68 ON THE BRACHYUROUS DECAPODS OF THE CAPE. 
manibus articulo secundo intus quinque-dentato, chelis apice concoloribus ad marginem 
haud striatis. 
Nore. This beautiful little species is four lines long, by more than five broad. 
12. The above great number of Grapsid@ at the Cape shews that the carcinology of South 
Africa agrees with that of intratropical climates more than it does with that of the temperate 
zones in general. But we now proceed to the stirps Pinnotherina, and for that purpose we 
must return to the family Ocypodide. Milne Edwards has shewn that a small crab of the 
Red Sea, called by him Doto sulcatus, makes the passage from the Ocypodide to the 
Pinnotherina. 
Stirps. PINNOTHERINA, Dehaan, or ParasrricaL Crass. 
13. This stirps contains so few known species, that I shall not attempt its arrangement at 
present, more particularly as Dr. Smith has only brought home one species, which has long 
been known as a native of the Cape of Good Hope. M. Dehaan makes the distinguishing 
characteristic of this stirps, which he calls Pinnotheridea, to consist in the sixth joint of the 
fourth pair of maxilla being inserted at the base of the fifth jomt. The groupe consists of 
singular crabs, among which we find the last pair of feet to be sometimes evanescent, as in the 
genus Hexapus of Dehaan. 
Fam. HYMENOSOMID£. 
Genus. HY MENOSOMA, Leach. 
Sub-genus. Luacuium, M. E. 
Sp. 32. (Hymenosoma) Leachium orbiculare, Leach, MSS. 
Hymenosoma orbiculare, Desm. Cons. p. 163. tab. 26. fig. 1. 
Nors. Milne Edwards has shewn that the Hymenosoma Leachii of Guerin belongs to 
another sub-genus. 
14. Perhaps when the attention of collectors shall have been more directed to these small, 
though curious crabs, we may discover their natural arrangement. The difficulties pointed out 
by Milne Edwards, who complains that his genera are so distinct from each other, evidently pro- 
ceeds from almost every one of his genera belonging to a distinct family. Perhaps indeed, if we 
consider his arrangement in this light—in other words, that most of his genera represent fami- 
lies—the table he gives (vol. 2, p. 29) may not be found so far wrong. But however this may 
be, I shall now return to the stirps Cancrina and family Carcinide. From these we pass 
directly to the osculant stirps Corystina, belonging to the interesting tribe of Trigonostomous 
Brachyura, which may be displayed to view in the following manner :— 
