1/6 



CRUSTACEA — EUCARIDA DECAPODA 



Fig. 120. — Dorsal view of abdomen, A, of Cenoiita, 

 sp. ; E, of Birgus latro. T, Telson 

 abdominal segments. 



segment ; following these there are four large plates (1-4) 

 representing the terga of the first four abdominal segments ; the 

 fifth, sixth, and the telson are, as has been stated, carried on the 



under side of the abdo- 

 men, but they are re- 

 presented diagranimati- 

 cally (5, 6, T) in the 

 dorsal view. Besides 

 the large terga, there 

 are a number of small 

 plates laterally, usually 

 two to each segment, 

 but they show a ten- 

 dency to subdivide and 

 increase in the largest 

 specimens. This condi- 

 tion of affairs is very 

 1-6, ist-6tii different to that in the 

 naked fleshy abdomen 

 of an ordinary Pagurid, but it can easily be deduced from 

 that of the genus Cenohita, ordinary Hermit-crabs found in the 

 Indo-Pacifio Oceans, from which the Eobber-crab has evidently 

 descended. In Cenohita (Fig. 120, A) we see the same system 

 of plates upon the dorsal surface of the abdomen, but they are 

 much smaller, and the lateral plates are not so numerous ; 

 indeed, the greater part of the abdomen remains fleshy and 

 uncalcified. The under surface of the abdomen shows the same 

 rugosity as is found in Birgus, and from a number of other 

 anatomical characters it is evident that the Eobber-crab is a 

 highly modified Cenohita that has deserted its shell and developed 

 a symmetrical abdomen protected by expanded and hardened 

 plates which represent those found in a reduced condition in 

 Cenohita. The species of Cenohita although they inhabit shells 

 and have normal branchiae, live on the shore, and have not been 

 seen to descend actually into the sea. 



The Lithodidae, which are found in temperate seas, especially 

 on the Northern Pacific coasts (though Lithodes maia occurs in 

 the North Sea, and certain species inhabit deep water in the 

 Indian Ocean), have a deceptively Brachyuran appearance, the 

 thorax being much shortened and the abdomen being much 



