General Catalogue of South African Crustacea. 435 



=■= Antarcturus kladophoros, Stebbing. 

 1908. Antarcturus MadopJioros, Stebbing, S.A. Crustacea, pt. 4, p. 53, 

 pi. 32. 

 No. 95, sent by Dr. Gilchrist, was dredged from a depth of 

 229 m., Cape St. Blaize, N. by E., distant 73 miles. 



Teibe ASELLOTA. 

 Family MUNNID^. 



1882. Mimiiidce, Sars, Vidensk. Porhandl. Christiania, No. 18, p. 17. 

 1897. M., Sars, Crustacea of Norway, vol. ii., pt. 6, p. 105. 



Gen. PAKAMUNNA, Sars. 

 1866. Paramunna, Sars, Beretning Zool. Eeise ved Kysterne 



Christianias, p. 31. 

 1897. P., Sars, Crustacea of Norway, vol. ii., pt. 6, p. 111. 



■•'• Paramunna l^vifeons, n. sp. 

 Plate XLVI.A. 



This species is distinguished from the northern Paramunna bilo- 

 bata, Sars, by having the broad head shallowly convex in front, 

 instead of being produced into two divergent lobes, which Sars includes 

 among the characters of the genus, as well as calling attention to 

 them in the name of the typical species. But the new species agrees 

 with the old in the conically produced eye-lobes, the six-jointed 

 doubly geniculate second antennae, the very small but distinctly 

 three-jointed palp of the mandibles, the stoutly subchelate first 

 gnathopods, with the remaining limbs very slender, and in the shape 

 of the first two pairs of pleopods which constitute the male 

 operculum. 



The lateral margins of the broad depressed peraeon converge 

 ovately to the narrower telsonic segment, distally ovate, but with the 

 sides at first scarcely curved. The eyes are small, with five coni- 

 ponents. In the first antennae the third joint of the peduncle is 

 scarcely larger than any of the three joints of the flagellum. In the 

 second antennae the fourth and fifth joints are both short between 

 the large third and sixth ; the seven-jointed flagellum is as long as 

 the third and fourth joints of the peduncle combined. The fifth 

 joint of the first gnathopods is distally much broader than long. The 

 finger, which has a secondary tooth on the inner side, overlaps the 



