_^ J^ ^v^^ ■ ^ — 



f ^1— j^r.^^—nm-^ 



■■ _ _L- . r , 



LITIIODES PANAMENSIS. 



51 



the peduncle together ; the acicle is armed with a small tooth on the external 

 margin midway between the base and the tip. There is no trace of an acicle 

 on the left antenna in the typo specimen^ which is the only one obtained. 

 The last segment of the pednnclc is nearly twice as long as the penultimate 

 segment. The chelipeds are furnished with scattered tubercles, a few of 

 which assume a spiny character. The left cheliped is rather slenderer 

 than its fellow. The ambulatory legs are long and rather slender, their 

 meri sparsely furnished above with tubercles, which tend to assume a spiny 

 form on the anterior and posterior margins; at the distal end of the anterior 

 margin of the meri there is a prominent spine-like tooth ; the carpi and 

 propodites are armed with teeth, as shown in the figure ; the dactyh are 

 equipped with four short spines (two superior and two lateral) near the 

 proximal end. The abdominal segments (of the female) are roughened by 

 low tubercles and dentate on their margins. The lateral teeth of the mar- 

 ginal plates of the right side are drawn out into long spines, as shown in 

 Fig. 1% Plate X. The tergal plate of the second abdominal segment is com- 

 pletely fused with the epimera, showing no trace of an intervening suture. 

 The marginal (episternal ?) plates of this segment are bounded within by a 



distinct suture. 



Length of carapace, excluding rostrum, 79 mm. ; rostrum, 14 mm. ; 

 breadth of carapace, 79.5 mm. ; length of posterior pair of ambulatory 

 legs, 193 mm. (merus, 58.5 mm.; carpus, 31 mm., propodite, 54 mm., dac- 

 tyl us, 33 mm.). 



Station 3384. 458 flithoms. 1 fern. 



Lillmks panamcnsis finds its nearest relatives in i. turritiis Ortm.,* from 

 Japan, and L> nmrrayi IIend.,t from Prince Edward Island in the Southern 



Ocean. 



; s 





1: 



Two more species of Lithodes were obtained, but they are represented by 

 specimens too young to furnish specific characters. One of these immature 

 forms very closely reseuibles young individuals of Lithodes agassmi Smith, such 

 as are represented on Plate I., Fig. 2, of Bull Mus. Comp. Zool, Vol. X., 

 No. 1 and probably belongs to the same or a closely allied species. It is 

 represented by three Individuals (the largest 14 mm. long) from Station 

 3365, 1010 fathoms, Station'^407, 885 fathoms, and Station 3418, 660 



■ 



*- Ortnumu, Zoolog. Jahrb., Abtli. f. Syst., VI. 320, Taf. XII. Fig. 36, 1893. 

 f Henderson, Eep. Challenger Aiiomura, p. 43, Tlale IV., 18S8. 



>K 



■i^ 





