24 



Cijpris setigera, Joues. Mon. of Tart. Entom., p. 12, pi. 1., figs. 6a. -6d. 

 Candona compressa, Brady. Mon. Bee. Brit. Ost., p. 382, pi. xxvi., figs. 



22-26. 



Not uncommon in Glasgow and Paisley Canal, Govan Colliery 

 Dam, Hairmyres old quarry, Frankfield and Bishop Lochs, 

 Duddingston and Lochend Lochs, Edinburgh; Mill and Year 

 Lochs, Lochmaben ; both Cumbraes and Bute. 



Candona Candida, Midler. 



Gypris Candida, Miiller. Entom., p. 62, tab. vi., figs. 7-9. 



Monoculus candidus, Jurine. Hist, de Monocles, p. 176, pi. xix., figs. 7-8. 



Candona lucens, Baird. Brit. Entom., p. 160, tab. xix., fig. 1. 



Candida, Lillj. De Crustaceis. 



Jones. Ter. Entom., p. 19, pi. i., figs. 8a, 8f, 5a, 5p. 



Brady, Mon. Bee. Brit. Ost., p. 383, pi. xxv., figs. 1-9; pi. xxxvi. , 



fig. 13; and pi. xxvii., fig. 1. 

 Crosskey, Brady, and Robertson, Mon. Post-ter. Entom., p. 135, 



pi. ii., figs. 29-30. 



Common nearly everywhere in lochs, ponds, and ditches. Not 

 being a swimmer it is chiefly found in mud, yet it is by no means 

 sluggish, as it may be seen scampering over and burrowing in and 

 out of it. Met with both in deep and shallow w r ater, and not 

 unf requently in water more or less brackish. In Lochlomond it has 

 1 ieen found at a depth of 40 fathoms. Like some of its congeners, it 

 is occasionally met with in water of very questionable quality. In 

 a creek of the Leven, at Dumbarton, which is used as a kind of dock 

 for timber, and apparently also as a receptacle for refuse of the 

 neighbourhood, the black mud at the bottom, which had a most 

 offensive odour, contained this species plentifully, and without the 

 least appearance of sickliness. 



Candona detecta, Miiller. 



Cypris detecta, Miiller. Entomostraca, p. 49, tab. iii., figs. 1-3. 



Candona Baird. Brit. Entom., p. 161. 



Brady. Mon. Bee. Brit. Ost., p. 384, pi. xxiv., figs. 35-38; 



and pi. xxxvii., fig. 2. 

 Brady, Crosskey, and Robertson. Mon. Post-ter. Entom., 



p. 134, pi. 1., figs. 7-9. 



In ponds, lakes, and ditches everywhere. Common in Glasgow 

 and Paisley Canal and Frankfield Loch. In Loch Urie, Arran (J. 



