20 Journal of Entomology and Zoology 
The eye tubercle just in front of the ovigers, projects nearly 
straight up In the unmounted specimen. It bears four eyes and is 
pointed. One large hair and several smaller ones project from it. 
The proboscis is two-jointed, the basal joint is narrower and 
cylindrical. The terminal joint is swollen in the middle and tapers 
at the tip, and tapers a little less at the base. The proboscis is bent 
at the base of the terminal joint and the tip points backwards under 
the animal. 
In the freshly killed animal the legs and all the leg-like append- 
ages were easily seen from above, but in the slide the ovigers did not 
show from above nor do they in the figure. 
The chelifori are three-jointed, the terminal joint is small, slightly 
lobed but not chelate. The other segments are of nearly the same 
length but the basal one is thicker. There are a number of long 
spine-like hairs on the middle joint and one large one on the basal 
joint. 
The palpi are ten-jointed, the two basal joints small, the five 
terminal joints are also small and bear fine hairs. 
The ovigers are nine, possibly ten, jointed, rather larger than 
the first two appendages and quite a little longer than the body. 
In the fresh specimen this appendage looks much like a leg from 
above. There are two claws, the terminal larger. The terminal 
joints bear a number of complicated spines and knobs as shown in 
the figure. 
The legs are broail at the body and taper towards the claws. 
The basal joint is provided with a single large spine. The narrower 
second joint bears two spines. The third joint is smaller and bears 
no spines. The fourth joint is usually about twice the length of the 
last and bears five spines at the end. The fifth joint bears several 
spines on the shaft as shown in the figure. The sixth joint is about 
as long as the fifth and bears spines on the shaft as shown in the 
figure of the four legs. The last two joints bear only a few smaller 
hairs. There is one slightly hooked claw on each leg. 
The wide lateral processes of the body, the first angular joint of 
the legs, the complicated spines of the oviger and the different ar- 
rangement of spines on appendages and body clearly separate this 
species from the other members of the genus. 
