STUDIBS IN AUSTRALIAN CRUSTACEA — McCULLOOH. 349 



Australia by Has well, while there are Australian specimens of 

 G.padavensia in the Australian Museum from Murray Island, 



Torres Strait (Coll. Hedley and McCulloch, Aug., 1907); Cook- 

 town, Queensland (Coll. Hedley and McCulloch, Aug., 1906) ; 

 Hood Bay, New Guinea ; and New Caledonia. 



Clibanarius tjeniatus, Milne Edwards. 



(Plate xi., fig. 1). 



Pagurus clibanarius, Quoy and Gaiuiard, Voy. " Uranie and 

 Physicienne," 1825, p. 529, pi. lxxviii., fig. I (not Herbst). 



Pagurus tamiatus, Milne Edwards, Ann. Sci. Nat., Zool. (3), x., 

 1848, p. 63. 



Clibanarius keniatus, Stimpson, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., 

 1858, p. 235. Id., Miers, Zool. "Alert," 1884, p. 265. Id., 

 de Man, Notes Leyd. Mus., xii., 1890, p. 113. Id., Grant 

 and McCulloch, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, xxxi., 1906, 

 p. 34. 



Although the original figure of this species shows the charac- 

 teristic colour marking, it is very imperfect in other details, so 

 I take this opportunity of figuring a specimen from Cooktown. 



Hab. — The specimen described by Quoy and Gaimard was 

 collected in Shark Bay, Western Australia. Others are in the 

 Australian Museum from North Australia; Mapoon, Gulf of 

 Carpentaria (Coll. C. Hedley, 1903); Cooktown, Queensland 

 (Coll. Hedley and McCulloch, 1906); Holborn Is., near Pt, 

 Denison (Coll. W. A. Haswell) ; Rat Is., Pt. Curtis (Coll. 

 McCulloch, 1909); Masthead Is., off Pt. Curtis (Coll. F. E. 

 Grant, 1905); Port Hacking, New South Wales. The specimen 

 recorded by Whitelegge 1 6 from Pleasant Island, Central Pacific, 

 is not this species, but C. eurysternns, Hilgendorf. 



Clibanarius eurystrrnus, Hilgendorf. 



Pagurus (Clibanarius) eurysternus, Hilgendorf, Monatsber. 

 Akad. Wiss. Berlin, 1878, p. 822, pi. iii., figs. 9-10. 

 Hab. — I collected six specimens of this species at Murray 

 Island, Torres Strait, in shells of S trombus hdmanus, Linne ; it 

 has not been previously recognised from Australia. The charac- 

 teristic dark lines on the carapace and legs are much more 

 striking than in Hilgendorf's figure. 



" Whitelegge— Uec. Austr. Mus., v., 1903, p. 11. 



