CRUSTACEA DECAPODA— BORRADAILE. 95 



Super-family PAGURIDEA. 



Family PAGURIDAE. 

 Sub-family PAGURINAE. 

 27.- Paguristes suhpilosus, HencL, 1888. 



Paguristes sulpilosus, Henderson, " Challenger " Macrura, p. 77, pi. VIII, fig. 2. 

 The specimens would agree equally well with the description of P. harhatus 

 (Heller) (Ortmann, Zool. Jahrb. VI, Syst., p. 279) were it not that the dactylopodites 

 of the second and third legs are a good deal longer than the propodites and do not 

 show a distinct continuation of the hairy line on the outside of the latter. 

 Four specimens were taken at Stations 90 and 96. 



Sub-family EUPAGURINAE. 



28. Eupagurus norae, QhiltOTi, I'd!!. 



Eupagimis edimrdsii, Pilhol, Bull. Soc. Philomath. Paris (7), VIII, p. 66 (1883) ; Miss. He 

 Campbell, III, ii, p. 412, pi. LII, figs. 1, 2 (1885); Thomson, Trans. N.Z. Inst. 1898, 

 pp. 173, 182. 



Eupagums novae, Chilton, Rec. Canterbury Mus. I, p. 299 (1911). 



The specimens agree closely with Thomson's description, but in most, though not 

 in all, the teeth on the fingers of the great chela are obsolescent. 



Many of both sexes were dredged in shallow water at Station 134, off New 

 Zealand. 



29. Eupagurus kirki, Filhol, 1885. 



Eupagums JcirJci, Filhol, Miss. He Campbell, III, ii, p. 416, pi. LI, fig. 5 ; Thomson, Trans. 

 N.Z. Inst. 1898, p. 175, pi. XX, figs. 8-10. 



According to Thomson, the antennular stalk should be one-fourth shorter than 

 the eyestalk. In the three specimens taken by the Expedition the antennular stalk 

 slightly outreaches the eye. 



Station 134. 



30. Eupagurus crenatus* n. sp. Fig. 8. 



Diagnosis. — Carapace smooth, with a few sparse hairs. Rostrum low, broad, not 

 covering eye somite. Length of eyestalks moderate, less than width of carapace just 

 behind antennae. Antennular stalk outreaching eye by nearly all its last joint. 

 Antennal scale outreaches eye ; flagellum outreaching, by a little, second leg. Third 

 maxilliped a little outreaching antennule. First legs unequal. In the right, which is 

 the larger of the two, meropodite hatchet-shaped in side view, its outer surface scaly, a 

 spine at distal end of its upper edge and a row of smaller spines along lower edge ; 

 wrist faintly granular on outer side, strongly so above, some of the granules rising into 



* In allusion to the crenate ridges on the hands of the chelipeds. 



