386 PERCY SLADEN TRUST EXPEDITION 



Alloniscus maldivensis Borradaile (Land Crustaceans in Gardiner's Fauna Maldives 

 and Laccadives, vol. i., p. 98, text-figs. 2, 3a, 6, 1901) from the Maldive Archipelago is 

 scarcely different from All. pigmentatus ; the description gives no information*. 



Genus Setaphora (Budde-Lund (5), p. 290), 1908. 



In the quoted paper I have given the provisional characters of this genus which I 

 have separated from the large genus Philoscia. 



Of the species of Philoscia, registered in Crust. Isop. Terr, only one species, Ph. 

 angusticauda Budde-Lund (1), p. 216, from "Borneo," has to be placed in the genus 

 Setaphora. But of species of Philoscia aftervs^ards described the follov^ing belong to 

 this genus : 



Ph. luhricata Budde-Lund (Ann. Mus. Civ. Gen. 5. 2, v. 14, p. 610), from "Burmah." 



Ph. comta Budde-Lund (ibid., p. 611), from Burmah. 



Ph. ccBca Budde-Lund (ibid., p. 611), from Burmah. 



Ph. truncatella Budde-Lund (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1902, p. 379), from "Malay 

 Peninsula." 



Ph. incurva Budde-Lund (ibid., p. 380), from "Malay Peninsula." 



Ph. suarezi DoUfus (Mdm. Soc. Zool. France, v. 8, p. 185), from "Madagascar, East 

 Africa." 



Ph. laticeps Bagnall (Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, v. 1, p. 429), "Europe," 

 imported? and I dare say also the follovs^ing : 



Ph. t7-uncata Dollfus (Weber, Reise Niederl. Ost. Ind. iv., p. 376), from Celebes and 

 Flores. 



Ph. variegata Dollfus (ibid., p. 377), from Celebes. 



Ph. iveberi Dollfus (ibid., p. 378), from Sumatra. 



Ph. cinctella Dollfus (ibid., p. 378), from Celebes. 



Ph. sundaica Dollfus (ibid., p. 379), from Sumatra and Java. 



Ph. pallida Dollfus (ibid., p. 380), from Java. 



Ph. alba Dollfus (ibid., p. 381), from Celebes. 



Ph. lifuensis Stebbing (A. Willey's Zool. Results, v., 1900, p. 648). 



Besides the three new species described below, I know about twenty undescribed 

 species of the genus Setaphora from different localities, most of them from the East Indies 

 and the Indian islands. 



31. Seta2)hora ovata, n. sp. (Plate 22, figs. 8 — 13). 



Superficies Isevis, nitida, vix punctata. 



Oculi mediocres, ocelli dense congregati, numero c. 20. 



* The description in fact agrees closely with that given in 1885 without figures by Budde-Lund for his 

 A. piymeniatus, except that the length of that species is stated to be 10 mm., while the longest specimen 

 of A. maldivensis measured only 3 '5 mm. 



