386 Annals of tlic Month African Museum. 



MACEOTEROCHEIR LEPIDACTYLUS (Hilgendorf). 



1878. Palcemon lepidactylus, Hilgendorf, Moiiatsb. Akad. Berlin 



p. 838, pi. 4, figs. 14-16. 

 1905. P. (Macrobrachium) L, Coutiere, Ana. Sci. Nat., Ser. 8, vol. xii., 



p. 272, pi. 10, pi. 11, figs. 13, 13a, 

 1908. Macroteroclicir L, Stebbing, S.A. Crustacea, pt. 4, p. 40. 



No. 155. From Barberton (Transvaal) and from Umgeni 

 lagoon (Natal), specimens out of the Durban Museum. 



GEN. LEANDEE, Desmarest. 



1849. Leander, Desmarest, Ann. Ent. Soc. France, p. 87 (cited from 

 Dana, U.S. Expl. Exp., vol. xiii., p. 535). 



1892. L., de Man, in Weber's Zool. Ergebn. Niederl. Ost-Indien, 



vol. ii., p. 506. 



1905. L., Coutiere, Ann. Sci. Nat., Ser. 8, vol. xii., p. 336. 

 1910. L., Kemp, Fisheries, Ireland, Sci. Invest., 1908, 1. [1910], p. 1 '27. 



LEANDER SQUILLA (Linn.). 



1758. Cancer squilla, Linn., Systema Naturae, ed. 10, p. 632. 



1798. Palfzmon s., Fabricius, Suppl. Ent. Syst., p. 403. 



1852. P. s., Dana, U.S. Expl. Exp., vol. xiii., p. 586, pi. 38, fig. 9. 



1853. P. s., Bell, Brit. Stalk-eyed Crust., p. 305, fig. in text. 



1893. Leander s., Stebbing, History of Crustacea, p. 247. 



1910. L. s., Kemp, Fisheries, Ireland, Sci. Invest., 1908,1. [1910], 

 p. 132, pi. 20, figs. 3, 3 a-e. 



1910. L. s., Stebbing, S.A. Crustacea, pt. 5. 



A specimen sent by Dr. Gilchrist from Muixenberg, from 

 a salt lake or " Vlei " in False Bay, appears to belong to this 

 species. The rostrum has 8 teeth above and 4 below, exclu- 

 sive of its bifid apex, in which the lower point projects beyond 

 the upper. Of the upper teeth two are behind the eyes, 

 belonging to the body of the carapace rather than the rostrum 

 proper. All the teeth are followed by setules. The sides of 

 the first pleon segment extend a little below those of the 

 second. The lateral apices of the fifth segment are acute. 

 The telson has three rather long apical spines and three latero- 

 dorsal pairs of minute spines. The length of the specimen is 

 about 44 mm. 



LEANDER CAPENSIS, Weber. 



1897. Leander capensis, Max Weber, Zool. Jahrb., vol. x., p. 174, 

 pi. 15, fig. 3. 



