148 



The legs of tlie l^t anti of tlie 5tli pair of the first type have 

 been figured (Fig. 2o and 2^9), 



Prof. BüTSCHLi of Heidelberg kindly sent me 3 cotypes (2 ova- 



bearing feniales and one younger feniale without eggs) of F. recti- 



rostris Zaddach, var. ociodentatus R. Neumann from Palnia de 



Mallorka. The examination of tlieso specimens proved at once 



their identity with the variety Fabricli. The hxrgest specimen, 



a female with eggs, is 58 mm. long and its rostrum, just as 



long as the scales and hardly trending upwards at apex, is 



7+1 



— - — dentato; 2^ tooth immediately behind the orbital margin. 



Antennular peduncle 9^^ mm., shorter ramus (the coalesced por- 

 tion included) 8 mm. long and reaching by two-thirds its lengtli 

 beyond apex of rostrum. 



The other egg-bearing specimen is 50 mm. long, the rostrum, 

 hardly longer than the scales and hardly upturned distally, is 



-— — dentato; the last specimen, finally, is also 50 mm. long 



and its rostrum, that slightly reaches beyond the scales and that 



is distinctly turned upwards at apex, is — - — dentate, the toeth 



o 



placed as in the first female. According to S. Kemp (1. c, page 128) 

 the upper margin, however, is arraed dorsally with five to seven 

 teeth and in the specimen from Nyborg Fjord, described above, 

 the rostrum bears also 7 teeth. 



General distribution: Sweden (GoËs) ; The Baltic, Gulf of 

 Danzig (Zaddach); Denmark (Meinert); Gulf of Kiel (Wede- 

 meyer); Christianiafjord (Wollebaek) ; South West coast of Nor- 

 way (Ratiike, Sars, Appellöf, etc.) ; West coast of Ireland 

 (S. Kemp); Thames estuary (8. Kemp); Weymouth (W. Thomp- 

 son); Poole Harbour (Bell); West coast of France (Bay of 

 Arcachon [Fischer], Gironde, Charente, Ie Croisic, Concarneau, 

 Boulonnais [Bonnier]) ; Adriatic and Mediterranean (Heller, 

 R. Neumann, Goürret, Senna, Thiele, etc). 



