, but are wanting on the 1* and the 4"; according to the cited description they should be conspicuous on the three first, but indistinct on the three posterior. . The thelycum much resembles that of Ste. ocellata (J. G. DE Man, l.c. Fig. 43), but eo ———- = Si II the terminal spine appears more slender and reaches until the 1° pair of legs. This specimen bears some resemblance to Sze. trispznosa de Man, but in the latter the 1° carapacial tooth is much shorter, not longer than the 2"¢, the pleura of the 1*t abdominal somite show two transverse furrows and probably will the male of Sze. parvaula also differ. g. Szcyonza vaevis Bate. Pl. 1, Fig. 6, 6a. Sicyonia laevis Sp. Bate, J. G. DE MAN, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a, Part I, Family Penaeidae, IQII (text) p. 118, 1913 (plates) Pl. X, fig. 41—41 0. Stat. 7. March 11. 7°55’.5S., 114° 26'E. Near reef of Batjulmati (Java). 15 m. and more. Bottom coral and stones. 1 female. This female has the same size as that from the south coast of Manipa-island, described by me in 1911, because it is also 17 mm. long (carapace, rostrum included, 6,2 mm., abdomen 10,8 mm.). The rostrum, which reaches to the middle of 2™¢ antennular article, slightly directed upward, is armed above with five teeth; the 1t stands on the carapace like in the female from. Manipa-island and the apex of the tooth reaches just beyond the orbital margin; this tooth and the two following are of the same size, but the 4'* and the 5' are a little smaller and the 5" that is slightly curved downward, projects not only (Fig. 6) beyond the small acute apex of the rostrum but even a little beyond the tooth of the lower margin. Near the lower margin at either side, on the distal half of the rostrum, four short spiniform setae are implanted. The distinctly narrowing rostrum appears in a lateral view 0,7 mm. broad at base, while the tip is 0,3 mm. broad, being near the base more than twice as broad as on the level of the 4 rostral tooth. In the female from Manipa-island the upper margin presented only four teeth and between the broken apex of the rostrum and the tooth of the lower margin a rounded prominence was observed, tipped with a tuft of setae. The two other carapacial teeth agree with my figure 41, the distance between their apices being slightly longer than the distance between the apex of the 2"¢ and that of the 1° rostral tooth. Outer orbital angle angular, obtuse; in the Challenger type that was 30 mm. long, the angle was spiniform, “produced to a point’’. The abdomen agrees with the female from Manipa-island, but of the two small acute teeth on the postero-inferior angle of the 4" pleura the upper is much larger than the lower. External maxillipeds a little shorter than the antennal scale. Peraeopods of the 1°t pair bispinose. The spine of the thelycum (Fig. 6a) reaches to the posterior border of the 2" legs. Median spines on the abdominal sterna well-developed. 10. Szcyonella tnmermzs (Paulson). Pl. I and I, Fig. 7—7%. Aphareus tnermis O, Paulson, Izslyedovaniya Rakoobraznuikh Krasnagho Morya. Chast. I. Kiev, 1875, p. 117, Pl. XVIII, figs. 3—32. Stcyonella inermis H. Balss, Die Decapoden des Roten Meeres. I Macruren, Wien 1915, p. 14, figs. 10—15 (ubi literatura). Stat. 41. April 3. 7° 25'S., 117° 50.5 E. Plankton. Surface to 10 m. 2 specimens. The two specimens are of equal size, 13,4 mm. long (carapace 3 mm., abdomen 10,4 mm.). I2 Of the two teeth with which, in both specimens, the rostrum (Fig. 7, 7@) is armed, the posterior appears slightly longer and a little more slender than the anterior and the distance between their apices is nearly twice as large as the distance between the apex of the anterior tooth and that of the rostrum; the distance between the apex of the rostrum and that of the posterior tooth measures about one-sixth the length of the carapace, rostrum included. Supra-orbital and hepatic spine well-developed, of equal size, larger than the small branchiostegal spine. Abdominal terga rounded, their posterior border truncate, excepting the 6 somite which is laterally strongly compressed, the upper margin, however, not carinated and terminating in a short acute spine; the 6‘ somite, 2,36 mm. long, is twice as long as broad and a little more than twice as long as the fifth. Telson 1,76 mm. long, three-fourths the length of the 6th somite, somewhat shorter than the inner uropod, that is almost as much shorter than the outer; there are still only four pairs (Fig. 76) of small marginal spinules. The eye-peduncles, namely their terminal joint, measure a little more than one-third the length of the carapace and the diameter of the globular eye measures one-third the length ot the peduncle. The acute spine (stylocerite) on the outer margin of basal antennular article, a little behind the middle, is well-developed, like also the spine at the distal extremity, which is directed outward, while the third spine, that rises from the upper surface just in front of the statocyst and behind the stylocerite, is quite conspicuous in a lateral view (Fig. 7@) of the animal. Second joint in the female 0,42 mm. long, 0,24 mm. broad, proportion between length and width like 7:4; 34 joint a little shorter, 0,3 mm. long and twice as long as wide in the middle. Both the inner and the outer margin of the 1st and 2™¢ antennular article are fringed with rather long setae, shorter setae occur also on the inner margin of the 3"¢ article; in both specimens the 34 article reaches by one-third its length beyond the antennal scale. Outer flagellum thickened at base, the thickened part 0,5 mm. long and with sensory filaments along its whole length. Second antennal article with a spine, which is nearly of the same size as the branchiostegal spine, antennal peduncle reaching as far forward as the stylocerite, a little shorter than the eye-peduncle and of a stout shape, the terminal joint twice as long as broad; flagellum in the female 15,7 mm. long g, only one-sixth longer than the body, with the abrupt double bend at three-sevenths of its length from the base, like in the male, long 20 mm., described by Dr. CaLMan in 1913, but in this male the flagellum was more than twice as long as the body, owing to it being adult. In both specimens the third maxillipeds are still only one-fifth longer than the carapace owing to their young age and reach only as far forward as the antennal scale. In neither specimen (Fig. 7c) I did succeed in observing the subdivision of the two distal segments, which for the rest agree with Catman’s figure 9 in his paper of October 1913. In the male the antepenultimate segment is 0,7 mm. long, the penultimate is just as long, while the terminal joint is a little shorter, measuring 0,5 mm. The peraeopods of the 1° pair (Fig. 7d) reach to the anterior border of the carapace, carpus 0,5 mm. long, chela 0,62 mm. long, 5-times as long as wide, fingers little shorter than palm. The peraeopods of the 2™4 pair (Fig. 7e) extend to the far end of the antennal peduncle, their merus 13 is 0,7 mm. long, carpus 0,86 mm., chela 0,74 mm. (palm 0,42 mm., fingers 0,32 mm.); chela ; 6-times as long as wide. The legs of the 34 pair (Fig. 7/) reach a little beyond the eye-peduncles; merus 0,8 mm. long, carpus 1,32 mm., chela 0,93 mm. (palm 0,57 mm., fingers 0,36 mm.); chela 8—g-times as long as wide. These numbers show that the fingers are relatively shorter in the 3"¢ than in the 2™4 legs and also relatively shorter in the 24 than in the 1’t and that the chelae appear gradually of a more slender shape from the 1% to the 3". The peraeopods of the 4 pair (Fig. 7.) reach to the anterior border of the carapace ; their merus is in the male 0,72 mm. long and 0,11 mm. broad, 61/,-times as long as wide; carpus 0,6 mm. long, 0,094 mm. broad; propodus 0,5 mm. long, 0,084 mm. wide, carpus and _pro- podus also 6-times as long as wide; dactylus long 0,26 mm., nearly half as long as the pro- podus, 0,05 mm. wide at base. The peraeopods (Fig. 7) of the 5 pair, finally, reach a little less forward than those of the 4'*, but show exactly the same measurements. The two branches of the petasma are not yet united and still little developed; they are 0,3 mm. long, 3- or 4-lobate, with rounded lobes; the protopod of the pleopods of the 1st pair is 0,8 mm. long, the exopod twice as long. This rare Crustacean, that according to Nosir1, Carman and Batss belongs to the Sergestidae, was already known from the Red Sea (Coast of Erythraea), the Cargados Carajos, the Maldives and Torres Straits. Family ALPHEIDAE. r 11. Ogyrides Stbogae (de Man). Pl. Il, Fig. 8—8g. Ogyris Sibogae J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a’, Family Alpheidae, 1911 (text) p- 135, 1915 (plates). Pl. I, Fig. 1—1z. 7 specimens, 3 of which are provided with eggs, collected by the Siboga expedition at Ambon at a depth of 54 m. Among the characters by which O. strzaticauda Kemp of the Chilka Lake is distinguished, STANLEY Kemp (in: Mem. Indian Mus. Vol. V, 1915, p. 288) adduces the existence on the ventral surface of the telson of “four oblique ridges, the three anterior ones placed close together, the other rather more distant’’ and the specific name is apparently derived from this character. The examination of the present specimens of O. Szdogae now proved at once that these ridges occur also in this species; the three anterior ones are placed exactly like in the species of the Chilka Lake, but the fourth or posterior was not observed (PI. II, Fig. 8). The type specimen on which this species was founded by me in 1910 and which was captured in the Sulu-Sea at a depth of 535 meter, was 18 mm. long; the present specimens, though apparently adult, because they are ova-bearing, are of a smaller size, about 13 or 14 mm. long from tip of rostrum to tip of telson. They fully agree with the description of 1911, but the eye-peduncles are not shorter, but as long or, in the ova-bearing females, even a trifle longer than the carpocerite, reaching by half the cornea beyond it, a difference perhaps owing to their smaller size. In 4 specimens, one of which is provided with eggs, the carapace is armed anteriorly with three spiniform teeth, in the three others with four as in the type; in the egg-bearing female, the peraeopods of which have been figured, the 3" or posterior spine is a little farther distant from the 2" as the 2™4 from the rt, in another ova-bearing female the 2™4 spine is placed a little nearer to the posterior than to the anterior. Figure 846 represents the scaphocerite of one of the egg-bearing females, it shows a different form from that of O. strzatécauda, the lamella being in the latter species truncate distally, which is not the case in O. Széogae. Of this female the five peraeopods are figured, 2'/,-times more strongly magnified than in the Siboga Monograph. The measurements taken i i 15 along the upper margin of the joints are the following. Of the 1‘t pair (Fig. 8c) the merus is 1,08 mm. long, wide in the middle 0,23 mm., proportion 4,7; carpus 1,25 mm. long, 0,235 mm. wide at the distal extremity, proportion 5,3; chela 0,8 mm. long (palm 0,32 mm., fingers 0,48 mm.). Of the 2™4 pair (Fig. 8¢) the merus is 1,48 mm. long, 0,2 mm. wide in the middle, proportion 7,4; 1st segment of the carpus 0,92 mm. long, 0,16 mm. thick at the distal extremity, 6-times as long as thick distally; 2.4 segment 0,3 mm. long, 3 0,24 mm., 4'* 0,44 mm., entire length of the carpus 1,9 mm., 1,28-times as long as the merus; chela 1 mm. long (palm 0,44 mm., fingers 0,56 mm.). Different from the type the 1‘t segment is a little shorter than the three following taken together and has a somewhat less slender shape, like also the merus. In another female with eggs the merus proved to be 1,36 mm. long and 0,18 mm. broad, proportion 7,5 ; carpus 1,87 mm. long, 1,37-times as long as the merus, the segments being from the 1* to the last respectively 1 mm., 0,25 mm., 0,22 mm. and 0,4 mm. long, the 1*t segment 0,14 mm. thick at the distal extremity; chela 0,78 mm. long (palm 0,36 mm., fingers 0,42 mm.). In this female the 1:t segment is a trifle longer than the three following taken together and also, like in the type, appears more slender than in the first. Of the 34 pair the merus (Fig. 8¢) is o,96 mm. long, its greatest width, anteriorly there where the spine is implanted, 0,28 mm., proportion 3,4; carpus long 0,66 mm. and 0,22 mm. broad, proportion 3; propodus long 0,44 mm., broad 0,2 mm. proximally, 2,2-times as long as broad; dactylus 0,34 mm. long, 0,04 mm. broad, 8-times as long as broad. The relative dimensions of merus, carpus and propodus are therefore: merus 1,45; carpus 1; propodus 0,66. Of the 4t pair (Fig. 8/) the ischium is 1,1 mm. long; the merus 1,4 mm. long, 0,22 mm. wide, proportion 6,4; carpus 0,92 mm. long, 0,18 mm. broad, proportion 5,1; propodus 0,82 mm. long, 0,14 mm. broad in the middle, proportion 5,7; dactylus 0,26 mm. long, 0,035 mm. broad, proportion 7,4. The relative measurements are: merus 1,52; carpus 1; propodus 0,9. Of the 5' pair, finally, the slender ischium (Fig. 8g) is 1,8 mm. long, in the middle 0,08 mm. thick, proportion 22, while it is 0,12 mm. thick at the distal extremity; merus 0,9 mm. long and 0,12 mm. broad in the middle, proportion 7,5, the merus is, however, 0,13 mm. thick ‘at the distal extremity; carpus long 0,4 mm., 0,16 mm. thick at the distal extremity, pro- portion 2,5; propodus 0,62 mm. long, 0,18 mm. broad in the middle, proportion 3,4; dactylus 0,46 mm. long, 0,073 mm. broad at base, proportion 6,3. The relative measurements are: merus 2,25; carpus 1; propodus 1,55. Ischium twice as long as merus. Eggs globular, diameter 0,18—o,2 mm. O. striaticauda Kemp appears closely related, but apparently differs by the larger (7 to 9) number of forwardly directed spines on the carapace, by the absence of the posterior ridge on the ventral surface of the telson and apparently by some slight differences in the measurements of the peraeopods. The scaphocerite has another form and there are probably still other differences. According to Mr. Kemp's description the telson should not possess a feeble lateral prominence, l.c. p. 288, but in the text-figures f and g such a prominence is visible, appearing in Fig. f as much developed as in O. Szdcgae. General distribution: Sulu Sea (pe Man). A probable variety occurs east of Dangar Besar, Saleh-bay. 16 12. Athanas Naitfaroensis Cout. Pl. Il, Fig. 9. Athanas Naifaroensis H. Coutiére, Alpheidae Mald. and Laccad. Archip., 1905, p. 859, fig. 131. Stat. 213. September 26—October 26. South-Island near Saleyer. Reef. 1 male. This specimen is 7,7 mm. long from tip of rostrum to end of telson, the carapace, rostrum included, measuring 2,9 mm., the abdomen without the telson 3,9 mm., the telson 0,9 mm. Rostrum 0,85 mm. long, almost half as long as the rest of the carapace, reaching (Fig. 9) to the far end of 2™ antennular article; its greatest width, at one-third its length from the base, 0,23 mm., is almost one-fourth the entire length; from here to the base the margins are slightly concave, parallel, while in front of it the margins, also a little concave, converge to the acute tip. Supra-corneal spine reaching, looked at from above, to the middle of the eye, extra-corneal spine very long, extending beyond the eye to the middle of the rostrum, infra-corneal spine very small, hardly projecting beyond the eye. Second joint of antennular peduncle a little, one-fifth, shorter than 3"; stylocerite reaching to the far end of 24. The measurements of the three posterior legs in millimeters are the following: Third legs Fourth legs Fifth legs Mengthvohinenisien pa) -asenue | 0,92 0,74 | 0,74 Waidthofsmentiswia) =) saan 0,2 0,154 | 0,16 Length of carpus. ieee 0,52 0,4 | 0,55 Width of carpus at distal end . 0,15 | 0,13 | 0,126 Length of propodus. . . . . Dai 0,86 0,94. Width of propodus. . . . . 0,125 0,11 | 0,115 Weneth ofsdactyiis) 2s ey) = 0,32 0,28 | 0,32 Width of dactylus at base . . 0,06 0,054 | 0,06 The relative measurements are therefore for the 3'¢ pair: merus 1,8, carpus I, pro- podus 2,1; for the 4'* pair merus 1,85, carpus 1, propodus 2,15; for the 5‘ pair merus 1,35, carpus I, propodus 1,7. I would still observe that the dactylus of the measured leg of the 4" pair bears a very small, ventral, accessory tooth just beyond the middle, its fellow of the 4 pair is lost, in the other legs the dactylus is simple. The endopodite of the 24 pleopod bears two appendices, the appendix masculina reaching almost to ‘the apex of the branch and with 5 spiniform setae on the tip, the stylamblys, which is much shorter and furnished with 6 cincinnuli. As the male of this species is still unknown, it is to be regretted that the first pair of legs are wanting. General distribution: Naifaro Reef, Hulule Male Atoll (Courtre). 13. Athanas parvus de Man. Athanas parvus J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. 39a’, Part II, Family Alpheidae, Igtt (text) p. 148, 1915 (plates) Pl. I, Fig. 4—4d. 17 Stat. 273. December 23/26. Anchorage off Pulu Jedan, East coast of Aru-islands. (Pearl-banks) 13 m. Bottom sand and shells. 1 specimen. This specimen, of which I did not succeed in examining the 2™! pleopod, so that it remains uncertain whether it is a female or the still unknown male, has nearly the same size as the egg-bearing female, on which this species was founded by me in t1g10, being 6,3 mm. long from tip of rostrum to end of telson; the carapace and the abdomen, rostrum, respectively telson included, measure 2,26 mm. and 4,04 mm. The rostrum, which is 0,72 mm. long measured from the level of the orbital margin to the tip, almost half as long as the rest of the carapace, extends just beyond the 2"¢ antennular article and the tip is slightly turned up- ward; the lateral margins are not straight as in Fig. 4 of my work, but very slightly convex along the two posterior thirds and very slightly concave distally, so that the form is somewhat different, and they make a distinct angle with the orbital margin of the carapace; at the level of these angles, thus a little in front ‘of the orbital margin, the rostrum is 0,24 mm. broad. Looked at from above the extra-corneal spine hardly projects beyond the eye, the infra-corneal reaches almost its anterior margin, just like in Fig. 4; in a lateral view the extra-corneal spine reaches the tip of the eye, the other almost just as far. Eyes black, distinctly faceted. The 2°¢ joint of the antennular peduncle appears in this specimen as long as wide and but a little shorter than the 3", the stylocerite extends almost to the distal margin of the 2"¢ joint, the terminal spine of the scaphocerite, finally, appears more slender than in Fig. 4, being 2/,-times as long as wide at its base. Telson 0,72 mm. long, just as long as the rostrum, 4-times as long as the distance between the postero-lateral angles is wide, this distance half as broad as the width at base. Legs of the 1° pair like in the type, equal. Merus 5-times as long as wide, carpus measuring two-thirds the length of the merus, 3-times as long as thick at the distal end, chela not longer, but a trifle shorter than the merus, the proportion being like 1:0,95; measured in the plane of the fingers, the chela proves to be 4,1-times as long as wide, proportion between the length of the fingers and that of the chela like 1 : 2,2. Merus of 24 legs 6,4-times as long (0,64 mm.) as wide (0,1 mm.), carpus 1,4-times as long as the merus, the 5 segments are respectively 0,38 mm., 0,11 mm., 0,1r mm., 0,11 mm. and 0,18 mm. long; chela 0,38 mm. long, as long as the 1*t segment, fingers as long as the palm. Ischium of 3'4 legs with two spines on the posterior margin, the posterior a little longer than the other. Relative dimensions of 3" pair: merus 1,9, carpus 1, propodus 2,05; merus 6,4-times, propodus 9,7-times as long as wide, carpus 3,8-times as long as thick at distal end; propodus with four short spinules besides two at the distal end, of which the longer is half as long as the dactylus and almost one-sixth the length of the propodus. The dactylus, which is 6*/,-times as long as broad at its base, measures more than one-third of the propodus, the proportion being like 16:39; ventral hook half as long as the principal, the latter little more than twice as wide at its base as the ventral, the proportion being as 7: 3. Ischium of 4% legs also with two spines on the posterior margin, but the anterior comparatively shorter than in the 3" pair. Relative dimensions of 4% legs: merus 1,94, carpus 1, propodus 2,22. Merus 6-times, propodus 9-times as long as wide, carpus 3,5-times as long as SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE XXXIX at, 3 18 thick at the distal end; propodus with five spinules besides the two at the distal end. Dactylus almost half as long as the propodus, the proportion being like 16: 35,5; they resemble those of the 3"¢ pair. Fifth legs lost. The slight differences as regards the measurements, when compared with those of the type, are probably owing to the younger age of this specimen or they are individual. General distribution: South coast of Timor (pE May). 14. Athanas Stebbingit de Man. Pl. II and Ill, Fig. 10—10/. Athanas Stebbingii J, G. de Man, in: Zoolog. Mededeelingen uitgeg. vanwege ’s Rijks Museum v. Nat. Hist. te Leiden. 1920. Dl. V, afl. 3, p. 106. Stat. 323. February 24/25. Sangkapoera-roads, Bawean-island. 12 m. Bottom mud. 1 egg- bearing female. A new species of the Dzmorphus-group, which I had the honour to dedicate to the author of the series of interesting and valuable papers on the carcinological Fauna of South Africa and who at the age of 87 is still continuing his researches with youthful zeal and diligence. This species, closely related to A. dimorphus Ortm. and also to the female of the remarkable A. folymorphus Kemp of the Chilka Lake, is of a smaller size than these two, being only 9,66 mm. long from tip of rostrum to tip of telson: the carapace is 3,7 mm. long, the abdomen 5,96 mm. The triangular acuminate rostrum (Fig. 10), that reaches about to the distal extremity of the 24 joint of the antennular peduncle, measures one-third the rest of the carapace and projects by more than half its length beyond the eyes; the rostrum is sharply carinate above, the carina ends, however, at the base; the lateral margins are also sharp, they do not reach, however, to the tip, fading away at the anterior fourth, and the height of the rostrum, in a lateral view, is nearly 1/, the length. Supra-corneal teeth wanting. Extra-corneal spine acute, reaching to the middle of the eyes. Infra-corneal angle rounded, reaching almost as far for- ward as the extra-corneal spine. Antero-lateral angle of the carapace rounded, unarmed. Abdomen about one and a half as long as the carapace, the telson, respectively the rostrum included; abdominal pleura with their inferior margin straight, rounded posteriorly, except that of the 5‘ somite, which is acutely pointed, while the infero-posterior angle of the 6" is articulated and also acute. Telson (Fig. 10a) 1,16 mm. long, measuring one-fourth the rest of the abdomen, 1°/,-times as long as the greatest width at base, while the distance between the postero-lateral angles is nearly half the width proximally. Dorso-lateral spinules implanted near the lateral margins that are almost straight, those of the anterior pair, 0,11 mm. long, just before the middle, those of the posterior, 0,12 mm. long, at the posterior third; posterior margin rounded, slightly prominent, the inner of the two pairs of spinules 0,2 mm. long, the outer 0,08 mm. Basal joint of uropods bispinose posteriorly, the outer spine 5-times as long as the inner. Uropods of equal length, slightly longer than the telson without the terminal spinules, but reaching as far backward as the latter; like in 4. polymorphus Kemp there is a fringe of feathered setae on the under side of the exopodite, close to and parallel with the straight outer margin; the outer margin of the endopodite, that is a little less broad, appears in the middle a little concave, anteriorly a little convex. 19 Eyes 0,5 mm. long, 1/, the length of the carapace, rostrum included, facets rather large, pigment deep black. Measured from the orbital margin of the carapace, the basal segment (Fig. 10) of the antennular peduncle proved to be 0,74 mm. long, one-fourth longer than the 2°¢ and 3"4 taken together; longitudinal crest with terminal spine on the infero-internal margin as in A. folymorphus ; the 2"¢ segment, 0,26 mm. long and 0,29 mm. broad, little broader than long, measures one-third of the 15t, the 3, finally, 0,35 mm. long and 0,26 mm. broad, is one-third longer than the 2™4, but a trifle less broad. The fused part of the outer antennular ramus, 0,4 or 0,42 mm. long, is nearly as long as the 3't segment of the peduncle and composed of three joints of which the 1*t or proximal appears as long as the two following that are sub- equal, taken together, the 3‘? being only a trifle longer than the 2™4; the thicker one of the two branches, the olfactory filaments of which are well developed, is nearly as long as the fused part, while the other branch is much longer; the inner antennular ramus is considerably longer. Stylocerite large, acuminate, reaching almost to the middle of 3" antennular article, outer margin slightly curved. The statocysts are in communication with the exterior by a wide aperture on the postero-external part of the upper surface of the basal segment and I observed in each a black rounded particle; both particles are of the same size, 0,08 mm. broad, and apparently act as statoliths. The two statoliths being of the same form, size and colour, it appears im- probable, that they have been introduced by the animal, but I do not venture to give any opinion about their origin. Second segment of antennal peduncle with a spine at the infero-external angle that reaches to the distal margin of the 1st joint of the antennular peduncle, carpocerite as long as this peduncle; scaphocerite 0,96 mm. long, 0,54 mm. broad, almost twice as long as broad and a little longer than the antennular peduncle, outer margin straight, terminal spine reaching a little beyond the rounded tip of the lamella. The outer maxillipeds reach to the distal extremity of the antennular peduncle, the terminal joint is twice as long, but not stouter than the penultimate. The peraeopods of the 1%t pair (Fig. 104, 10c) are very nearly equal and project by the chela and half the carpus beyond the antennal scale. Merus of the right leg one and a half, that of the left one and one-third as long as the ischium and 6-times as long as broad; carpus slightly shorter than merus, the proportion being like 15:17, and 5-times as long as thick at the distal end; chela but a trifle shorter than carpus, fingers measuring three-fifths of the palm. Except the usual tufts of setae on the fingers these legs appear nearly glabrous, the few setae that one observes on the joint being extremely short and fine. The peraeopods of the 2™¢ pair (Fig. 10@) are also equal or very nearly so. Carpus composed of five segments, nearly one and a half as long as the merus; the 15t segment as long as the four following together and a little more than 6-times as long as thick at the distal extremity; the three following joints are equal or very nearly so and a trifle less broad than long; 5" segment a trifle longer than the two preceding taken together and almost 3-times as long as thick; chela measuring about one-third the length of the carpus, fingers of the right leg a trifle longer, of the left a trifle shorter than the palm. 20 . The three following legs regularly diminish in length and stoutness. The ischium of the legs of the 34 (Fig. 10e) and 4‘ pair are armed with one or two spines inferiorly, but not that of. the 5%; for the rest these legs are nearly unarmed. Carpus of 3? pair three-fifths of the merus, 4-times as long as thick distally; propodus almost twice as long as the carpus, 9-times as long as wide, its posterior margin with 7 or 8 small spinules and with a much longer spine, long 0,2 mm., at the distal extremity, almost half as long as the dactylus; dactylus simple, not biunguiculate, slightly curved near the tip, measuring one-third of the propodus and 6-times. as long as broad at its base. The legs of the 4" pair nearly agree with those of the 3'4; in those of the 5'» (Fig. 1of) the carpus measures two-thirds of the merus and a little more than half the length of the propodus, which bears tufts of setae, not found in the two preceding pairs, on the distal fourth of the lower margin, and at the distal end the long spine, that also exists on the propodus of the 3" and 4' pair. The endopodite of the 224 pleopod bears only one appendix, the stylamblys. Only 3 or 4 ova were still preserved, they are small, 0,5 mm. long. Athanas dimorphus Ortm. differs by the shorter rostrum that reaches only to the far end of the basal antennular article, by the infra-corneal angle being acute, not rounded, by the telson being broader posteriorly and by the much shorter chela of the 1*t peraeopods of the female, that is but little more than half as long as the carpus. The female of A. polymorphus Kemp differs also by the acute infra-corneal angle, by the existence on the carapace of a sharp. tooth opposite to the insertion of the antennae, by the 2™¢ joint of the antennular peduncle being not shorter, but almost twice as long as the 3", by the shorter stylocerite, by the shorter chela of the 1‘ pair of legs, in which the fingers are as long as the palm etc. Measurements in millimeters. Tablewn: | OXF read oR) ie) cic) | ees ei. A een i WORSE Sn) Gl ok OS NOMBO Oo es oS. >. o Tpile Wadth ‘of telson» at base> (2)ss5 0.) ee oe orneam ay” ee G2 a. See bce os oo, OER Distance between the postero- eect panies PB ott hs : a 80,34" Distance between the posterior margin of 6th somite end the enter pair er daese: tateral poms 0,52 Distance between the posterior margin of 6th somite and the posterior pair of dorso-lateral spinules 0,8 Table B. Right leg Left le of fie Ist ae of the Ist aiid Thiet ie | Hote dee eas ength of ischivmy..~ ag a meetin a icens eters 0,9 I | Meneth vol menus; -.: a: stone eetieeaeee s,s aes elle MO an | eae 2 1,14 0,92 Widtheotameruss. > 1 Se ee 0,2 | 0,22 024° =) Pome ti" 7G,1o Length of carpus . . Et, ‘it, oc eee 152 Tee) 0,75 0,65 0,66 Width of carpus gee ne <0; See 0,2 0,22 0,18 | 0,18 0,175 enotheotychela we x. ec eee in). teers 1,14 Upylie Mengthtotepalm a. nicl mater.) BS oun 0,72 0,7 Lenethtofifincers Many sper eceeeenn =) ska.) Beene 0,42 0,42 Lengthsotspropodus) a-ca-eemetoe , |.) ae 1,4 122 1,22 Width sofspropodus) aaa. mremt mr ire. ce cae Ons | 0,14 0,14 Wencthofidactylusi. "cnc: sameeren eee eons 0,45 0,45 0,42 Width oftdactylus at base mus cmene ens | 0,08 Ys ayvofs 0,085 21 Table C. Measurements of the carpus and chela of the 2™4 legs. | Right leg | Left leg Mengthvofeistescoment:. . s =. ss see O:S 0,76 Width at-distal extremity . . . . 5 | 0,12 | 0,12 Lensthoor-25discoment =. , «2, . ae || Oe 0,14 Wadthioteonlicesment. .| . ) 4 care 0,12 uO; 12 Kenprhvoteaciceament. . . 05a] 34 0,35 min. thick, and a trifle longer than the visible part, Jong 0,75 mm., of basal article; 3" article 0,5 mm. long, */, of 2°¢. Stylocerite as long as basal article. Antennal peduncle as long as that of the upper antennae, terminal spine of the scaphocerite reaching almost to the tip of the antennular peduncle. The peraeopods of the 1% pair are wanting. Of the right leg of the 2™4 pair the merus is 9,5-times, of the left 9-times as long as wide. The carpal segments of the right leg are Imm., 0,48 mm., 0,36 mm., 0,34 mm. and 0,62 mm. long, the chela 1 mm. long (palm 0,42 mm., fingers 0,58 mm.); of the left leg the segments are 1 mm., 0,6 mm., 0,4 mm., 0,36 mm. and 0,6 mm. long, the chela 0,97 mm. (palm 0,44 mm., fingers 0,53 mm.). These numbers show that, like in the variety /aetadz/is, the fourth segment is distinctly shorter than the'\2™¢. The relative measurements of the 3" pair are: merus 1,4, carpus I, propodus 1,3, so that both the merus and the propodus are a little shorter in proportion to the carpus than in the other female from this Station, referred to the variety /aefadz/zs. The merus is 7,2-times as long as broad, the carpus 7-times as long as thick, the propodus 11-times as long as broad and provided with 8 pairs of spinules. The dactylus measures one-third of the propodus and is 6,2-times as long as broad at base. This specimen is probably an individual variety of the /aefadz/is-form; when, however, it should prove to be constant, a proper name must be created. 25. Alpheus paradentipes Cout. Alpheus paradentipes H. Coutiere, Alpheidae Mald. and Laccad. Archip. 1905, p. 880, Ri LRexLVenne. 07. Alpheus paradentipes J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa!', Part I, Family Alpheidae, 1911 (text), p. 336. Stat. 220. November 1/3. Anchorage off Pasir Pandjang, west coast of Binongka. 54 m. Bottom coral sand. 1 male. This specimen is 7,85 mm. long from tip of rostrum to tip of telson (carapace 2,65 mm., abdomen 5,2 mm.), the abdomen being only about twice as long as the carapace. Rostrum and orbital spines like in the specimen from Stat. 279, described in 1911. Second antennular article twice as long as thick, just as long as the visible part of the 1*t; 3"4 article a little more than two-thirds of 224. Antennal peduncle and terminal spine of scaphocerite almost reaching to the tip of the antennular peduncle. Large cheliped lost. Merus of the small (left) cheliped 3,5-times as long as broad in the middle, when measured along the upper border of the outer surface, that ends in an acute tooth; infero-internal margin with 6 or 7 small spinules along its whole length. Chela 1,9 mm. long, one-fourth the length of the body, fingers as long as the palm. Carpal segments of the right leg of the 2°¢ pair 0,5 mm., 0,36 mm., 0,15 mm., 0,2 mm. and 0,28 mm.; chela 0,66 mm. (palm 0,28 mm., fingers 0,38 mm.). Merus of this leg 1,15 mm. long, broad in the middle 0,14 mm., 8-times as long as broad. Relative measurements of the 3 leg: merus 1,85, carpus 1, propodus 1,4. Merus 35 6,5-times as long as broad in the middle, carpus 4,7-times as long as thick at the distal extremity, propodus 7-times as long as broad in the middle. The three movable spinules on the posterior margin of the carpus are present, but that of the distal extremity is lost. Pro- podus with 8 pairs of spinules, dactylus one-third of the propodus, 5-times as long as broad, ventral claw little shorter than the other. The two appendices are implanted on the middle of the inner branch of the 2"¢ pleopod ; appendix masculina one-fourth longer than the stylamblys and tipped with 6 long setae, that are nearly as long as the appendix itself, stylamblys with 4 well-developed cincinnuli. This rare species, discovered in the Maldive Archipelago, is also known from Rumah- kuda-bay, Roma-island. 26. Alpheus acuto-femoratus Dana. Alpheus acuto-femoratus Dana, J. G. DE MAN, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa', Part II, Family Alpheidae, 1911 (text), p. 337. Stat. 115. July 9/11. East side of Pajunga Island, Kwandang-bay. Reef. 1 young female without eggs. This specimen, which after the examination of the 2°¢ pleopod proved to be a temale, is 11,5 mm. long from apex of rostrum to tip of telson and has lost the large cheliped. The rostrum, almost twice as long as broad at its base, extends to the distal third of the visible part of basal antennular article. Antennular peduncle, carpocerite and scaphocerite fully agree with the figure 63 on Plate XXVII of my work of 1902 (Abhandl. d. Senckenb. naturf. Gesells. Bd. XXV). Basicerite with a small spine. Telson 1,48 mm. long, 1 mm. broad anteriorly, while the distance between the postero-lateral angles is 0,45 mm.; distance between the anterior pair of dorso-lateral spinules and the posterior margin 0,9 mm., distance between the posterior pair and that margin 0,48 mm. Outer surface of merus of small cheliped twice as long as broad, inner margin with a well-developed acute tooth. The acute tooth on the anterior margin of the carpus is placed at the supero-internal angle; viewed from above the carpus appears one-third longer than broad anteriorly. The small chela is 3,1 mm. long, palm 1,9 mm., fingers 1,2 mm. and the palm is 1 mm. high, measured on the outer side; according to my descrip- tion of 1902 in the ova-bearing female, long 19 mm., of this species the height of the palm should be two-thirds of its length, so that the palm proves to be less high at a younger age; the anterior border of the carpus and the inner side of palm and fingers are clothed with long stiff hairs that are not feathered though scabrous, a few similar hairs occur also on the distal extremity of the upper border of the merus, shorter ones on the margins of this joint. Also in the other characters the chela agrees with the description of 1902. The carpal segments of the 2" pair of legs measure from the 1% or proximal one to the 5 0,46 mm., 1,32 mm., 0,34 mm., 0,34 mm. and 0,54 mm., the 2"! segment being almost 3-times as long as the 1°; palm 0,54 mm., just as long as the 5‘ segment, fingers 0,42 mm. Merus of 3% pair 4-times as long as wide in the middle. The merus of the 4" pair, the apical tooth of which is as large as that of the 3", is 3,5-times as long as broad in the 36 middle; the relative measurements of this leg are: merus 2, carpus 1, propodus 1,1, while the dactylus measures two-fifths of the propodus. As regards the relative measurements of the antennular peduncle, the carpocerite and the scaphocerite, also as regards the peraeopods of the four posterior pairs 4. acauto-femoratus much resembles A. conscbrinus de Man, but when the specimen from Stat. 115 is compared with the ova-bearing female of A. consobrinus described below, I observe nevertheless some differences. Of A. consobrinus the basicerite is unarmed. In a lateral view of the carapace the interocular part of the rostrum appears in this female of A. consobrinus distinctly convex, curved and hardly or not concealed by the eyes, in the specimen of A. acuto-femoratus, however, the interocular part appears in this view situated behind the eye, running nearly straight downward. The telson shows somewhat different measurements. In the specimen of A. acuto-femoratus the 2™4 carpal segment of the 2"! peraeo- pods is almost 3-times as long as the 1st, in the full-grown female of A. consobrinus, however, little more than twice as long (pE Man, l.c. 1911, p. 362) and in the young female, described below, even only a little more than one and a half. The most striking differences between the two species are, however, presented by the two chelipeds. 27. Alpheus consobrinus de Man. Alpheus consobrinus J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa@!, Part Il, Family Al- pheidae, 1911 (text), p. 360, 1915 (plates), Pl. XVI, fig. 75—75 /. Stat. 213. September 26—October 26. South-Island near Saleyer. Reef. 1 egg-bearing female. This specimen is only 9,3 mm. long from apex of rostrum to tip of telson and fully agrees with my description. The rostrum reaches almost to the middle of the visible part of ist antennular article, the 2" article is hardly longer than that visible part of 15t. Basicerite unarmed. In a lateral view the rostrum runs obliquely downward, rather much, with the acute tip slightly turned upward. Telson 1,5 mm. long, anteriorly 0,76 mm. broad, distance between the postero-lateral angles 0,53 mm. Outer surface of the merus of the larger cheliped (on the right side) twice as long as broad, acute tooth at the inner margin well-developed. Looked at from the outer (upper) side the large chela proves to be 3,2 mm. long, the palm 1,12 mm. thick, proportion 2,8; when, however, the lower (outer) side is looked at, the chela resembles Fig. 72¢ on Plate XV of my work, the palm being higher with regard to the height of the fingers than in the male (Pl. XVI, Fig. 75¢), while the lower but especially the upper border appear more strongly curved. Merus of the small cheliped 2'/,-times as long as broad, measured on the outer side, internal margin unarmed. Carpus almost twice as long as broad distally. Viewed at from the upper side (as in Fig. 75) the chela proves to be 3,5-times as long as broad proximally, while the palm is in proportion to the fingers as 13 to 10, exactly as in the adult female from Stat. 315 described by me in 1911. Palm presenting only a few setae on the inner side near the upper border. Carpal segments of the 24 legs long 0,38 mm., 0,62 mm., 0,22 mm., 0,22 mm. and 0,36 mm., chela long 0,72 mm. (palm 0,34 mm., fingers 0,38 mm.); these numbers prove that 37 in the young female the 24 joint is still but a little more than one anda half as lone as the 1, 28. Alpheus frontalis H. M.-Edw. Alpheus frontalis H. M.-Edw., J. G. DE MAN, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa', Part II, Family Alpheidae, 1911 (text) p. 369, 1915 (plates), Pl. XVII, fig. 79—79¢. Telok Berandang, Pulu Babi (2° 7’ N., 96° 40’ E.). 1 young male collected April 1913 by Mr. E. JACOBSON. Sinabang, Simalur. 1 adult male and 1 adult ova-bearing female collected February 1913 by Mr. E. JACOBSON. Telok Dalam, Nias. 1 adult ova-bearing female collected by Dr. KLEIWEG DE ZWAAN. Stat. 133. July 25/27. Anchorage off Lirung, Salibabu-island. 1 young female. In the young male, long 22 mm., from Pulu Babi the small cheliped is situated on the right side; the chela is 8 mm. long (palm 4,5 mm., fingers 3,5 mm.), the dactylus is 2 mm. broad and the palm 3,8 mm. high. The front resembles my figure 79, but on either side of the median emargination the frontal margin is straight, not at all concave. The female from Sinabang is 41 mm. long, the male 38 mm. In the male the front resembles fig. 79, but on the right side the frontal margin is straight, not concave, in the female, like in the female from Nias, it agrees with the figure 79a, the front being more prominent, rounded, net emarginate, in the middle, with the lateral emarginations distinct; in the young specimen from Stat. 133, finally, the frontal margin is straight, without emarginations. 29. Alpheus bidens (Oliv.). Alpheus bidens (Oliv.), J. G. DE MAN, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa', Part II, Family Alpheidae, 1911 (text), p. 371, I915 (plates), fig. 80—8o0c. ! Stat. 144. August 7/9. Anchorage north of Salomakiée-(Damar)-island. 45 m. Coral bottom and Lithothamnion. I young specimen, that has lost all the legs except one of the 22d and one of the 4th pair. Stat. 172. August 26/28. Anchorage between the island of Gisser and Ceram-Laut. Reef. I young specimen, that has lost all the legs excepting those of the 4th and 5th pair. 30. Alpheus anchistus de Man. Pl. Il, fig. 16—16¢. Alpheus sp., J. G. DE MAN, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa!', Part. II, Family Alpheidae, IQII (text), p. 383, 1915 (plates), Pl. XIX, fig. 85—85 4. Alpheus anchistus J. G. de Man, in: Zoolog. Mededeelingen, uitgeg. vanwege ’s Rijks Mus. v. Nate bistetesceiden, 1920. DI. V, Afiz 3) pros: Stat. 181. September 5/11. Ambon-anchorage. 54 m. Bottom mud, sand and coral. 1 male and I egg-bearing female. The two specimens are of equal size, about 20 mm. long from tip of rostrum to tip of telson, a little larger than the specimen from Stat. 51, that was described by me in my work on the Siboga Alpheidae as Adpheus sp.: this specimen from Stat. 51, that is lying before me and that belongs to the same species as these two from Ambon, measures only 8 we 16 mm. and proved to be a male, the endopodite of the 2™4 pleopod being provided with a stylamblys and an appendix masculina. The nearest related species is no doubt A. ¢enuzcarfus de Man from the north coast of Celebes and the east coast of Sumbawa. The acute rostrum which is as long as broad at base, extends horizontally forward about to the middle of the visible part of basal antennular article and is separated by very shallow concavities from the rounded orbital hoods. The rostral carina that extends only to the'base of the orbital hoods, appears on its anterior half rather sharp, but posteriorly obtuse; it is rather low, quite concealed in a lateral view by the orbital hoods and appears in the middle slightly concave; separated by deep grooves from the orbital hoods, it is narrow on the anterior half but from the middle gradually widens a little before passing into the surface of the carapace, which is smooth like that of the abdomen. Of the male the telson is lost, the measurements of the telson of the female (Fig. 16) and of the male from Stat. 51 are indicated in the Table: it closely resembles that of A. ¢enwz- carpus, but the dorso-lateral spinules that are 0,26 mm. long, are a little farther distant from the lateral margins. The two pairs of antennae agree with the figure 85 (I. c.) of the male from Stat. 51, but in both specimens from Ambon the antennal peduncle is as long as that of the inner antennae and in the male the antennal scale appears a little longer than the antennular peduncle. Unfortunately the male from Ambon has lost both peraeopods of the 1° pair and the female the larger cheliped. The merus of the small cheliped (Fig. 16a) of the female, placed on the left side, is 5-times as long as broad in the middle, being 3,5 mm. long and 0,7 mm. broad; the distal extremity of the upper margin is unarmed, the infero-external margin finely serrulate by about 25 serrulations, while the infero-internal is armed with a small acute tooth at the distal end and with 5 aciculiform, movable spinelets that increase in length from the 1*t, implanted at the proximal fourth, to the 5‘* placed a little beyond the middle. Between the 5" spinelet and the distal tooth the margin bears 4 or 5 long hairs and a few are implanted on the lower surface. The short carpus, 1,1 mm. long and 0,7 mm. thick distally, measures one-third of the merus and is one and a half as long as thick. Chela 5,8 mm. long, the palm which is 2,6 mm. long and 3,25-times as long as wide, is a little shorter than the fingers, the proportion between their length being like 13:16. The carpal segments of the right 2"¢ leg of the male (the left is lost) are 1,25 mm., 1,48 mm., 0,54 mm., 0,54 mm. and 0,62 mm. long, the 2°4 segment, 0,2 mm. thick, is 7,4- times as long as thick; chela 1,02 mm. long, palm 0,44 mm., fingers 0,58 mm. In the female the carpal segments of the right leg are 1,1 mm., 1,3 mm., 0,48 mm., 0,48 mm. and 0,54 mm. long, the 2™4 segment 6,9-times as long as thick; chela 1 mm. long, palm 0,44 mm., fingers 0,56 mm.; for the left leg these numbers are 1,1 mm., 1,28 mm., 0,48 mm., 0,48 mm. and 0,52 mm., the 2"¢ segment 6,4-times as long as thick, chela 1 mm. long, palm 0,44 mm., fingers 0,56 mm. The male bears still the peraeopods of the 3 pair. The merus, 4 mm. long and 0,52 mm. broad, is 7,7-times as long as broad, the carpus, 1,8 mm. long and distally 0,45 mm. thick, is 4-times as long as thick; the propodus, that slightly narrows from the proximal to 39 the distal extremity, is 2,6 mm. long, 0,34 mm. broad near the base and 0,27 mm. in the middle, being almost 10-times as long as broad in the middle, the slightly curved and tapering dactylus, finally, is 1,35 mm. long. The relative measurements of the 3" leg are therefore: merus 2,2, carpus 1, propodus 1,44, dactylus 0,75. The 4 leg of the male presents the following measurements. Merus 3,1 mm. long, 0,42 mm. broad, 7,4-times as long as broad; carpus 1,65 mm. long, 5-times as long as thick at the distal extremity; propodus 2,4 mm. long, 0,3 mm. broad near the base, 0,24 mm. in the middle, ro-times as long as broad in the middle; dactylus lost. The relative measurements are: merus 1,9, carpus 1, propodus 1,45. The merus of the 4 leg of the female, finally, 2,7 mm. long and 0,4 mm. broad, is 6,75-times as long as broad; carpus 1,5 mm. long, 5-times as long as thick at the distal extremity; propodus 2,12 mm. long, dactylus 1,12 mm. and the relative measurements are here: merus 1,8, carpus 1, propodus 1,4, dactylus 0,75. The appendix masculina of the 2°¢ pleopod of the male measures one-fourth the length of the endopodite and is implanted just behind the middle of the latter; it bears anteriorly and on the tip about a dozen of setae; the naked and glabrous stylamblys looks like a ribbon. Alpheus tenuicarpus de Man differs at first sight by the deen emarginations, by which the orbital hoods are separated from the rostrum, by the antennal peduncle projecting by the length of 3"4 article beyond that of the upper antennae, by the larger chela of the male being about 3-times as long as high and by some slight differences in the measure- ments of the following peraeopods. Alpheus tenuipes de Man from the northern entrance of Buton-strait is also closely related, but easily distinguished by the different form of the telson, which is more narrowed posteriorly, with smaller dorso-lateral spinules and the posterior margin of which is truncated, not at all projecting backward; the rostral carina is separated by feeble depressions from the orbital hoods, the stylocerite is as long as basal antennular article and the peraeopods of the 3" pair are still more slender. Alpheus rapacida de Man, finally, differs by the rostral carina which can be followed almost to the middle of the carapace, by the less slender shape of the peraeopods and by some other characters. Measurements in millimeters. Nor NO. 2 Length of the telson BPN PS i gmeye oe tals ES SoU RE: oe OCT es 2,16 2,7 NVC UC MDASCHE MME Lic oid iva af tlh rer rg! eb.<4) cu bi omimORe st oe: ic) PN O1OAT |) TS Width of the posterior margin. . . AOR kes | 5 Ue ae 0,52 0,68 Length of the posterior margin in the radale linen asi aN 2 0,18 0,28 Proportion between the length of the telson and the distant uF the an- terior pair of dorso-lateral spinules from the posterior margin . . . | 1,6 1,6 Proportion between the distances of both pairs of spinules from the posterior margin. . . cng bees : - : 1,8 1,9 Proportion between the ean of the sea sie the ou ae the eae rior margin . . : : pete 4 4 Proportion between ne width at the bee bad thee of aie paeierior margin 1,8 1,7 N°. 1 male from Stat. 51, N°. 2 female from Ambon. 40 Alpheus lepidus de Man. Pl. IV, fig. 17. aN, Alpheus lepidus J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa', Part II, Family Alpheidae, IQII (text) p. 397, 1915 (plates) Pl. XXI, fig. 92—92/. Stat. 181. September 5/11. Ambon-anchorage. 54 m. Bottom mud, sand and coral. 2 egg- bearing females. The carapace of the larger female is 4,9 mm. long, telson and 6 somite are lost; the entire length of this specimen will, however, have been about 14,6 mm., because the other specimen, in which carapace and abdomen are respectively 4,5 mm. and 8,9 mm. long, measures 13,4 mm. As regards the characters of the carapace, the antennular and antennal peduncles and the scaphocerite, these specimens fully agree with the original description. The telson of the smaller female is 1,7 mm. long, anteriorly 0,8 mm. broad, the distance between the postero- lateral angles 0,46 mm. The anterior pair of dorso-lateral spinules are implanted a little before the middle, the distance between this pair and the posterior margin being 1,06 mm., while the posterior margin is 0,6 mm. distant from the posterior pair. Measured along the upper margin the merus of the large cheliped proves to be 2,16 mm. long, while the outer surface is 0,68 mm. broad in the middle, so that the merus is 3,2-times as long as broad; the serrulations of the infero-external margin are nearly 30 in number, the infero-internal border bears 4 spinules that slightly increase in length from the 1* or proximal one to the 4%, which is 0,o9 mm. long and implanted at the anterior third; the acute tooth at the distal end of this border is small. The ischium presents also a small spinule inferiorly. The chela also agrees with the original description and the figure 92c; it is 4,2 mm. long, measuring °/, of the length of the carapace, palm 2,8 mm., fingers 1,4 mm., while the palm is 1,35 mm. high. The small cheliped, placed at the right side, was still unknown (Fig. 17). Merus a little longer than that of the large cheliped, but for the rest closely resembling it; outer sur- face 2,5 mm. long, 0,82 mm. broad, just 3-times as long as broad, upper border unarmed, outer margin serrulate like in the other leg, inner border with 5 movable spinules, of which the distal one, at the anterior third, is 0,12 mm. long, while the preceding ones diminish in length; the inner border, that appears also somewhat serrulate, is furnished with setae and has a very small acute tooth at the distal extremity, which is only half as long as the foremost movable spinule. Carpus long 0,86 mm., 0,62 mm. high distally, about one and a half as long as high. The small chela is 3,75 mm. long, palm 1,45 mm. long, fingers 2,3 mm., and the palm is 0,82 mm. broad near the articulation of the fingers; this chela, only a little shorter than the larger, has a more slender shape, being 4,6-times as long as broad, while the fingers are one and a half as long as the palm. The palm, like that of the other leg, has no transverse groove near the dactylus and is smooth, though furnished with long hairs along the upper and lower border at the’ inner side; though the fingers are straight and parallel, they leave a narrow interspace between them and they are, on the inner side, covered with hairs. In the younger specimen both peraeopods of the 1° pair are wanting and in both females also the legs of the 24 pair. In the larger female the merus of the 3% leg is 61/,-times as long as broad in the 41 middle, the carpus 3,4-times as long as thick at the distal extremity, while the relative measure- ments are: merus 2,2, carpus 1, propodus 1,45, dactylus 1. The younger female bears still one leg of the 4 pair. The merus is 5-times as long as broad, the carpus 4-times as long as thick at the distal extremity and the relative measure- ments are the following: merus 1,82, carpus 1, propodus 1,46, dactylus 0,9. Ova 0,26—o,28 mm. long, a little less broad. The type-specimens of Alpheus lepidus were obtained in Madura-bay and in Kwandang- bay-entrance. 32. Alpheus Bastardi Cout. Alpheus Bastardi H. Coutiere, Alpheidae Mald. and Laccad. Archip. 1905, p. 907, Pl. LXXXV, fig. 45—45 6. Stat. 172. August 26—28. Gisser, anchorage between this island and Ceram-Laut. Reef. I ova-bearing female. This female is 17,5 mm. long from apex of rostrum to tip of telson. The acute rostrum that projects by more than half its length beyond the rounded orbitae, is 0,22 mm. long and reaches, the visible part of 1%t antennular article being 0,56 mm. long, about to the second third part of the latter. There is no trace of a rostral carina. Telson 1,95 mm. long, width anteriorly 1,12 mm., distance between the postero-lateral angles 0,6 mm., so that it is more than 3-times as long as this distance; anterior pair of dorso-lateral spinules implanted before the middle, the distance from the posterior margin being 1,12 mm., posterior pair just midway between the anterior pair and the posterior margin. As regards the antennal and antennular peduncles and the scaphocerite, this specimen agrees with CouTiere’s figure 45, but the terminal spine of the scaphocerite, that projects a little beyond the apex of the lamella, extends as far forward as the antennular peduncle. Spine of basicerite very small. The large cheliped is wanting g, the small one on the right side. Infero-internal margin of the merus with a small acute tooth at the distal extremity and with 3 or 4 movable spinules at unequal distances. Chela 4,9 mm., palm 2,4 mm., fingers 2,5 mm. long, the palm 1,18 mm. high; fingers a trifle longer than the palm, closely shutting together, palm twice as long as high. The carpal segments of the right leg of the 2™¢ pair are 1,36 mm., 0,75 mm., 0,34 mm., 0,32 mm. and 0,6 mm. long, the chela 1 mm. (palm 0,46 mm., fingers 0,54 mm.); for the left leg these numbers are in the same succession: 1,35 mm., 0,72 mm., 0,36 mm., 0,34 mm., 0,6 mm., the chela 1,04 mm. (palm 0,48 mm., fingers 0,56 mm.). The 1%t segment appears in the right leg 1,8-, in the left 1,87-times as long as the 2°4, according to Couriére the pro- portion should be 2. The merus of the 3 peraeopods is 4,66-, that of the 4'* 4,8-times as long as broad in the middle. The two nearest allied species are A. /evinscudus Dana (J. G. pe Man, l.c., 1911 (text), Pp. 411, 1915 (plates), Pl. XXIII, fig. 939846) and A. microrhynchus de Man (J. G. pE Man, SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE XXXIXat. 6 42 l.c. 1911 (text), p. 413, 1915 (plates), Pl. XXIII, fig. 99 and 99a), especially the former. In these species the rostrum is continued as a low rounded ridge, respectively as a narrow, obtuse carina, that only extends as far as the corneae of the eyes. The small chela of the female of A. leviusculus is almost 5-times as long as high, in A. Bastardi only 4,1-times, in a female of A. microrhynchus from Bangkok, long 43 mm., described by me in 1898 (Mémoires Soc. Zoolog. de France, 1898, p. 318), the palm of the small chela was 3-times as long as high. In A. microrhynchus the infero-internal margin of both chelipeds is unarmed and the 1* carpal segment of the 24 pair appears in the full-grown female more than twice, in younger speci- mens almost 3-times as long as the 2"4. A. microrhynchus is moreover a species of large size, attaining a length of 85 mm. General distribution: Minikoi (Courrire); Mascate (Covtiire); Madagascar (CouTtire) ; Djibouti (Courtire); Panama (Coutiére). 33. Alpheus euchirus Dana. Pl. IV, fig. 18—18 6. ? Alpheus euchirus J. D. Dana, U. S. Explor. Exp. Crustacea, p. 545, Pl. XXXIV, figs. 6a—f. Alpheus euchirus J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa', Part II, Family Alphei- dae, IQII (text), p. 434. Stat. 273. December 23/26. Anchorage off Pulu Jedan, east coast of Aru-islands. (Pearl-banks). 13 m. Bottom sand and shells. 1 male of medium size. 1 male and 1 egg-bearing female collected by Prof. SLUITER in the Bay of Batavia. 1 full-grown ova-bearing female collected 10 May 1909 by Mr. VAN NouHUys west of Segli, north coast of Sumatra, at a depth of 72—126 m. The male from Stat. 273 and the two specimens from the Bay of Batavia belong to that species which was described by mé in detail in 1897 as a variety of A. hippothoé de Man (in: Zoolog. Jahrb. (SpenGEL) IX. Abth. f. Syst. p. 754, Pl. 36, figs. 66—66c¢ and in: Notes from the Leyden Museum, XX, 1898, p. 210), and to which belonged also the 10 specimens described in 1911 (l.c.). The male from Stat. 273, which bears an epicarid in the left side of the carapace, is 19 mm. long, the large cheliped is placed on the left side, the small one on the right. The large chela is 9 mm. long, palm 5,5 mm. long and 3,75 mm. high, tooth at the distal end of the upper border of the palm, behind the groove, subacute; acute tooth on the infero-internal margin of the merus well-developed, while it is very small and rudimentary on the merus of the smaller cheliped. Small chela 6,5 mm. long, palm 3 mm. long, slightly shorter than the fingers, and 1,9 mm. high.’ Tooth on the meri of the 3" and 4 pair of legs well- developed, like in fig. 66¢ (I. c.). The male and the female from the Bay of Batavia are respectively 25 mm. and 27 mm. long, the 1%t peraeopods are wanting in both. The full-grown female from the north coast of Sumatra, that is nearly 37 mm. long, does not quite agree with the preceding specimens. In this specimen namely (Fig. 18) the orbital heods project each forward as a vertically-compressed rounded lobe, that extends along the proximal third of the free part of the rostrum and that laterally is distinctly separated from the antero-lateral border of the hood by a slight emargination; in a lateral view of the 43 carapace (Fig. 18a) this lobe looks like a short acute spine, nearly as in Dana’s figure 6a. According to my description of 1911 these prominences of the orbital hoods did also occur in an adult male from the west coast of Flores and in other specimens, but sometimes were less conspicuous and this is also the case in the preceding specimens from Stat. 273 and from the Bay of Batavia. The acute tooth on the merus of the 3" (Fig. 184) and 4* legs is in this female much smaller than in the preceding specimens, looking exactly as in Dana’s figure 6f. This specimen should therefore perhaps be referred with more right to the true A. euchirus Dana, but it appears still uncertain, because, like in the preceding specimens, the merus of the 1° pair of peraeopods is armed with an acute tooth at the infero-internal margin, while according to Dana (“brachio apicem non spinigero”) the merus should be unarmed. The large chela, on the right side, agrees with the preceding specimens, it is 17 mm. long, the palm 12 mm.; the smaller chela is 12,5 mm. long, fingers as long as the palm, that is 3 mm. high.. (In Dana’s figure 6@ the palm appears much higher, but this figure no doubt represents the small chela of the male). The identification of these specimens with Dana’s species appears therefore still doubtful. Family PROCESSIDAE. 34. Processa aeguimana (Paulson). Pl. IV, fig. 19—19/. Nika aequimana O. Paulson, Izslyedovaniya Rakoobraznuikh Krasnagho Morya. Chast. I. Kiev, 1875, p. 97, Pl. XIV, figs. 6—6a. Processa aequimana G. Nobili, in: Annal. Scienc. Nat. g¢ Sér. Zool. T. IV, 1906, p. 79 (translation of PAULSON’s description). Stat. 181. September 5/11. Ambon-anchorage. 54 m. Bottom mud, sand and coral. 6 specimens. In my work, issued January 1920, on the Caridae of the Siboga Expedition four pro- bably different species of this genus were described and figured by me (p. 203, Pl. XVII, fig. 52—52/) under the name of Processa sp.; the adult female from Stat. 193 was the first, which I am now inclined to identify with Proc. processa (Bate), the young male from Stat. 4 and the two young males from Stat. 261 were the second, the egg-bearing female from Stat. 4 and the specimen from Stat. 104 the third, the young female from Stat. 154, finally, the fourth species. The 6 specimens from Amboina now apparently belong to the third of these species and are now referred to Proc. aeguimana (Paulson) from the Red Sea; Pautson’s work is in my possession, though only the plates can be utilized by me, but the late Dr. Noprtt has given (l.c.) a translation of the russian description. This species now differs from the first of the four described by me, besides by other characters, by the stouter shape of the antennular peduncle and of the peraeopods of the 1%t pair, by the smaller number of carpal joints of the 24 legs and by a smaller size; it differs from the second and the fourth by the anterior pair of dorso- lateral spinules of the telson being placed more forward, from the second moreover by the less stout shape of the chela of the 2™4 legs, from the fourth, finally, by the pleura of the 5th abdominal somite being unarmed. Three of the 6 specimens are egg-bearing and of the same size as the fourth, that may be a male, the two last specimens are of a smaller size. This fourth specimen shall now be described in detail. It proved to be 14,7 mm. long, the carapace 4,4 mm. long and 2,25 mm. high, the abdomen 10,3 mm. long. The rostrum (Fig. 19, 19@) is 1,08 mm. long, one-third of the length of the carapace and éxtends horizontally forward to the end of the eye-peduncles; viewed from above, the rostrum agrees with the figures 52 and 527 (I. c.), being styliform except at the base, in a lateral view it gradually narrows to near the bidentate tip, the height in the middle being */, the length; of the two acute points, in which the rostrum terminates and that are slightly 45 directed downward, the upper is half as long as the lower. At first sight Pautson’s figure 6 of the rostrum, looked at from above, does not seem to agree with our specimen; but below the base of the rostrum the semicircular prominence, from which in Pautson’s figure the rostrum proceeds forward, becomes also visible by means of the microscope in our specimens. I now suppose that Pavtson has erroneously drawn this prominence as the base of the rostrum and that the true base of the latter was overlooked by him. Carapace of a stout shape, only twice as long as high, rostrum included; antennal spine well-developed and curved inward when looked at from above, antero-lateral angle rounded. Abdomen a little more than twice as long as the carapace. Fifth somite with no tooth at the obtuse posierior angle of the pleura. Telson (Fig. 19c) 2 mm. long, one-fourth the rest of the abdomen, tapering much backward, the width of the posterior margin, 0,24 mm., being hardly half the width (0,55 mm.) anteriorly. Anterior pair of dorso-lateral spinules 0,22 mm. long, 0,36 mm. distant from the posterior margin of the 6t somite, this distance one-fifth {in the figured telson of the female one-sixth) the length of the telson; posterior pair 0,18 mm. long, situated about midway between the anterior pair and the tip. Of the two terminal spinules at either side of the tip the longer one is 0,4 mm., the other 0,13 mm. long. Outer uropod slightly longer than inner, both surpassing a little the telson. The antennular peduncle differs from that of the adult female from Stat. 193 (I. c. fig. 52) by its less slender form: the 24 joint, indeed, is only three times as long as wide, viewed from above, and only one and a half as long as the 3". The antennular peduncle is as long as the antennal scale, which much resembles that of the female from Stat. 193 (l.c. fig. 52), but the distal border runs almost transversely and is distinctly surpassed by the terminal spine. The antennal peduncle hardly extends beyond the strongly excavated basal joint of the peduncle of the upper antennae, spine at the outer angle of 24 joint well-developed. The antepenultimate joint of the outer maxillipeds reaches as far as the antennal peduncle. Merus of left simple leg (Fig. 19¢) of 1% pair slender, 1,7 mm. long, 6-times as long as wide in the middle; carpus 0,65 mm. long, 3-times as long as wide distally; propodus 0,84 mm. long, one-fourth longer than the carpus, nearly 4-times as long as wide proximally and distinctly tapering ; dactylus 0,3 mm. long, half as long as the carpus. Merus of the right chelate leg (Fig. 197) 1,6 mm. long, 51/,-times as long as wide in the middle; carpus 0,58 mm. long, half as wide distally as long; chela 0,92 mm. long, about one and a half as long as the carpus, 3-times as long (in a lateral view) as wide proximally, fingers nearly half as long as the palm. In the female the fingers are somewhat longer. The right peraeopod of the 2™¢ pair (Fig. 19 /) is 5,6 mm. long (merus 1,4 mm., carpus 2,24 mm., chela 0,48 mm.), the left 5 mm. long (merus 1,28 mm., carpus 2,06 mm., chela 0,46 mm.); m both legs the carpus is divided into 13 segments, while in Pautson’s specimen, a female, it was divided into 11; of the carpus of the right leg the 1t or proximal segment is 0,4 mm. long, the 2™4 0,15 mm., the last joint 0,24 mm. long and 0,145 mm. broad in the middle, fingers as long as the palm, chela 0,155 mm. broad, 3-times as long as broad; of the carpus of the left leg the 15t segment is 0,37 mm. long, the 2"¢ 0,15 mm., the last 0,22 mm. long and 0,14 mm. broad in the middle, chela 0,46 mm. long and 0,15 mm. broad, also 3-times 46 as long as broad, fingers as long as palm, According to Pautson the proportion between the length of the two subequal legs of the 2™¢ pair should be like 226: 205, in the present spe- cimen it is like 226: 202. Also in the other specimens there are 13 segments in the carpus. This specimen bears still the right leg of the 3" pair, the left is lost like also the two posterior pairs. This leg is 6,38 mm. long and very slender; ischium with 2 spines on the lower margin, one at the base, the other a little beyond the middle; merus 1,76 mm. long, with 5 spines on the lower margin, carpus 1,7 mm. long, almost as long as the preceding joint, propodus 1,1 mm., two-thirds of the carpus, dactylus 0,38 mm. long, one-third of the propodus. Eggs small, 0,22 mm. long. In Pavtson’s female the carapace was 4,5 mm. long, his specimen had the same size as those described above. 35. Wikowdes Stbogae de Man. Nikoides Sibogae J. G. de Man, Siboga Exp., Monogr. XXXIXa‘, Part. IV, Caridae, 1920, p. 193, Pl. XVI, fig. 50—507. Stat. 181. September 5/11. Ambon-anchorage. 54 m. Bottom mud, sand and coral. 1 female of medium size. This female is 23 mm. long (carapace 7,8 mm., abdomen 15,2 mm.). The rostrum extends a little beyond the eyes, though it is still distinctly shorter than basal antennular article; it is 2 mm. long, slightly more than one-third the rest of the carapace and the greatest height at the proximal third measures just '/, the length; of the two teeth in which the rostrum terminates, the lower is one and a half as long as the upper. Antennular peduncle as in the female from Stat. 260 (I. c.), but the 24 joint is 1°/,times as long as 3%. The external maxillipeds project by the two last joints beyond the antennal scale. The merus of the right chelate leg reaches just beyond the base of the terminal joint of the antennal peduncle and, measured laterally, appears 6,4-times as long as thick in the middle; the carpus, that measures */, of the merus, appears 2,9-times as long as broad distally in a lateral view, being a little more slender than in the full-grown female from Stat. 260. While the merus is 3,7 mm. long, the carpus and chela show respectively a length of 1,5 mm. and 2,1 mm., the chela being one-third longer than the carpus, in the full-grown female, however, almost one and a half as long; fingers nearly half as long as the palm. The simple left leg is wanting. As regards the other peraeopods I confine myself to indicating the measurements only of those of the 5» pair: merus 4,9 mm. long, carpus 4,5 mm., propodus 4 mm., dactylus 1,4 mm, Family CRANGONIDAE. 36. Aegeon ortentalis Henderson. Aegeon orientalis J. R. Henderson, A contribution to Indian Cuarcinology, 1893, p. 446, Ply oe aics-elOs 7. Aegeon orientalis Stanley Kemp, in: Records Indian Museum, Vol. XII, Part VIII, Calcutta Igl6, p. 378. Stat. 133. July 25/27. Anchorage off Lirung, Salibabu-island. 36 m. Bottom mud and hard sand. 1 young female. This specimen is 14,5 mm. long, measured in the middle line from tip of rostrum to tip of telson, the carapace being 4,3 mm. long, the abdomen 10,2 mm.; the latter is almost 21/,-times as long as the carapace. The rostrum, that measures 1/,, the length of the rest of the carapace, hardly reaches to the middle of the eyestalks, not yet to the corneal portion; the distal margin is truncate, but armed at either angle with a small acute tooth, which measures only 1/, the length of the rostrum; at the inner side of the right tooth a third, supernumerary of course, is observed, as long as the right, and both teeth are a little smaller than the left. The lateral tooth is placed a little behind the middle of the oblique lateral margins, the distance between the apices of the lateral teeth is 3-times as long as the distance between the two at the distal border of the rostrum. The eyestalks measure one-fifth the length of the carapace, rostrum included; the corneal portion is 0,6 mm. broad, three-fourths the length of the eye- stalk, distinctly faceted, of a pale colour, while the emargination of the cornea is nearly black. The five carinae of the rt abdominal somite and the median carina of the 2"4 terminate each in a small spine. Both on the 2™¢ and on the 3'¢ somite, at either side of the middle line, the lower half of the tergum, except near the posterior margin, is situated on a lower level than the upper half, the boundary line running with a curve from the anterior margin backward and downward; this boundary line is regarded by SraNLey Kemp as a carina, for he says “there are two longitudinal carinae on either side of the second abdominal somite”’. The other carina is formed by the boundary between tergum and pleuron, but this boundary is rounded and appears therefore hardly as a carina. The exopodite of the 2" pleopod jis 2,5-times as long as broad, the endopodite has the same length as the outer branch, but, being implanted on a lower level, does only reach to the distal sixth of it and is 4-times as long as broad; the styliform stylamblys presents well- developed cincinnuli at the tip and extends to the distal third of the endopodite. General distribution: Gulf of Martaban (HENpDERsoN); Persian Gulf (Kemp); Port Blair, Andamans (Kemp). Family SCYLLARIDAE. 37. Scyllarus sp. op) tat. 75. June 5th. 4°57'.4S., 119° 2.8 E. Off Makassar. Plankton. { very young specimen. I do not succeed in identifying this specimen with one of the known species, because it shows still juvenile characters: it will perhaps once prove to be the young of Scyllarus Martensiz, a species known from Makassar, because the 3? abdominal tergum is much more prominent than the rest. This specimen is 7,1 mm. long from the anterior border of the carapace to the end of the telson. The carapace is 2,6 mm. long, measured in the median line, the antero-lateral angles that project a little beyond the anterior border of the carapace, are 3,2 mm. distant, the carapace appearing here '/, broader than long. A little in front of the anterior third, at 1 mm. from the antero-lateral angle, the lateral margins of the carapace show a small incision and a somewhat smaller incision exists in the middle; the lateral margins are armed along their whole length with numerous small teeth of somewhat unequal size and length; between the antero-lateral angle and the anterior incision one observes at the right side 7, at the left 8 teeth, between the two incisions 8 and behind the posterior one about 15 teeth at either side. The anterior border of the carapace appears behind the antennular segment broadly rounded, but reaches here less forward than the lateral parts of the anterior border; in a lateral aspect, however, the anterior border rises here upward as a small acute tooth. A much larger, also acute tooth arises on the posterior half of the gastric region with the bifid acute tip directed forward; a third acute tooth, a little smaller than the gastric one, arises immediately behind the cervical groove. The 24 and the 3'¢ tooth are a little uneven above in the midline; at each side of the 3™4 one observes on the slightly elevated cardiac region a few minute tubercles, a few occur also more backward, at either side, on the intestinal region, but for the rest the upper surface appears between the lateral carinae smooth. The lateral carinae are as usual divided by the cervical groove into a shorter anterior and a longer posterior portion; both portions are denticulate, the anterior presenting two larger teeth anteriorly behind one another, the posterior terminating anteriorly in an acute tooth, behind which 3 or 4 smaller teeth occur. Outer border of the orbits denticulate. Posterior margin of carapace concave in the middle. The antennular segment bears at either side a tooth or spine on the anterior border, the apices of which are 0,52 mm. distant, nearly '/, the distance between the antero-lateral angles of the carapace; a much smaller denticle occurs on the anterior border at either side and close to the median incision. 7" . 49 The basal joint of the inner antennae presents distally a prominence of which the outer angles are obtuse, while it ends in the middle in a rather obtuse tooth. Looked at from above the basal joint of the outer antennae proves to be armed with four strong acute spines, the most prominent in the middle of the anterior border, one more internally, the 3'4 at the outer angle, while the 4t* occurs at a lower level also at the outer angle; in front of the 4 spine the joint presents a rounded lobe, projecting forward. The 4 joint or proximal outer squame is about as long as broad, but the larger triangular part is 1/, longer than broad. The outer margin presents a small incision a little in front of the middle and is armed along its whole length with 22 or 23 small, acute, subequal teeth, ten before the incision, the rest behind it; one observes on the inner margin of the triangular part an acute tooth a little behind the middle and between this tooth and the tip eight somewhat smaller teeth; the inner border of the inner part of the joint ends distally in a tooth, which is somewhat larger than the teeth of the outer part. The inner margin of the 5‘ joint ends in an acute, the outer in a subacute tooth and close to each the anterior border bears a somewhat larger ‘tooth. The distal squame has four lobes on the anterior and two on the inner border; the free margin of these lobes is armed with small acute teeth or spines and the lobes gradually decrease in width from the outer one to those of the inner border, of which the anterior is larger than the posterior one, the smallest of all, but the anterior is much smaller than’ the contiguous fourth lobe of the anterior border. On the upper surface of all the joints short setae are implanted. First abdominal tergum rounded, 2™¢, 3", 4th and 5'" sharply carinated in the middle line, the carinae are prominent, especially that of the 3, which is the highest and most prominent of all; on each side of the carina the terga show the trace of an oblique groove that runs towards the postero-lateral angle. The terga are for the rest nearly smooth, presenting only a few microscopic granules, tipped with short setae, especially near their posterior margin. The posterior margin of the 6 tergum has a small subacute tooth in the middle, a somewhat larger acute tooth at the outer angles and a smaller one between the median tooth and the latter. Pleura smooth, denticulate along the margins. Anterior segment of thoracic sternum with a shallow notch in the middle. Thoracic legs fringed along the margins of their joints with short, more or less spini- form setae. Those of the 2°4 and 3" pair are rather not much compressed. Body pubescent, the short setae, however, rather sparse. SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE XXXIX at. 7 Family NEPHROPSIDAE. 38. Enoplometopus longirostris de Man. Pl. IV, fig. 20—204. Enoplometopus: longirostris J. G. de Man, in: Archiv f. Naturg. 53. Jahrg. 1888, p. 488, Ply xy fie. 4. ’ Stat. 37. March 30/31. Sailus Ketjil, Paternoster-islands. Surface, in the plankton. 1 specimen. Stat. 248. December 4/5. Anchorage off Rumah Lusi, North-point of Tiur-island. “pelagisch”. I specimen. Besides these two still a third specimen is lying before me, one of the six from Amboina described (1. c.) in 1888 and which is preserved in my private collection. The three specimens are nearly of the same size, about 23 mm. long. In the specimen from Stat. 37 the lateral mar- gins of the rostrum are armed at each side with 3 spines. The lateral row consists, according to the original description, of 3 posterior spines placed on the gastric region.and 2 anterior ones on the rostrum; in the specimen from Stat. 37 one observes on the left side 3, on the right 2 spines on the rostrum, the 3"? supernumerary spine on the left side being smaller than the preceding, placed in front of them, just behind the posterior one of the 3 marginal spines. The five median spines on the carapace are low, not prominent and of equal size, the posterior one placed on the cervical groove. Lower margin of the rostrum with 7 teeth, decreasing in size from the posterior one to the anterior one. Outer orbital angle acute, though not spini- form. Just above this angle a rather deep groove proceeds almost from the orbital margin backward for a short distance, curves at first downward and runs then forward to nearly midway between the curve and the antennal spine; cervical groove inconspicuous, but on the branchial region two long parallel and oblique grooves exist, of which the anterior almost unites with the first described groove there where it curves downward. Pleura of the 2"¢ abdominal somite with two small teeth on the anterior border, which posteriorly terminates in a strong tooth; according to the original description there were three small teeth on the anterior margin. The small tooth on the lateral margins of the telson, just in front of the posterior spine, is still inconspicuous. In the specimen from Stat. 248 the lateral margins of the rostrum bear only two spines at either side, but for the rest one observes the typical number; the left pleuron of the 24 abdominal somite bears only one small tooth on the middle of the anterior border, while this border has no teeth at all on the right pleuron, in both, however, the posterior spine is well-developed. In this species the telson is broadly grooved above to near the base and a little behind the level of the anterior pair of marginal spines, at either side of the middle line and close to it, 2 or 3 long setae are implanted that reach to the posterior extremity of the telson. ae 51 In the young female from Lxoplom. occidentalis (Randall) from Amboina the anterior margin of the 1St antennal segment is armed at the inner side of the tubercle, bearing the opening of the antennal gland, with a spine that is directed forward and slightly inward: in Enoplom. longirostris this spine is wanting. The examination of the abdomen revealed the remarkable fact 1° that the 15 somite issdestitnute of appendages, 2° that the pleopods of the 24, 3'¢, 4th and 5th somites bear all a well-developed appendix interna or stylamblys of which the tip is provided with a cluster of cincinnuli. As far as I know in all the Nephropsidae the 1%t abdominal somite should bear a pair of uniramous appendages, while the pleopods of the four following somites should be destitute of an appendix interna, (A. Atcocx, A descr. Catal. Indian Deep-Sea Crustacea, Calcutta 1901, p. 150, also L. A. Borrapatrze, in: Annals and Mag. Nat. Hist., Ser. 7, Vol. XIX; 1907, p. 473). I did ‘not succeed in detecting genital apertures in one of the three specimens lying before me. The sternum of the 1*t abdominal somite is quite smooth. In the specimen from Stat. 37 the two branches of the 2"* pleopod (Fig. 20) are subequal in length and width, the endopodite bears just behind the proximal third of the inner border a stylamblys which is 0,54 mm. long, being a little shorter than half the length (1,32 mm.) of the branch; the stylamblys is slender, 13- or 14-times as long as wide and there is a cluster of cincinnuli (Fig. 20@) at the tip. In the 3" pleopod the stylamblys (Fig. 206) is implanted at the posterior fourth, it shows the same length as that of the 24, but it is considerably thicker, only 9-times as long as thick; the 4" pleopod fully agrees with the 3, while the 5, that was not dissected, no doubt also agrees with it. According to Professor Atcocx’s cited work, p. 9, in the Macrura Astacides the antennal scale, if foliaceous, should not conceal the terminal joint of the antennal peduncle entirely. In the young female of Exopiom. occidentalis the antennal peduncle is not entirely concealed by the antennal scale, projecting a little beyond it, but in Axoplom. longirostris the antennal scale extends far beyond the antennal peduncle, which it conceals entirely. It appears to me quite probable that Axoflom. longirostris will once prove to be the young of a still unknown species, because it differs too much from Lxoplom. occidentalis or pictus to be considered as a young of these two. _ EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. ’ PLATE I. Gennadas clavicarpus de Man. Lower part of the anterior border of the carapace of the adult Fig. I. male from Stat. 185, presenting the branchiostegal spine of moderate size, 17. Fig. 2. Solenocera pectinata (Bate). Rostrum of the female, long 45 mm., from Nias, & 17. Fig. 3—3d. Penaeopsis intermedia (Kishinouye) var. anchista de Man. — 3 the male, long 77 mm., from the Kei-islands, < 4/,; 3a@ petasma of this male, x 6; 30 posterior half of abdomen of this male, x 2; 3c lateral view of the extremity of telson of this male, « 6; 3d thelycum of the larger female, long 80 mm., from Ternate, x 6. Fig. 4—46. Penaeopsis sp. A very young specimen, long 19 mm., from Stat. 166. — 4 rostrum, 22; 4@ posterior part of abdomen, 17; 46 posterior half of telson, < 33. Fig. 5. Parapenaeus sp. Rostrum and anterior margin of the carapace of the very young specimen from’ Stat. 47, X 33: Fig. 6, 6a. Sicyonia laevis Bate. Female from Stat. 7. — 6 distal half of rostrum, < 40; 6a thelycum, 40. Fig. 7. Sicyonella inermis (Paulson). Anterior part of carapace of the female with eye-peduncles etc., < 50 vO an Te | . Siboga-Expeditie XXXIXa*. J. G. pe Man. Penaeidae. . if Fig. 3—3d J. F. ObBEs, the other figures J. G. DE MAN, del. PLATE II. ig. 7a—7h. Sicyonella inermis (Paulson). All the figures are taken from the female. — 7a lateral view of the anterior part of carapace with eye-peduncles etc., x 50; 70 posterior half of telson, 66; 7¢ the two last joints of the external maxilliped, x 66; 7@ carpus and chela of the peraeopod of 1st pair, x 66; 7e the same of 2nd pair, X 66; 7f the same of 3rd pair, X 66; 7g, 7 the three last joints of the peraeopods of 4th, respectivciy 5th pair, 66. ryrides Sibogae (de Man). Egg-bearing female, long 13 or 14.mm., from Ambon. — 8 lower surface of telson, X 25; 8@ anterior part of lower surface, x 50; 84 scaphocerite, x 25; 8c peraeopod of 1st pair, 8d of 204 pair, 8e of 3rd pair, 8f of 4th and 8g of 5th pair, all the peraeopods, X 25. | Athanas Naifaroensis Cout. Frontal and antennal region of the specimen from Stat. 213, X 33- Athanas Stebbingii de Man, The typical female from Stat. 323. — 10. Frontal and antennal region, X 33; 10@ caudal fan, X 33. Siboga-Expeditie XXXIXa*. J. G. pe May. Penaeidae, Alpheidae. I. 7a « 50 J. G. DE Man, del. ¢ 7 FS a ea bl on Messe: - 14, 14¢@. ig. I5—I5¢. - 16—16¢. PLATE II. . 106—10f. Athanas Stebbingti de Man. The typical female from Stat. 323. — 106 right leg of the rst pair, X 20; 10c lateral view. of the chela of this leg, x 20; 10d left leg of the 2nd pair, xX 20; 10e right leg of the 3rd pair, x 20; 10/7 left leg of the 5th pair, x 20. . 11—11f. Arete [phianassa de Man. — 11 rostrum of the ova-bearing female from Stat. 213, * 33; Ita second pleopod of the male from Stat. 213, x 66; 116 distal half of the two appen- dices, & 135; IIc fused part of the left outer antennular flagellum of the male, x 66; 11d of the female, 66; I1e larger cheliped of the male, x 17; 11f cutting-edges of the fingers of this cheliped, excepting the tips, >< 50. . Alpheopsis sp. Specimen from Stat. 166. — 12 Frontal and antennal region, > 50 (the setae are drawn simple, not feathered); 12@ peraeopod of the 1st pair, & 33; 126 proximal half of the cutting-edges of the fingers of this leg, x 100; 12¢ leg of the 3rd pair, * 50. Synalpheus amboinae (Zehntner). Large chela of the larger specimen from Krakatau, looked at from the outer and from the inner side, X 4. Synalpheus hastilicrassus Cout. var. acanthitelsoniformis de Man. Male from Stat. 115. — 14 extremity of telson, X 50; I4@ upper side of the basicerite, x 50. Synalpheus sp. Egg-bearing female from Stat. 144. —- 15 Frontal and antennal region, 27; Isa telson, X 27; 150 leg of 3:4 pair, X 27; 15¢ dactylus of this leg, x 106. Alpheus anchistus de Man. — 16 Telson of the egg-bearing female from Ambon, x 17; 16a small cheliped of this female, 11; 164 two of the spinelets on the lower margin of the merus of this cheliped, x 50; 16c leg of 3rd pair of the male from Ambon, X It. Siboga-Expeditie XXXIXa*. J. G. pe May. Alpheidae. Il] 10c x17 { anne ; AN wh MM i \ NGht \ I\ NIN i | wh n) ee X 20 | Pigatz, (32). F. OBBES, the cther figures J. G. DE MAN, del. a yay 7 Bus fee ivy ae . eee ae “ ’ Se TONIC (ie hi x em aw) « 1 ciwal ‘ia eee ys a _o / eget fis: A kA mM a ‘ Mn : th Fig. 7. 18—188. 19—I9f. 20—208. PLATE IV. Alpheus lepidus de Man. Small cheliped of the larger female, looked at from the inner side, * 17 (the leg is lying somewhat obliquely, so that the merus and the chela appear a trifle less broad). ; Alpheus cuchirus Dana. Ova-bearing female from the north coast of Sumatra. — 18 Frontal and antennal region, X 8; 18a the same looked at laterally, X 8; 186 peraeopod of the 3rd pair, x 6. Processa aequimana (Paulson). All the figures are taken from the specimen, long 14,7 mm., which is supposed to be a male, excepting 19c which is the telson of an egg-bearing female. — 19g rostrum, eye-peduncles etc., viewed from above, X 33; 19a@ rostrum etc., viewed from above, X 50, a peduncle of the right eye; 190 lateral view of rostrum, X 50; I9¢ telson of the female, 50 (here the distance between the anterior pair of spinules and the base measures only one-sixth the length of the telson); 19d right, 1g9e left leg of 1st pair, x 50; 19f carpus and chela of the right leg of 2nd pair, x 50. Enoplometopus longirostris de Man. — 20 24 pleopod, X 50; 20a extremity of stylamblys of this pleopod, X 320; 204 stylamblys of 3rd pleopod, x 50. Fig. 13—184 J. F. Opes, the other figures J. G. DE MAN, del. . 36 nae i ae XLIX'd) M. M. Schepman. The Prosobranchia of the Siboga Rapeeition Part II. Taenioglossa and Ptenoglossa. With 7 plates : 44s Livr. (Monogr. XXIXa) Andrew Scott. The Copepoda of the ‘Siboga E Expedition. 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