42 



In HomoeosccUg mimita (pi. II, fig. 1 i and fig. 1 k) I have found the rather small spennato- 

 thecse (though they are not illustrated) close together in the line between the hindmost pair 

 of trunk-legs, and I think I have found the two genital apertures in close proximity in the 

 posterior wall of the ventral depression — which is particularly conspicuous in fig. Ik — 

 in a line between the iirst pair of legs. 



In a number of species belonging to SjihreroneUa I have found a most peculiar struc- 

 ture beneath the larger part of the skin of the head at its back and sides. It appeared most 

 distinctly in S. paradoxn, where I saw very plainly beneath the skin a single layer of 

 rather large hollow spaces; fig. 4k in pi. Ill is drawn to the same scale of enlargement 

 as fig. 4 i and shows the skin and two rows of the afore-mentioned hollow spaces beside 

 each other. In S. Metopw (pi. IV, fig. 3 i) the spaces were filled and appeared in outline 

 as shown in the illustration. 



The males are sometimes liinged on the females, but much more frequently on the 

 gills or on the marsupial plates of the host by a thread which proceeds from the median 

 line of the front close in advance of the rostrum. This thread is secreted by a gland or 

 glands and can presumably be produced by the males of all species. The shortest tlu-ead I 

 found in Homoeoscelis minnta, in two specimens, in one of which its length was similar to 

 that of the first joint of the maxilliped, in the other somewhat shorter. In e. g. Spheer. para- 

 doxa (pi. Ill, fig. 4 h, s) the thread is about ^/s of the length of the animal, in Sfenothocheres 

 Sarsii (pi. I, fig. 2 k, s) a little shorter and in S. abi/sui (pi. IV, fig. 2 d) even a little longer 

 than the whole animal. I found the longest thread in a specimen of Aspidoecia Normani, 

 where it was between twice and three times as long as the animal, whereas in the spe- 

 cimen illustrated in pi. XII, fig. 3 k it was scarcely half as long as the male. Tlris last 

 instance shows that the length of the thread can vary very much in the same species, but 

 this is not usually the case, as in some species a shorter, in others a long tlu-ead is always 

 found. In all the above-mentioned and in several other species the tln-ead is always simple 

 and cylindrical, generally a little dilated towards the distal end by which it attaches itself, 

 and not unfrequently the end is expanded into a disk. Deviating forms of this tliread are 

 met with in the species of the genus Mysidion, and especially in the species wliicli I have 

 placed together below under the heading of the SpJueroneUa LeucJcarHi-grou]). In Mymlion 

 the proximal part of the thread is simple, the distal part appears in two varieties; either, 

 as in Mysidion abyssorum (pi. XII, fig. 2 g), it shows two considerable fusiform expansions, 

 the middle parts of which are each surrounded by a peculiar collar-shaped ring, or, as in 

 Mysidion commune (pi. XI, fig. 3h, s), the apical part is very tliick and above it the 

 thread dilates still more and becomes fusiform; its widest part has a collar-like ring, and 

 a similar ring surrounds it somewhat higher up, where the tliread is only half as wide. In 

 the species belonging to the SpJuer. Leuckartii-gvon^ we often find the male hinged by a thread 

 which varies in extent between nearly half and almost the full length of the animal, and is 

 constructed in the following way: it is divided into two parts, either of equal length, or 



