52 SMITHSONIAN misce;lIvAne;ous collections 



the thumb extending on to the hand for some Httle distance. Ambu- 

 latory feet conspicuously hairy; their sides smooth. Dimensions of 

 a male : Length of carapax, 0.33 ; breadth, 0.45 inch. 



It has considerable resemblance to Cancer electra Herbst (pi. Li, 

 fig. 6), but the frontal teeth are less prominent and the greatest 

 width is at the penult, and not at the last antero-lateral tooth. 



This species was taken at Loo Choo. 



73. CHLORODIUS EXARATUS' Milne Edwards 



Plate VI, Fig. 3-4, 6-9 



Chlorodius exaratus Milne Edwards, Hist. Nat. des Crust., i, 402; Illust, 

 Cuv., pi. XI, fig. 3. HoMBRON and Jacquinot, Voj^ au Pole Sud, pi. 11,. 

 fig. 3. Dana, U. S. Expl. Exped., Crust, i, 208. 



Chlorodius sanguineus Milne Edwards, Hist. Nat. des Crust., i, 402. 

 Dana, U. S. Expl. Exped., Crust., i, 207, pi. xi. fig. 11. 



Xantho aiflnis De Haan, Fauna Japonica, Crust., 48, pi. xiii, fig. 8. 



Xantho lividiis De Haan, /. c, 48, pi. xiii, fig. 6. 



Xantho distinguendus De Haan, /. c, 48, pi. xiii, fig. 7 (?). 



This is the most common of the numerous species of Chlorodius 

 found in the eastern seas, and large numbers of specimens were col- 

 lected by the expedition at different places on the shores of China and 

 at the Japanese and the Pacific islands. It is only after a long and 

 careful study of these specimens that we have arrived at the results 

 set forth in the above synonymy. 



That the Chlorodius exaratus of Milne Edwards is a very variable 

 species, and is so considered by the carcinologists at Paris, will be 

 evident from a comparison of the figure in the illustrated edition of 

 the "Regne Animal" with that in the "Voyage au Pole Sud." But 

 one would scarcely be prepared to find so much variety in the char- 

 acter of the surface, the number and shape of the lateral teeth, and 

 the sculpture of the feet, as we see in the present instance, these 

 characters being in other genera and species of the highest specific 

 importance. The varieties described below, however, are found to 

 run into each other in all the characters which at first sight strike 

 the examiner as specific, and several of them are often found living 

 together under circumstances which do not fail to impress the col- 

 lector with the idea that they are one and the same species. 



We are first led to question the distinctness of C. sanguineus by 

 finding in a number of specimens from Loo Choo the supplementary 

 tooth posterior to the lateral one, gradually becoming smaller and 



Leptodius exaratus Milne Edwards. 



