MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 261 



ber. Several individuals moulted once or twice, but beyond a slight increase 

 in size, a growing opacity of the shell, and the change in the teLsou noiiced 

 above, little alteration was discernible. 



On looking at the proportions of the adult Porcellana macrocheles (Fig. 11 ; 

 the carapace of this specimen measured 9 nun. in length by 12.5 mm. m 

 width) one might be inclined to doubt its identity with our young form ; but I 

 have material at hand to show that the widening of the airapace is the gradual 

 result of growth. In a specimen 3.5 mm. broad, caught, free-swimming, at 

 Newport on the 30th August, 1865, by Mr. Alexander Agassiz,* of which he 

 made a sketch at the time, the breadth of the carapace exceeds its length by 

 one fifth. In a specimen from Charleston, S. C, 6 mm. broad, the carapace 

 is less than one fourth broader than long. 



As the delicate integument of. the young becomes indurated by the deposi- 

 tion of calcareous salts, and the aeration of the blood devolves more and more 

 exclusively upon the gills, the carapace broadens with the expansion of the 

 respiratory chamber. This change in the proportions of the carapace is com- 

 monly seen in the Brachyum Avhen a graduated series from very small to adult 

 specimens is examined, and Carcinologists cannot be warned too often against 

 establishing new species upon juvende characters. 



List of W(»-ks relating to the Development of Porcellana. 



Hailstone and Westwood. Descriptions of some Species of Crustaceous Animals. 

 By S. Hailstoxe, Jun., Esq. "With Illustrations and Remarks, by J. 0. West- 

 wood, Esq., F. L. S., etc. Loudon's Magazine of Natural History, Vol. VIII. 

 pp. 261 - 277 ; Figs. 28, 29, May, 1835. 



This paper contains descriptions and figures of a series of young specimens of Por- 

 cellance from Hastings, England (P. minuta Westw. ; probably the young of P. Ion- 

 gicomis, M. Edw.). The smallest of these specimens measured 2 mm. in length, and 

 was used by AVestwood as an argument against the probability of a metamorphosis in 

 Porcellana, which had recently been announced by J. V. Thompson. 

 Thompson, J. V. Memoir on the Metamorphosis in Porcellana and Portunus. En- 

 tomological Magazine, Vol. III. pp. 275-277, Fig. 1, Oct. 1835. 

 This is the first published notice of the zoea of PorcellanaA Thompson actually 



* Mr. Agassiz has another drawing of a young Porcellana raised from the zoea at 

 Newport, August 17, 1875, which seems to indicate the occuiTence of a second species 

 on the coast of New England. In this form the front is prominent and triangular, 

 the dactyli of the ambulatory feet long and without the accessory claws of Pohjonyx. 

 The length of the carapace is 3 mm., its breadth slightly less. 



t According to Clans, who ignores the observations of Thompson, Couch, and 

 Dujardin (Marburger Sitzungsberichte, 1867, p. 12 ; Untersuchungen iiber Crus- 

 taceen, p. 57), the larva of Porcellana was described under the name of Lonchophorus 

 ancej^s as early as 1825 by Eschscholtz. (Bericht iiber die zoologische Ansbeute 

 wahrend Apt Reise von Kronstadt bis St. Peter- und Paul. Isis von Oken. 1825, 1, 

 col. 734 ; Taf. V. Fig. 1.) The animal here referred to, as is evident from the fiss- 

 ure, is the Brach3'uran zoea afterwards described by Dohm (Zeits. Wiss. ZooL XXI. 



