306 CHILTON 
PONTOPHILUS AUSTRALIS (G. M. Thomson). 
Crangon australis G. M. Thomson, Trans. N.Z. Inst. xi., 1879, 
De oat. 
Pontophilus australis G. M. Thomson, Trans. Linn. Soe. (2), 
vill., 1903, p. 484. 
Several damaged specimens from Station 1 and one from 
Station 2. 
STOMATOPODA. 
LYSIOSQUILLA SPINOSA (Wood-Mason). 
Coronis spinosa Wood-Mason, Proc. Asiatic Soc. Bengal, 1875, 
p. 232. 
Lysiosquilla spinosa Miers, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., (5) v., 1880, 
p. 12, pl. 1., figs. 10-12, and p. 125. 
Chilton, Trans. N.Z. Inst., xxvii., 1891, p. 62; pl. x. and 
xt Op. 138) ie. 
One imperfect specimen from Station 5; the posterior end of 
the abdomen is wanting but the whole dorsal surface is quite 
smooth and the parts that can be examined agree well with this 
species which is widely distributed in New Zealand seas, and 
has also been recorded from the Andamans. 
SQUILLA ARMATA Milne-Edwards. 
Squilla armata M.-Edw., Hist. Nat. Crust., 11., 1837, p. 521. 
Gay, Hist. de Chile, Zool. i1i., Crust., 1849, p. 223. 
Miers, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 5, v., 1880, p. 25. 
A. M-Edw., Mission du Cap Horn, 1891, p. F. 53. 
Chilton, Trans. N.Z. Inst: xxii., 1891, p: 60, and xh; 19% 
p..135; fies. 1and 2, 
Stebbing, South African Crustacea, part 1., 1901, p. 45. 
Bigelow, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. xvii., 1895, p. 515. 
Several specimens from Station 85, found in the stomach of 
a Dasybatus brevicaudatus. These specimens are all of 
approximately the same size, the largest being about 84mm. in 
leneth. They agree on the whole well with the description of 
S. armata given by Miers, and evidently belong to the same 
species as two large specimens of S. armata in the Dominion 
Museum, with which I have been able to compare them through 
the kindness of Mr. A. Hamilton. They differ from these 
specimens only in having the median tubercles on the 4th, 5th 
and 6th abdominal segments obsolete and in the various carine 
being rather less prominent. In nearly all of them there are 
two or three small teeth on the posterior margin of the fifth 
