52 DISCOVERY REPORTS 



St. 142. 30. xii. 26. East Cumberland Bay, South Georgia, from 54° 11' 30" S, 36° 35' W to 

 54° 12' S, 36" 29' 30" W, 88-273 rn-' ^- Large otter trawl: 3 specimens, i ovigerous, i overgrown 

 with Hydroids, the third very soft. 



St. 143. 30. xii. 26. Off mouth of East Cumberland Bay, South Georgia, 54° 12' S, 

 36° 29' 30" W, 273 m. Large otter trawl: 2 $$, i cJ (ovigerous and with i large and several small 

 Isopods attached), i immature. 



St. 144. 5. i. 27. Off mouth of Stromness Harbour, South Georgia, from 54° 04' S, 

 36° 27' W to 53° 58' S, 36° 26' W, 155-178 m.; gn. M. S. Large otter trawl: i <S (soft). 



St. 149. 10. i. 27. Mouth of East Cumberland Bay, South Georgia, from 1-15 miles N 76!° W 

 to 2-62 miles S 11° W of Merton Rock, 200-234 m. ; M. Large otter traw4: i $ and 4 immature 

 specimens. 



St. 154. 18. i. 27. Jason Harbour to Larsen Point, South Georgia, from 2-6 miles S 84° W to 

 5I cables S 26° E of Larsen Point, 60-160 m. ; M. Large dredge: several adult and immature 

 specimens, including i ovigerous cJ. 



St. 156. 20. i. 27. 53° 51' S, 36° 21' 30" W, 200-236 m.; R. Large dredge: i (^, i $ (claw 

 short). 



St. 170. 23. ii. 27. Off Cape Bowles, Clarence Island, 61° 25' 30" S, 53° 46' W, 342 m.; R. 

 Large dredge : 2 specimens, i very flabby (claw short). 



St. 195. 30. iii. 27. Admiralty Bay, King George Island, South Shetlands, 62° 07' S, 

 58° 28' 30" W, 391 m. ; M. St. Medium otter trawl: at least a hundred specimens of all sizes. 



St. WS 32. 21. xii. 26. Mouth of Drygalski Fjord, South Georgia, 91-225 m.; gy. M. Small 

 beam trawl : i ?. 



St. MS 68. 2. iii. 25. East Cumberland Bay, South Georgia, 17 miles SJE to 8| cables SE x E of 

 Sappho Point, 220-247 m. Large rectangular net : many specimens of all sizes including ovigerous 

 and larvigerous (^(S, one is overgrown with a compound Tunicate and Hydroids, one has an Isopod 

 attached. 



Description of male. Trunk with lateral processes separated by a considerable 

 interval (o-6-i-5 of their own diameter). Neck rather long, base of oviger large and in 

 contact with, or a little in front of, first lateral process. Ocular tubercle as wide as, or 

 even wider than high ; eyes conspicuous. 



Proboscis expanded somewhat in middle and again at apex; subequal to scape and 

 slightly shorter than cephaHc segment. 



Abdomen short, scarcely reaching to distal end of fourth lateral process, elevated at 

 an angle of about 30^. 



Chelophore. Scape shorter than the curved chela, length four and a half times the 

 distal width, bearing a number of short, stout setae. Palm long, narrow, and provided 

 with a number of short setae along mid-dorsal surface. Fingers rather longer than, and 

 at an angle of about 45° to, palm; 65-90 crowded spinules on immovable, 75-110 on 

 movable finger. 



Polp long and slender; segments 2-5 subequal; in the proportions 10 : 10 : 11 : 10 

 and 12 : 14 : 13 : 14-5. 



Oviger. Terminal claw a little more than half of tenth segment and armed with 10-16 

 long spinules. Total number of denticulate spines in adults 40-51. Segments 4-6 in 

 the proportions i : 1-71 : i ; fifth segment slightly curved and contracted in proximal 

 third, sixth segment bent in a very open S curve (Fig. 73). 



