AMPHIPODA AND ISOrODA OF THE FIRTH OF CLYDE. 23 



Anonyx norvegicus, Lilljeborg, Of vers, af Kgl. 

 Yeteusk.-Akadem. Forh. (1851), p. 22. 



Anonyx Holbolli, Spence Bate, Cat. Amphip. Crust. 

 Brit. Mus. (1862), p. 75, pi. xii., fig. 4. 



Lysianassa gulosa, Goes, Crust. Amphip. Maris 

 Spetsb. (1866), p. 4. 



Habitat.— T)r edged between the Allans, Cumbrae, 

 in 2 to 4 fathoms, sandy-weedy bottom. It has also 

 been taken by the Rev. G. Gordon of Elgin and 

 Mr. Edward of Banff. Mr. Barlee dredged it on 

 the Haaf, about 30 miles off the Shetlands, and 

 the Rev. A. M. Norman and Dr. J. G. Jeffreys in the 

 Outer Skerries Harbour, Shetland. Mr. Loughrin 

 has taken it at Polperro, and Messrs. Bate and 

 Westwood in Plymouth Sound. 



On one or two occasions I have taken in the 

 surface-net a specimen with long under-antennse, 

 which I believed to be the male of the same species. 



Genus Callisoma, Costa (1851). 

 callisoma crenata, Spence Bate. 



Scopelocheirus crenatus, Spence Bate, Brit. Assoc. 

 Report 1855. 



Callisoma crenata, Spence Bate, Cat. Amphip. Brit. 

 Mus., p. 85, pi. xiv., fig. 5. 



Habitat. — Loch Fyne, in 80 fathoms, bottom soft 

 mud ; Lochgoil, in 12 fathoms, mud and gravel ; off 

 Garnock Beacon, in 5J fathoms, muddy gravel ; and 

 a little off Kilchattan Bay, in 30 fathoms, bottom 

 sandy mud. On one occasion, while washing dredged 

 material through a sieve in a large tub, this species 

 was seen in great abundance floating on the surface 

 of the water. On lifting up an old spineless and 

 partly broken test of Brissus lyrifer, it was found 

 to be crowded with the same species ; and there can 

 be little doubt that those floating in the tub had 

 escaped from the old test. I have since observed 

 it again under the same conditions. The eyes in 

 life are moderately large and red. 



