1896.] A. Alcock — Garcinological Fauna of India. 293 



110. Eaninoides persouahis, White, Henderson. 



Baninoides personatus, White MS., Henderson ' Challenger' Anomura p. '27 pi. ii. 

 fig. 5. 



Carapace twice as long as broad. The lateral border in its posterior 

 half is defined by a fine raised and milled line, and at either external 

 orbital angle is prolonged into a spine, at a distance behind which 

 equal to the distance between it and the rostrum is a second smaller 

 but still large, spine. The carapace between the two latter spines is 

 finely punctate and in places granular, elsewhere it is smooth and 

 polished. 



The front consists of three teeth, the middle one of which alone 

 is large and prominent forming the true rostrum, the lateral teeth 

 being small : between each of these small lateral teeth and the external 

 orbital spine, and separated from both by a fissure, is an angular lobe 

 that completes the roof of the orbit. The whole fronto-orbital border 

 is hairy. The pterygostomian regions are densely granular in a well 

 defined band that occupies much more than their outer half. 



The chelipeds have the ischium armed distally, on its inner border 

 with a sharp slender spine : two similar spines occur towards the distal 

 end of the carpus — the larger one being on the outer border the 

 smaller on the dorsal surface : a similar spine is found towards the 

 far end of the outer border of the hand, and three occur alono- the 

 inner border of the hand: the dactylus has a smooth cutting edo-e, 

 but the opposed edge of the immobile finger is very sharply laciniate 

 np to a sharp terminal spine. There is no spine on the outer edo-e of 

 the dactylus. The third pair of true legs has its merus on both edo-es 

 and the other joints on the posterior edge fringed with long stiff hairs 

 the second pair has similar hairs on the posterior edge of merus carpus 

 and propodite, the first pair on lower edge of propodite. 



Excluding the filiform last pair, the other legs have the carpus 

 dorsally carinate, and the propodite and dactylus foliaceous. 



In the Indian Museum collection are numertwrs specimens from the 

 coasts of the Bay of Bengal, from 12 to 70 fathoms. 



111. Rauinoides serratifrons, Henderson. 



Raninoicles serratifrons, Henderson, Trans. Linn. Soc, Zool., (2) V. 1893 p. 

 408, pi. xxxviii. figs. 10-12. 



Differs from B. personatus Henderson in the following particulars: i 



(1) the rostrum is carinated, and it, as well as the dentiform lobe 

 at either side of its base, has the edge sharply clearly and uniformly 

 serrated : 



(2) between the dentiform lobe at the base of the rostrum and the 



