370 Annals of the South African J 



lat. 34 2' 45" S., long. 25 10' 00" E., between 55 and 62 m. 

 depth. 



1903. Calliactites r., Borradaile, Ann. Nat. Hist., Ser. 7, vol. xii., 

 p. 545. 



GEN. UPOGEBIA, Leach. 



1813. Upoycbia, Leach, Edinb. Encycl., vol. vii., p. 400. 



1893. U., Stebbing, History of Crustacea, p. 185. 



1900. U., Stebbing, S.A. Crustacea, pt. 1, p. 42. 



1903. U., Borradaile, Ann. Nat. Hist., Ser. 7, vol. xii., p. 542. 



UPOGEBIA CAPENSIS (Krauss). 



1843. Gebia major, var. capensis, Krauss, Siidafrik. Crust., p. 54. 



" Frequent in Table Bay." 



1891. G. capensis, Ortmann, Zool. Jahrb., vol. vi., p. 54. 

 1900. Upogebia c., Stebbing, S.A. Crustacea, pt. 1, p. 45. 



No. 4, specimens sent by Dr. Gilchrist, from Swartkops 

 River, Algoa Bay. It has also been sent me from Gordon's 

 Bay, False Bay, by C. F. Kies, Esq. Dr. Gilchrist states that 

 it is very abundant in some of the " Vleis," or salt-water lakes 

 of Cape Colony. 

 1903. U. c., Borradaile, Ann. Nat. Hist., Ser. 7, vol. xii., p. 543. 



Borradaile says: The fact that " this species has gills on the 

 last pair of legs will probably make it needful to separate it as 

 a subgenus with such others as may share the character." 



UPOGEBIA SUBSPINOSA (Stimpson). 



1860. Gebia subspinosa, Stimpson, Pr. Ac. Sci. Philad., vol. xii., 



p. 22 (91). 



In Simon's Bay, at the Cape of Good Hope, from 15 m. 

 depth. It is stated that the feet of the first, second, and 

 third pairs are armed with a sharp spine near the base. No 

 trace of such a spine is apparent in the preceding species. 

 But a specimen about 8 mm. long, sent me by Mr. C. F. 

 Beyers, Esq., which I should otherwise have assigned to U. 

 capensis, does show such a spine on the limbs mentioned, and 

 may therefore be the young of U. subspinosa. 



GEN. CALLIADNE, Strahl. 



1861. Calliadne, Strahl, M. B. Akad. Berlin, p. 1064. 



1868. Gebiopsis, A. Milne-Edwards, Nouv. Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. 

 Paris, vol. iv., p. 64. 



