94 THE EOTIFEEA. 



Family XV. CATHYPNAD^. 



[Body inclosed in a lorica, ojjcn at each end, of two j^lo-tcs ; the dorsal more or less 

 elevated ; the ventral ncarhj flat, the two divided by a dee}} lateral longitudinal sulcus, 

 covered ivith flexible membrane ; toes tivo, or one, always exjioscd. 



This is a ■well-marked, easily recognised, and compactly coherent group, the two 

 divisions of the lorica, and their connection, readily identifying its members, notwith- 

 standing the diversity in toes. The appearance, viewed from behind, reminds one of a 

 pair of bellows, if we only imagine the upper board arched instead of flat ; the leathers 

 representing the lateral sulci. The toes, m two of the genera, are two, furcate ; in the 

 others there is but a single toe : yet the form, position, and use of these organs are so 

 exactly identical, and yet so peculiar, that the genera cannot be dissociated. An ample 

 brain, descending into the occiput, carries a single eye, usually conspicuous. The trophi 

 are large, the mallei much more developed than the incus, virgate. 



All the genera are marked by a common habit, which is not found elsewhere. One 

 will rest on the tip of its toe (or toes), and having bent down the whole body, remain 

 motionless, and as if asleep, for a long interval, the whole fore-parts retracted. Then 

 it will seem to awake, and languidly swing round the body, first to the one side, and 

 then to the other, without letting go its moorings, and without protruding its head ; and 

 then, perhaps, go to sleep again. Or it may rouse itself into activity, and begin to 

 grope away among the floccose, or glide deliberately off, soon coming again to anchor. 



Five species were known to Ehrenberg, who placed the two with furcate toes in the 

 genus Euchlanis, with which, however, they have no close affinity. — P.H.G.] 



Genus CATHYPNA, Gosse, gen. nov. 



[GEN. CII. Lorica sub-circular liorizontally , ustcally much arched vertically ; 

 lateral inangulation wide and deep ; toes two, furcate. 



The characters by W'hich the species of this genus are distinguished are sometimes 

 minute, and even obscure, yet constant ; the shape assumed by the toes, and especially 

 by the extreme points of these organs, demanding attention. Li one group they are 

 narrow, parallel-sided, like a carpenter's rule ; in another, much widened in the middle, 

 with the sides curving to the point : the former I call rod-shaped, the latter blade-shaped. 

 The former, too, do not taper gradually to the tip, but are abruptly narrowed with a 

 right- angle, so as to make a sensible shoulder, whence the point descends as a marked 

 claw. And this may be only on one edge, or on both edges ; the too being one-shouldered 

 or two-shouldered. — P.H.G.] 



C. LUNA, Ehrenberg. 

 (PL XXIV. fig. 4.) 

 Euchlanis luna . . . Ehrenberg, Die In/us. 1838, p. 402, Taf. Ivii., fig. 10. 



[SP. CII. Dorsal and ventral plates of lorica sub-equal, occipital edge crcsccntie ; 

 toes rod-shaped, tivo-fifths as long as lorica, clawed ; the claw one-shouldered, one-flfth 

 as long as toe. 



The lorica, broadly ovate in horizontal outline, ending in front by a crescentic exca- 

 vation, and in rear by a small sinus between two points, and the toes, very narrow, 

 parallel-edged, generally carried in contact, with short, sharp claw-tips, may easily serve 

 to identify this common species. The dorsal and ventral plates are of nearly the same 

 form and curvature ; high and deep behind, they come into contact in front, at least at 

 the lateral edges, which project in two acute points. During the long retractations of 

 the fore-parts, the lorica may bo considered shut by this contact. AVhcn activity is 

 resimicd, the plates separate, and a broad head protrudes, the front of whicli is tnmcate, 



