95 
(fig. 1h) and very short hairs. Basal joint of the maxillipeds rather slender and a good 
deal longer than half of the breadth of the head at its base. The genital area (fig. 3a) 
more than double as broad as long; between, behind and obliquely outside the genital apertures, 
as well as behind the caudal stylets, are a number of very fine hairs. 
MALE. A normal specimen (fig. Li and fig. 1k) is -20mm. in length and ‘O09 mm. 
in breadth, or about half the length of a middle-sized adult female (comp. fig. 1d with fig. 1b 
and fig. 1c). The body between scarcely double and a little more than double as long as 
broad. The frontal margin seems to be like that of the female; the incisions are extremely 
difficult to see (the hair-covering in fig. 1i is too long). Basal joint of the maxillipeds of a 
shape similar to that of the female. Trunk-legs and caudal stylets long, longer than half 
the breadth of the body, and very distinctly furnished with hairs about all over the distal half. 
OVISACS. Of medium or rather large size, globular or shortly ovate (fig. Le and 
fig. 1f). As a rule there are fourteen to eighteen very large eggs in each sac. It is a not 
common occurrence to find eight ovisacs with one female, and a greater number has never 
been observed. 
LARVA. A free specimen (fig. 1g) is 15 mm. in length. Its cephalothorax is 
nearly double as long as broad. Having only one such specimen in hand, I prepared some 
larve out of their egg-membranes and examined them more closely; one of them is seen in 
fig. 11. We notice that its cephalothorax is still somewhat shorter and broader than that 
of the freely swimming larva, and the animal is only 14mm. in length. The olfactory seta 
of the antennul turned backward reaches beyond the posterior extremity of the cephalothorax. 
Distance between the maxilla and the maxillipeds about as long as the basal joint of the 
latter. Second abdominal segment as long as the first. The longest seta of the caudal 
stylets considerably longer than half the length of the cephalothorax, about half the length 
of the body in the free specimen. 
POST-LARVAL DEVELOPMENT. Described in detail above, on p. 55. 
HABITAT. In the branchial cavity of Diastylis lucifera (Kyr.) from Denmark. The 
parasite I have found in sixty-six specimens, the special locality of fifty-seven of these are 
unknown to me; five specimens were taken at Hellebzek (four by Dr. Joh. Petersen, one by 
the author), and four in the following four stations of the expeditions of »Hauch«: Stat. 25 
(110 fathoms), Stat. 368 (13 fath.), Stat. 370 (15 fath.) and Stat. 383 (14 fath.)*). Hither 
the right or the left side is infested; in no specimen have I found both sides infested. Only 
one female and generally also one male, rather seldom two males, are found in the same 
branchial cavity. Where the parasite has laid several ovisacs, the carapace of the host is very 
considerably swollen, and frequently this swelling rises somewhat above the median dorsal line. 
1) Details about the exact localities of these stations, the description of the bottom ete. is found in: 
»C. G. Joh. Petersen: Det videnskabelige Udbytte af Kanonbaaden ,Hauch‘s Togter i de danske Have indenfor 
Skagen i Aarene 1883—86*, p. 1—33, 1893. In my descriptions of several of the following species, other 
stations from these cruises will be quoted and may be looked for in the afore-mentioned work. 
