Land, Fresh- Water, and Marine Crustacea. 167 



Found in the stomachs of Gurnards (Trigla gurnardus), as 

 well as in the stomachs of sharp-tailed Lumpenus, small 

 Whitings, and Long Eough Dabs, captured in the estuary 

 in April and May 1901. 



Genus (65) Leptocheirus, Zaddach, 1844. 

 1 110. Leptocheirus hirsutimanus (Spence Bate). 



1862. Protomedeia hirsutimanus, Bate, Catal. Amphip. Brit. Mus., 

 p. 168, pi. xxx. fig. 6. 



1894. Leptocheirus pilosus, G. 0. Sars, op. cit., vol. i. p. 556, 



pi. cxcvii. (not L. pilosus, Zaddach). 



Habitat. — Dredged off Elie Ness in 17 fathoms in 1888. 

 Dredged off Inchkeith in 1890, and again in 1894; and at 

 Station III. and Station VI. in May 1901. In this species 

 the accessory appendage of the superior antennae is composed 

 of about six joints. 



111. Leptocheirus pilosus, Zaddach. 



1844. Leptocheirus pilosus, Zadd., Synopsis Crustaceorum Prussi- 



corum Prodr., p. 8. 

 ?1869. Protomedeia pectinata, Norman, Brit. Assoc. Rept. (1868), 

 p. 283. 



1895. Leptocheirus pilosus, A. O. Walker, Trans. Liverpool Biol. Soc, 



vol. ix. p. 310. 



Habitat. — Dredged in the Firth of Forth in 1893 and 

 1894. Over a dozen specimens of this species were obtained 

 in some material dredged off St Monans on 22nd May 1901. 

 In this species the accessory appendage of the superior 

 antennae is two-jointed. A female specimen, with ova, 

 measured a little over three millimetres. 



Genus (66) Gammaropsis, Lilljeborg, 1854. 



112. Gammaropsis maculata (Johnston). 



1828. Gammariis maculatus, Johnston, Coutrib. to Brit. Fauna, 



Zool. Jour., vol. iii. p. 1/6. 

 1894. Gam?naropsis erythrophthalma, G. O. Sars, Crustacea of 



Norway, vol. i. p. 558, pi. exeviii. 

 1900. ,, maculata, Chevreux, Albert I er Prince de 



Monaco, Camp. Scient. (Amphipoda), p. 92. 



Habitat. — Dredged off the west side of Inchkeith in 1888. 



1 Cf. A. O. Walker, "Revis. of the Amphip. of the L. M. B. C. District," 

 Trans. Liverpool Biol. Soc, vol. ix. p. 310 (1895). 



