apparently new Gopepods from the Clyde. ISO 



The antennse are stout and apparently four-jointed, and are 

 provided with several terminal setiB; two of these setae are 

 elongate and slightly hooked, while other two terminate in 

 what appear to be rounded disks, as shown by the figure 

 (PI. XI. fig. 7) ; the antennse do not appear to be furnished 

 with secondary branches. The mandibles are elongate 

 slender appendages that terminate in hook-like extremities 

 and are furnished interiorly near the middle with two long 

 marginal setge (PL XI. fig. 8). The maxillae are very rudi- 

 mentary, each being little more tiian a short stout tubercle 

 bearing two small hairs (PI. XI. fig. 9). The anterior foot- 

 jaws, which are also rudimentary, are short, stout, and some- 

 what triangular in outline, and are one-jointed and provided 

 with two terminal setae (PI. XI. fig. 10). The posterior foot- 

 jaws are apparently two-jointed, the first joint being compara- 

 tively large and dilated interiorly, so as to assume a gibbous 

 form and having a considerable portion of the interior surface 

 clothed with minute spines ; the second joint is very small 

 and armed with three unequal setse, as shown by the figure 

 (PI. XL fig. 11). So far as can be made out there appear 

 to be only three pairs of thoracic feet ; the first and second 

 pairs are somewhat similar in structure ; the basal joints of 

 each foot are two in number and very stout, the second of the 

 two basal joints carries two branches, which are compara- 

 tively wide apart ; the inner branches are composed of two 

 and the outer of three joints, and both are moderately slender ; 

 the armature of the inner branches consists of three terminal 

 setae, the exterior one being short, while the other two are 

 elongate and plumose ; four elongate setae spring from the 

 inner margin of the outer branches, one from the second joint 

 and three from the last; the exterior marginal setse are 

 short (PI. XI. fig. 12). The third pair of feet are apparently 

 only one-branched, the outer branches being developed, while 

 the inner are obsolete ; these outer branches are two-jointed 

 and articulated to the upper part of the distal extremity of 

 the stout second basal joints (PI. XI. fig. 13). There appear 

 to be no fourth or fifth pairs. The ovisacs form elongate 

 cylinders and appear to contain a single series of large ova. 

 Situated between and a little in front of the mandibles is a 

 large circular appendage, which from its peculiar structure is 

 probably a sucking-disk for enabling the Copepod to adhere 

 more securely to the creature that forms its host ; but whether 

 that is its only function we are unable to say. This ap- 

 pendage is represented by figure 17, PI. X. 

 Male unknown. 



