40 Memoirs of the Indian Museum. [Vor. IV, 
A very small specimen ("'), a male 19 mm. in length, taken in company with 
large typical examples, is in an early post-larval stage. The spines at the antero- 
lateral angles of the carapace are not developed, submedian carinae are absent except 
on the last somite, and on the margin of the telson there are numerous minute sub- 
median denticles and ten or eleven intermediate. .\ similar but slightly larger example 
(|;), measuring 23°5 mm., is referred with some doubt to this species. The denticles 
on the margin of the telson are, as might be expected, fewer in number than in the 
small example, but in the bifurcate process of the uropods the lobe on the outer face 
of the long tooth is very much larger than in that specimen or in adults. In both 
these individuals the inner edge of the process is finely serrate. 
Spirit specimens of S. gi/es? show no characteristic colouring. 
The following examples are in the Indian Museum :— 
meas Off Madras Coast ; 80—110 fms., 
14° 18’ 15” N., 80° 18° 30” E. ‘ Investigator.’ I3d',94 mm; 49, 72—82 mm. 
TYPES. 
~ Madras Coast. ‘ Investigator.’ Ig, 23°5 mm. 
os” Off Orissa Coast; 19° 49’ N., 
86° 43’ E. ‘ Investigator.’ 19, 81mm. 
so N.E. Bay of Bengal; 65 fms., 
20° 18’ N., 90° 50’ E. “ Investigator.’ - 43, 19—59 mm. 
a0: ® Persian Gulf; 35 fms., 
26° 20’ 30” N., 54° 52’ 30” E. ‘ Investigator.’ I?,56mm. 
[Squilla minor, Jurich. | 
1904. Squilla minor, Jurich, Stomatop. Deutsch. Tiefsee-Exped., p. 364, pl. xxv, figs. 4, 4a. 
Allied, apparently, to the two preceding species is Jurich’s Sgwilla minor, des- 
cribed from two extremely small specimens (16°5 and 19°5 mm. in length) from 50 
metres near Zanzibar. According to the description and figures these examples differ 
from Brooks’ adult S. data in the following characteristics :— 
1. There are no intermediate carinae on the carapace and no submedian carinae 
on any segment of the post-abdomen except the last. 
. The rostrum is much wider, a little broader than long. 
3. The eyes are extremely large, their length being about gue tied the length of 
the carapace and rostrum. 
4. There is a prominent outstanding lobe at the proximal end of the external 
margin of the raptorial dactylus. 
5. The spine on the ventral surface of the fifth thoracic somite is unusually well- 
developed ; it extends outwards and is visible in dorsal view. 
6. There are three or four submedian denticles on the telson and on either side of 
the median crest there is an oblique row of six short elevations which appear 
to correspond with the interspaces between the impressed lines in S. /ata. 
i) 
