114 Rev. A. M. Norman's Notes on British Amphijjoda. 



Oban ; Loch Fyne ; Firth of Clyde ; Lulworth, Dorset ; 

 Jersey {A.M. N.) ; Banff (jT. Edward) ; Polperro [Laughrin] : 

 Mus. Norm. 



Distribution. Adriatic {Heller and Claus) : Mus. Norm. 

 Naples {Costa) ; Marseilles {Catta) ; Western France {M.- 

 Edioards &c.) ; South and West Norway {M. Sars dDc.) ; 

 Azores {Barrois). 



2. Leucothoe furina (Savigny). 



1809. Lycesta furina, Savigny, Descr. de I'Egypte, Crust, pi. ii. fig. 2. 

 1830. Leucothoe furina, M.-EdMards, Ann. des Sci. Nat. vol. xx. p. 381. 

 1840. Leucothoe furina, M.-Edwards, Hist. Nat. des Crust, vol. iii. 



p. 57, pi. xxix. fig. 14. 

 1857. Leucothoe proccra. Bate, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. xix. p. 146. 

 1862. Leucothoe furina, Rate «&; Westw. Brit. Sessile-eyed Crust. 



vol. i. p. 275. 



Hob. The specimen described by Bate and Westwood was 

 taken by the late Mr. T. Edward at Banff. I know of no 

 other British examples. 



Distribution. Mediterranean {Savigny cOc.) ; Western 

 France {Chevreaux cC'c). 



I recorded specimens nnder this name in my ' Shetland 

 Dredging Report ' of 1868 ; but they seem to difier in so many 

 particulars that I now describe them under the name Leuco- 

 thoe imparicornis. 



Chevreaux states that this species is always found free and 

 not in Ascidians or sponges ; he adds : — " On reconnait 

 facilement cettc esp^ce h la forme toute particuli^re du telson, 

 et surtout i\ un caraetere fort net que Sp. Bate n^a pas 

 signals : le bord inferieur du troisicime segment de I'abdomen 

 se termine en arri^re par un petit crochet aigu et recourb^ 

 landis que ce bord est carrdment tronque chez L. spin icarpa.^' 



3. Leucothoe imj7aricornisj n. sp. 

 (PI. X. tigs. 1-4.) 



Antennce (fig. 1) feeble and very short, not longer, or only a 

 little longer than the first two joints of the peduncle of anten- 

 nules; in the specimen figured the penultimate joint only reaches 

 to the end of the first joint of antennules, in otlier specimens it 

 is slightly (but only slightly) longer, penultimate joint the 

 longest ; flagellum of seven or eight articulations, subequal in 

 length to last joint of peduncle. First gnathopods (fig. 2) 

 having the hand narrow and the finger short, about equal to 

 one fourth of the length of the hand. Second gnathopods 

 (fig. 3) elongated, pyriform, dorsal margin slightly concave 



