• this sp 



'•'■ 



ns, vol. 61, 19131 N° 15, p. 1 ï Comm s) = 



ind the northeastern point "t rimor. 27 -54 



ls about 60 arms vvhich are about 90 mm. long; the cirri are 

 mm i<> 9 mm. long. 

 r is in the ten armed juvenile stage, the arms being 25 mm. long. 



\. 1 1. Clark. 



A. II. Clark. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 25, [912, p. 21. 



.5 S.. 1 14 55 .; E. SS Metres. 1 Ex. 



I hr cirri are XXII. [3, 13 mm. long; the first segment is short, the.second twice as 



its median diameter, the third about three dmes as long as its median diameter, the 



fourth and fifth the longest, trom three to three and one half times as long as the median 



diameter; tl jegments decrease rapidly in length so that the antepen ultimate is 



slightly longer than broad and the penultimate about as long as broad; the fifth is a transi- 



tion segment; the following have small, but sharp and prominent, dorsal spines which are 



acutely triangular in end view; the opposing spine is subterminal, slender, and very sharp, in 



[ual to about one third the lateral diameter of the penultimate segment; the terminal 



claw is nearly or quite twice as long as the penultimate segment, very slender and modera- 



: basally, but becoming nearly straight in the outer two thirds. 



The arms are about 60 in number, too mm. long. 



mouth is subcentral and the anal tube submarginal. 

 The terminal comb on the proximal pinnules lias 11 or 12 teeth. 

 masler sióoga* is most nearly related to C. fruticosus, differing from that species 

 chiefly in its proportionately longer and more slender cirri, which have proportionately longer 

 nd sharper and more prominent dorsal spines in the distal portión. 



r pulcher A. H. Clark. 



A. II. Clark. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 25, 1912, p. 22. 

 •r.iit. Kei Islands. Up to 52 Metres. 1 Kx. 



XXVII, 15 — 17. \z mm. to 15 mm. long; the first segment is about 

 ;econd about twice as long as the expanded distal ends, strongly 

 •rally, the third from three to four times as long as the median diameter, con 

 trally, though n nuch so as the preceding; the fourth segment is slightlj over 



nal diameter; the following segments rapidly decrease in length 



