208 



DISCOVERY REPORTS 



Paramoera obliquimanus, n.sp. (Figs. 118/, 125). 



Occurrence: St. 54. Falklands. 2 ?$ H - ^ mm., 1 <J and 1 immat. $ 11 mm. 



Description. Integument minutely shagreened, with scattered pits, which are not 

 so large or so close together as in gregaria. No dorsal teeth. Post-antennal angle of head 

 acutely produced. Side-plate 1 rounded below, with a rather strong spine postero- 

 inferiorly. Pleon segment 3 with a small point at postero-inferior angle. Telson cleft 

 for half its length, lateral margin convex, lobes apically notched, with one spine, two 

 pairs of lateral spine-setae. 



Antenna 1 with a calceolus on every alternate flagellar joint proximally; on the distal 

 joints the calceoli are replaced by sensory filaments. 



d ^ e. 



Fig. 125. Paramoera obliquimanus, n.sp. a. Head. b. Pleon segment 3. 

 c. Telson. d. Gnathopod 1 $. e. Gnathopod 2?. /. Portion of antenna 1. 



Gnathopod 1, 5th joint rather strongly expanded in a rounded lobe inferiorly, 6th 

 ovate, palm and hind margin forming a continuous curve, with four stout spines. 

 Gnathopod 2, 5th joint as in gnathopod 1, 6th obliquely ovate, widest proximally, 

 narrowing distally, palm not defined except by four to five stout spines. 



Neither the $ nor the immature ? have the peculiarly shaped hands of the gnathopods 

 found in the large $$ ; they resemble more those of fascicidata, Thorns., as figured by 

 Stephensen (1927, fig. 15), but have the 5th joint more strongly expanded inferiorly 

 and lack the "rounded projection" or scarious edge mentioned by Stephensen. 



Paramoera hermitensis, n.sp. (Figs. 118 /, 126). 



Occurrence: St. 222. Cape Horn. 1 $ 8 mm., 6 $$ 8-10 mm. 



Description. Very like edouardi. Integumentary shagreen rather coarser, but still 

 very fine. Eyes broadly reniform, large, dark. Post-antennal angle of head quadrate, 



