50(3 ZOOLOGY sect. 



marked off from one another. The abdomen is devoid of caudal 

 styles. The exoskeleton of the head unites with that of more or 

 fewer of the thoracic segments to form a cephalo thoracic carapace. 

 Paired eyes are usually present and may be sessile or stalked. 

 The antennules are biramous in most cases. The mandibles arc 

 provided with a palp. There is usually a raetamorjjhosis, but a 

 nauplius-stage rarely occurs. 



Series I. — Leptostraca (Phyllocarida). 



Malacostraca in Avhich the abdomen contains seven segments 

 and a telson — the last segment des'oid of appendages, the telson 

 bearing a pair of caudal stylus. There is a large bivalved carapace 

 with an adductor luuscle, enclosing the greater part of the body. 

 The thoracic appendages are foliaceous, the abdominal biramous. 



Includes only one order, the Nebaliacea, with Nebalia (Fig. 457) 

 and three allied geuera. 



Series II. — Eumalacostraca. 



Malacostraca with six segments and a telson in the abdomen, 

 the latter never provided with caudal styles. Carapace never 

 bivalve. Thoracic appendages nearly always leg-like, but seldom 

 all uniform : their protopodite always made up of two podomeres 

 exce^Jt in the Stomatopoda. 



Division 1. — Syncarida. 



Eumalacostraca devoid of carapace, with the first thoracic 

 segment united with the head or marked off from it by a groove. 

 Heart elongated, tubular. 



Order— Anaspidacea. 



Syncarida in which the thoracic appendages are provided (excei^t 

 the last or the last two) with exopodites, and (except the last) 

 with a double series of lamellar epipodites (gills). The abdominal 

 appendages, except the first two in the male and the last in both 

 sexes, have the endopodite reduced or absent. The last pair of 

 abdominal appendages (uropods) expanded, and forming with 

 the telson a fan-like tail-fin. This, the only order of the Syncarida, 

 comprises the genera Anaspides, Koonunga, and Paranaspides 

 (Fig. 458). 



Division 2. — Peracarida. 



Eumalacostraca in which the carapace, when present, leaves at 

 least four of the thoracic segments free. Heart elongated, 

 tubular. 



