18 ORCHESTIIDJl. 



The eyes are large, irregularly round, and placed near 

 the top of the head. The upper antennae are so small 

 that they seem almost rudimentary. The lower antennae 

 in the male are long, sometimes two-thirds the length 

 of the animal ; in the females and young males they 

 are much shorter. The peduncle is longer than the fla- 

 gellum, and appears to consist of but three articulations, 

 the two basal ones being fused into the frontal wall of the 

 head, a circumstance which forces the superior antennae and 

 organs of vision nearly to the top of the head, a position 

 not common in the Amphipoda. The olfactory denticle 

 is wanting. The organ of smell probably undergoes some 

 change to meet the altered condition of the existence of 

 the animal from that of marine Crustacea generally. 



The mandibles are powerful organs, armed at the biting 

 edge with teeth, formed more for tearing than for cutting ; 

 below which a second row of denticles is fixed upon a 

 plate, which is movable. A few strong hairs or spines, 

 curved inwardly, are situated between the incisive margin 

 and the molar or grinding tubercle. This last is a 

 prominence at the inner base of each mandible, and is 

 crowned by very minute denticles^ and corresponds with 

 a similar grinder in the opposite jaw. By the joint action 

 of these two molar tubercles an imperfect mastication is 

 effected . 



The foot-jaws are notunguiculate — that is, the last ar- 

 ticulation does not terminate in a sharp, nail-like extre- 

 mity, but ends obtusely, the tip being fringed with short 

 hairs. A squamiform plate is developed from three of 

 the articulations, of which the first, the most internal, is 

 the largest, and is furnished at the extremity with three 

 small stout spines or teeth. The apparatus which com- 

 poses the mouth projects anteriorly beyond the head, by 

 which means the animal can the more easily gatlier its 



