XXI 



AMBULATORY LEGS 



509 



if we include, the terminal claw. They vary from a length about 

 equal to that of the body (Pyciwgonwm, Rhynchothorax, Ammothea) 

 to six or seven times as much, perhaps more, in Nymplwn and 



FIG. 273. Nymphon stromii, Kr. Male carrying egg-masses on his ovigerons legs. 



Colossendeis, the fourth, fifth, anil sixth joints being those that 

 suffer the greatest elongation. The seventh joint, or tarsus, is 



FIG. 274. Terminal joints (tarsus and }>ropodus) of legs. 1, C]icln,ii/in/>linii Iiii- 



Kulir. : 2, X. xlriiiiiii, Kr. ; 3, A'I/I/I/I/III brevirostre, llod;jv : 4. Ammothea <'<-/iu/<>l". 

 Hodge ; 5, Ascorhynchus abyssi, G.O.S. (All after Sars.) 



usually short, but in some Nymphonidae is much elongated; 

 the eighth, or propodus, is usually somewhat curved, and usually 

 possesses a special armature of simple or serrate spines. The 



