CHELOl'HORES, PALPI, ETC. 



507 



these the terminal portion or " hand " forms a forcipate " chela," 

 of which tlie ultimate joint forms the " movable finger." In 

 some species of Nyviplion the chela is greatly 

 produced and attenuated, and armed with 

 formidable serrate teeth on its opposing edges ; 

 in otliers it is shortened, with blunter teeth ; 

 in Boreo7iymp]ion robust iim the claws are 

 greatly curved, with a wide gape between. 

 In this last, and in F/ioxichilidiuni, the oppos- 

 ing edges are smooth and toothless. In Cordy- fig. 268. — Proboscis 

 lochele the hand is almost globular, the movable aiid cheiophores of 



° ' Cordylochele longt- 



tinger being shortened down, and half enclosed coUis,G-0.^. (After 

 l)y the otlier. ^'''''•) 



Palpi. — The second pair of appendages, or palps, are absent, 

 or all l:)ut absent, in the adult Pycnogonum, Phoxichilus, Phoxi- 

 chilidium, Pallenc, and their allies. In certain of these cases, 

 e.g. Phoxichilidium, a knob remains to mark their place ; in 

 others, e.g. Pallenopsis, a single joint remains; in a few Pallenidae 

 a sexual difference is manifested, reduction of the 

 appendage being carried further in the female than 

 in the male. The composition of the palps varies 

 in the genera that possess them. In Kymphon 

 there are five joints, and their relative lengths 

 (especially of the terminal ones) are much used 

 by Sars in defining the many species of the genus. 

 The recently described Paranymp)l(on, Caullery, has 

 palps of six or seven joints. In the Ammotheidae 

 Fig. 269.— i'w/,!/- the number of joints ranges from five or six in 

 cide hispida, Tanvsttilum to nine (as a rule) in Ammothea and 



Kr., showing -jo \ / 



stalked pro- Oovhynchus, ov ten, according to Dohrn, in certain 



boscis and zig- gpeyigj^ Qf Ammothea. Colossendeis and the Eury- 



cididae have a ten-jointed palp, which in this last 



family is very long and bent in zigzag fashion, as it is, by the way, 



also in Atntnothea. The terminal joints of the palp are in all cases 



more or less setose, and their function is conjecturally tactile. 



Ovigerous Legs. — Custom sanctions for these organs an 

 inappropriate name, inasmuch as it is only in the males that 

 they perform the function which the name connotes.^ They 



' As a rare exceiition, Hoek has found the eggs carried on the ovigerous legs in 

 a single female of N'ymplion brevicaudatum, Miers. 



