94 STALK-EYED CRUSTACEA. 
Length (ovigerous female), 40 mm.; length of carapace, 13.5 mm. ; 
breadth, 14 mm.; rostrum, 5 mm. 
Station, 3424. 676 fathoms. 2 males, 1 female ovig. 
3425. 680 : imalessae ss xs 
Munidopsis scabra resembles M. sharrert (A. M. Edw.), but may be at once 
distinguished from the latter by the shortness of the ocular spines, and the 
great development of the spiny-pointed tubercles of the carapace. 
Munidopsis tanneri Fax. 
Plate XXII, Fig. f, 1°. 
Bull. Mus. Comp. Zodl., XXIV. 187, 1893. 
Carapace flat, quadrangular, covered with squamous setiferous tubercles 
which have a tendency to develop spiny points on the gastric region. This 
is especially true of a transverse row of six on the anterior part of this 
region. The rostrum is triangular and horizontal. There is a prominent 
spine on each side of the anterior margin of the carapace between the eye 
and the antenna, another at the antero-lateral angle, and two or three on the 
side of the anterior branchial lobe ; the hind border of the carapace is den- 
ticulated. A small spine over the eye. Antenne shorter than the body; one 
spine on the outer side of the first joint, two lateral and one superior on the 
second and third joints. Cheliped (present in only one specimen) long, slen- 
der; merus and carpus many-spined ; propodite spiny along the upper and 
lower margins; tips of fingers enlarged and denticulated. Ambulatory 
limbs: a prominent row of spines on the upper edge of the merus and 
carpus, propodite and dactylus devoid of spines. Abdomen without spines; 
pleurze narrow, angles rounded. 
Length, 41 mm.; length of carapace, 23.5 mm.; breadth, 15.5 mm. ; 
rostrum, 6 mm. 
Station 3396. 259 fathoms. 2 males, 1 fem, (1 male with Bopyrus.) 
Be. = flay, | 1 male. 
This species is nearly related to MZ. scabra, but differs from the latter 
species in having the carapace broader and flatter, with squamous tubercles 
which are not produced into points, except a few on the gastric area. The 
spine between the eye and the antenna is longer; the propodites of the 
ambulatory legs are smoother, with no well-developed spines. 
