120 Memoirs of the Indian Museum. [Vou. IV, 
dactylar teeth, for the specimens which Lanchester records from Penang, and which 
also were only °75 inches in length, possess twelve to fourteen teeth. It is, however, 
not impossible that the post-larval development of the species may vary in different 
localities. 
The two examples of L. spinosa in the Indian Museum were found at the following 
localities :— 
pa Port Blair, Andamans, .. J. Wood-Mason. 2. 2 9), 68mm DVPe. 
*35 Dunedin, New Zealand. .. EF. W. Hutton. ee lS), Aime = 
The species has been recorded from numerous localities in New Zealand and in 
the neighbouring islands: Chatham Is., Kapiti and Waikanae, near Wellington 
(Kirk), Waipapa Pt. and Port Pegasus, Stewart I. (Thomson), Port Chalmers, Otago 
Harbour, Resolution I. (Chilton), Napier District (Hamilton) and Auckland Is., in the 
stomach of Notothenia microlepidota (Hutton). In addition it was found by Sir J. C. 
Ross’ Antarctic Expedition (Miers) and is known from Penang (Ianchester). Accord- 
ing to Chilton most of the specimens which have been recorded were taken from the 
stomachs of fish. 
6. Lysiosquilla acanthocarpus', Miers. 
1847. Cornis acanthocarpus, Gray MS., White, List Crus. Brit. Mus., p. 85 (sine desc.). 
1880. Lysiosgitilla acanthocarpus, Miers, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (5), V, pp. 11, 125, pl. i, figs. 7-9. 
1882. Lysiosquilla acanthocarpus, Haswell, Cat. Australian Crust., p. 206. 
1886. Lysiosquilla sarasinorum, Miiller, Verhandl. naturf. Ges. Basel, p. 478, pl. iv, fig. 3. 
1894  Lysiosquilla acanthocarpus, Bigelow, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XVII, p. 503. 
1894. Lysiosquilla saracinorum, Bigelow, ibid., p. 503. 
1904. Lysiosguilla acanthocarpus, Jurich, Stomatop. Deutsch. Tiefsee-Exped., p. 374, pl. xxvi, 
fig. 3. 
The dorsal surface is smooth and polished. The greatest breadth of the carapace 
is about equal to its mid-dorsal length ; for the rest, it bears a close resemblance to that 
of L. maculata. ‘The rostrum is widest at the base and is usually a little longer than its 
greatest breadth. It terminates in a slender median spine and possesses in addition 
prominent antero-lateral angles on either side. These are rectangular or slightly obtuse, 
and the margin both before and behind them is concave : the former more strongly 
so than the latter. The rostrum is thus composed of an almost square proximal portion 
which bears at its distal end a sharp spine with a very broad base. 
The eyes are composed of two closely-approximated lobes. The greatest breadth 
of the cornea is about equal to the greatest length of the stalk. The anterior edge of the 
ophthalmic somite is rounded, but, when the animal is viewed from above, is entirely 
concealed by the rostral plate, as are also the dorsal processes of the same somite. The 
antennular peduncle is less than half the length of the carapace excluding the rostrum. 
The dorsal processes of the antennular somite consist of two long and sharp spines 
directed obliquely outwards and forwards and reaching to the middle of the eyes. The 
mandibular palp is composed of three segments. 
'See addendum, p. 196. 
