360 



>uter corner apparently quite absent, or perhaps more properly forming an inte- 

 grant part of the distal joint, a thin bristle, exactly resembling that usually issu- 

 ing from the said process, being present at the outer corner of the distal joint 

 itself; inner expansion rather large, extending considerably beyond the distal 

 joint, and, like that joint, clothed on the lower face with an obliquely transverse 

 row of small spinules, apical setae resembling those on the distal joint and slightly 

 unequal in length. 



Colour not yet ascertained. 



Length of the specimen examined 0.81 mm. 



Remarks. This is a rather anomalous species, and should perhaps more 

 properly be regarded as the type of a separate genus, differing, as it does, rather 

 conspicuously from the other species in some of the structural details. The an- 

 tennae and oral parts seem, however, on the whole to be built upon the type 

 characteristic of the present genus. 



Occurrence. Of this form also only a solitary female specimen has come 

 under my notice. It was found in a sample taken at Kopervik, SW coast of 

 Norway, from a depth of about 30 fathoms. 



Distribution. Scottish coast (Scott). 



Page 46. 



Bradya typica, Boeck. 

 Distribution. Polar islands north of Grinnel Land (2nd Fram Exp.). 



Page 47. 



Add the following species. 



Bradya armifera (Scott). 



(Suppl. PI. 6, fig. 2). 



Ectinosoma armiferum, Th. Scott, I.e. p. 434, PL 36. figs. 20, 43; PI. 37, figs. 4, 17, 31, 53; 



PI. 38, figs. 14, 19, 37, 43. 



Specific Characters. Female. Body moderately slender, with the anterior 

 division less sharply marked off from the posterior than in the type species, though 

 exceeding it somewhat in width. Cephalic segment comparatively large, being 

 fully as long as the 4 succeeding segments combined, and gradually contracted 

 in front, rostral projection of moderate size, and evenly rounded at the tip. Uro- 

 some scarcely more than half as long as the anterior division, and having the 

 segments apparently quite smooth; last segment shorter than the preceding one. 

 Caudal rami very small and far apart, being scarcely as long as they are broad, 

 apical setae very slender, the inner medial one almost attaining the length of the 





