19 if Miscellaneous. 



seen beneath. I could also detect the breathiiip; apparatus placed on 

 eacli side at the back of the uioutli ; the inovcnifiit was similar to 

 that of a long rojje when gently waved at one end. After a few days' 

 confinement it ehanged colour : five or six broadish bands of a lovely 

 rose colour appeared, the bands of colour being restricted to the back 

 portion of each segment of the body ; the tail also changed to the 

 same rosy hue, but in the course of two or three days the animal again 

 assumed its original colour. I have noticed this change of colour in 

 many of the Palceinoniilfc and Crauyonidcc, and I believe it to arise 

 from the transparency of the cuticle enabling any change in the body 

 itself to be seen through it, and that the change of colouring of the 

 body is occasioned by fear or some instinct. In all the specimens of 

 Nika I have obtained the shell is soft as in a new-moulted Prawn, and 

 in piercing them with a fine pin for preserving, the shell bends before 

 it. Is this of any value as a generic character ? M. Milne-Edwards 

 says they resemble Athatias "in possessing but a small rostrum;" 

 they also resemble them in their mode of locomotion, as they then 

 carry the external pedipalps and first pair of feet extended before 

 them in a line with their body ; their movements are also slow and 

 deliberate, and they appear to progress by walking and not by 

 swimming; when alarmed they shoot backwards by striking forward 

 with their tail, as is the hat)it of all the long-tailed ('rustaceans. 



I now proceed to lay before you the information I have obtained 

 as to its liabits. 



I may assert that Nika is essentially a burrowing genus. I was 

 not prepared to find it so, as I considered its slender limbs and its 

 prominent eyes but ill-adapted for the purpose ; however, we live 

 and lejirn, and I have learned that practice is far better than theory; 

 had I relied on the latter I should have insisted i\\dXNika edutis w&s 

 not a burrower. 



In accordance with a plan which I have formed of attempting to 

 study the habits of any of our rarer marine animals I may have the 

 good fortune to meet with, I placed my prisoner in a vase with a 

 few weeds and some pebbles, that being the nature of the ground on 

 which it was dredged; 1 left it in this vessel for two days, and found 

 out it was not at home, and, in fact, that a j)ebbly bottom was not 

 its choice. I therefore removed it to a large earthenware pan in 

 which I had previously placed a few weeds, having filled it also to 

 the depth of three inches with coarse gravel ; I then left it for an 

 hour, and on examining the vessel I could not find my friend ; I 

 searched on the table, thinking it might have thrown itself out, but 

 it was without success ; I turned over the stones and weeds, and with 

 the like result. I then commenced turning over the gravel, and at 

 last found that Nikf/ edulis was a burrowing Crustacean. I accord- 

 ingly transferred it for facility of observation to a vase, and })lacing 

 in it the same material, namely, the coarse gravel and weeds, in this 

 gravel it buried itself three several times. Burrowing in this loose 

 material was evidently a difficult matter ; it required great f)atience 

 and perseverance to overcome the difficulty occasioned by the loose 

 gravel constantly falling in on the excavator : it took the animal ten 



