84 A KEYISION OP THE BEITISH SPECIES OP 



C serrulatus is, in the British. Islands, certainly the commonest 

 representative of the genus, few gatherings of Copepoda, from 

 whatever elevation, whether from lakes, ponds, or smaller col- 

 lections of water, heing entirely without it. It is, moreover, 

 remarkably constant in its characters and can scarcely be con- 

 founded with any other species. The American C. pectinifer, 

 Cragin, seems to be only a variety and scarcely a well-marked 

 one. Eehberg identifies this species with C. agilis, Koch, chiefly 

 on account of the shape of the egg-sacs. Koch's figures may 

 very probably be meant to refer to C. serrulatus, but it seems? 

 scarcely wise to discard Fischer's well-known specific name for 

 one of only speculative propriety. 



C. serrulatus is recorded by almost all continental authors : — 

 Norway (G. 0. Sars) ; Sweden (Lilljeborg) ; Germany (Fischer, 

 Koch, Claus) ; Tyrol (Heller) ; Bohemia (Fric) ; Holland (Hoek) ; 

 Turkestan (TJljanin), North America (Herrick). 



12. Cyclops macrurus, G. 0. Sars (PL YII,, fig. 2). 



1863. Cyclops macrurus, G. 0. Sars (20), p. 45. 

 1878. „ „ Brady (82), p. Ill, pi. XXIY., 



figs. 1-5. 



Crag Lake, Northumberland, was until recently the only 

 known British locality for this species. But it occurs also very 

 plentifully in collections made by the Eev. Dr. Norman in the 

 Castle Loch, Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire, and in Loch Achray, 

 Perthshire. It is recorded by G. 0. Sars from Norway and by 

 Eehberg from Germany. The last-named author identifies it 

 with C spinulosus, Claus, but as that species is described as 

 having antennae longer than those of C. serrulatus it is impossible 

 to accept the identification. 



13. Cyclops magnoctavus, Cragin. 



1883. Cyclops magnoctavus, Cragin (40), p. 5, pi. IIL, 



figs. 14-23. 



Cephalothorax subelliptical, widest in the middle, none of its 

 segments angulated nor prominent laterally, the last segment 



