.'44 



TACil!; SKOnSHKHC 



with long, stiff socDiulary bristles at tlu- iiiiddU', distally tlu'y have slioit hairs or are bare; 

 this eiulite has one medial bfistle, of about the same type and size as that of the preceding endite. 

 The second exopodite joint is slightly shorter than that of the preceding species. It has a rather 

 large number of bristles, all situated very near the ventral edge of the joint. The two (sometimes 

 the three) posterior of these bristles are rather long, with long, soft hairs right to the point. 

 There is no pronounced gap between these bristles and the others. Ten to seventeen of the 

 remaining bristles are of moderate and somewhat varying lengths, with long hairs at the 

 middle and short hairs distally'; their long hairs are not arranged in distinct wreaths, those 

 on the posterior of these bristles are rather soft, those on the anterior ones are more stiff, 

 even somewhat stiffer than in the preceding species. From six to twelve bristles have short 

 hairs, are, as a rule, not inconsiderably shorter than the other bristles on this joint and are 

 somewhat, though only slightly, dis])laced from the ventral edge of the joint up the lateral 

 side. The pilosity is similar to that of the preceding species. 



Seventh limb: — This is very similar to that of the preceding species. The 

 following differences are to be noted: Distally there are from eleven to thirteen ventral cleaning 

 bristles and nine or ten (usually nine) dorsal ones placed very close together. Scattered irre- 

 gularly proximally of these there are eleven or twelve ventral and from ten to fourteen dorsal 

 cleaning bristles. The cleaning bristles are equipped with from three to seven bells. The end 

 comb consists of from ten to thirteen distal teeth and live or six proximal teeth on both sides 

 of these. The distal wart on the dorsal chitinous plate of the distal cavity is of about the 

 same type as in the preceding species, its central tooth, however, seems always to have a 

 single point. In other respects this limb is similar to that of the preceding species. 



Furca: — This is very like that of the preceding species, with the same number 

 of claws, aU weU defined fi'om the lamellae. The fourth claw is usually somewhat short and 

 weak comparatively, sometimes its weakness is even rather striking. The curvature of the 



Fig. XXXVII. — C. (Doloria) pectinaia n. sp. — 12. BncJopodite of the second antenna of a male larva in Stage I; 

 224 X- 13. Furca of a larva in Stage IV; the teeth of the claw.s are not drawn; 224 X. Furca of a larva in Stage V; 



the teeth of the claws are not drawn; 224 X. 



