300 Records of tke Indian Museum. [Vol. XXII, 



of S. chlorida (i) in the form of the rostrum, (ii) in the length of 

 the eye compared with that of the antennular and antennal pe- 

 duncles, and (iii) in the direction of the lateral process of the fifth 

 thoracic somite. It perhaps represents a species hitherto unknown, 

 but the resemblances to 5. microphtliahna are so great that we 

 hesitate to describe it as new. 



C ,303/1. Off Tondi, Madras Presidency, J. Horncll. i 9 , 20 min. 



6 fms. 

 C 302/1. 4 miles N.N.E. of Kabusa Is.. 'Investigator.'' 1(^,40 mm. 



.Mergui Archipelago, 33 fms. 



It should be noted that, apart from a doubtful record from 

 N. Australia (Miers), S. microphtkalma has hitherto been found 

 only at Zanzibar (Jurich) and from Karachi, Bombay, and the 

 Madras Coast (Kemp). The specimen referred to above is the first 

 that has been obtained on the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal. 



Squilla fasciata, de Haan. 



1913. Squilla fasciafa, Kemp, loc. cit., p. 34, pi. i, llgs. 21-23. 



Seven additional specimens, presented by Dr. T. Kawamura, 

 were brought from Japan by Dr. Annandale. Under the name of 

 S. fallax, Bouvier ' has recently described a closely related species 

 from Mauritius, which, apart from the number of teeth on the 

 raptorial dactylus and other characters, differs from S. fasciata in 

 the complete suppression of the mandibular palp. We have re- 

 examined the Indian specimens in comparison with those brought 

 back by Dr. Annandale and have no doubt that all belong to 

 de Haan's 5. fasciata. 



C jg8/i. romo, Ringu prov., japan. T. Kawamura. 3'?, 49, 60-77 



mm. 



Squilla scorpio, Latreille. 



IQ13. Squilla scoi-pio, Kemp, loc. cit., p. 42, pi. ii, fig. 30. 



1918. Sqziilla Scorpio, Sunier, Coiitrib. Faiine Indes Neerland. IV, p. 4. 



lyiS. Squilla scorpio. Kemp, Mem. Asiat. Soc. Bengal \'\, p. 297. 



Sunier has examined a number of specimens from the Aru Is., 

 Makassar and Batavia without finding any examples of the variety 

 immaculata. The variety was, however, found — for the first time 

 in company with typical examples — by Dr. Annandale in the 

 Tale Sap in Peninsular Siam (v. Kemp, /oc. cit., 1918). We have 

 seen additional specimens of the typical form from Singapore, 

 collected by Capt. Hutcheson. 



Squilla gonypetes, Kemp. 



1913. Squilla gonypetes, Kemp, loc. cit., p. 54, pi. iv, figs. 42-44. 

 1918. Squilla gonypetes, Sumcr, Contrib. Faui>e Indes Neerland. IN', 

 P- 5- 



' Bouvier, Bull. sci. France Belgique XLVIII, p. 308, text-figs. 39-42 



(1915)- 



