ANOMOURA PAGURIDEA. 



Anterior region of carapax convex, naked, smooth. Eyes hardly 

 shorter than the front, smooth. Feet armed with short conical 

 spines having corneous tips; anterior pair subequal, hands sparsely 

 hirsute, upper margin of hand dense pilose, carpus of left leg having 

 upper surface gibbous ; second and third pairs lax and sparsely 

 hirsute, tarsus subterete, very long (longer than fifth joint), spi- 

 nules of under surface imperfectly seriate. 



Plate 29, fig. 10 a, animal, natural size ; b, side view, showing an- 

 tennae. 



Upolu, Navigator Group. Found in the forests, some miles from 

 the sea. The shell covering the abdomen is like the shell of a nutmeg. 



Length, about three inches. Colour, dark brown. The general 

 characters are similar to those of the Olivieri ; but the legs are longer 

 and hairy, the tarsus more slender, the eye-peduncles smooth instead 

 of granulous, carapax also smooth, and moreover naked. The shorter 

 flagellum of the inner antennae is about one-third the length of the 

 longer. 



CENOBITA RUGOSA, Edwards. 

 Plate 30, fig. 1, animal, natural size. 



Paumotu Archipelago, at Raraka ; Samoan Islands ; Tongatabu ; 

 Feejee Archipelago; Sooloo Sea. Common on bushes and on the 

 ground, often fifty rods or so from the sea. 



Length, often three inches. Colour, bluish and brownish gray; 

 generally a large brown spot on the outer surface of the hand, and 

 sometimes smaller ones on the four following legs. Eyes, black ; 

 peduncles, grayish. The hands are very unequal and a little pube- 

 scent. The granules of the surface are not acute. The eye-peduncle 

 is much flattened, but the outer of the upper edges is obtuse or 

 rounded. 



C. ruyosa, EDWARDS, Crust., ii. 241. 



Cenobita clypcata, OWEN, Crust. Blossom, p. 85, pi. 25, f. 3. 



