54 CRUSTACEA COPEPODA. II. 
rounded, with a pair of somewhat small, nearly ovate posterior processes about half as long as the carapace 
and situated rather near each other in a more ventral position than the ovisacs; the anterior part of the 
trunk without segmentation. — An ovisac is somewhat shorter than the trunk, with 4—5 eggs in a trans- 
verse row. 
Antennulz 4-jointed, rather short and clumsy, considerably tapering. — Antenne broad when 
seen from the side (fig. 10 a), first joint much broader than long; endopod very broad and distally nearly 
semicircularly rounded, without armature; exopod clumsy, 2-jointed, the distal joint with two small and 
slender spines and one (perhaps two) proportionately large, robust and obtuse spine. — Maxillule of a similar 
structure as in L. longicaudata (see later on), but more clumsy, with the three terminal processes thicker 
and their apical sete shorter than in the species named; the palp seems to be two-jointed. — Maxille con- 
siderably longer than the body and separate from base to end; each maxilla is somewhat thick at the base 
and decreases gradually to near the end, where it is rapidly thinner to the very short thread which termin- 
ates in a small, cupuliform, dark-brown bulla (lost in the left maxilla). — Maxillipeds originate almost in 
advance of the maxille; they are much more robust than in L. longicaudata, but as one among them had 
been mutilated it was deemed necessary not to remove the other but to draw it as well as possible (fig. 10 b) 
without preparation; it is seen that the proximal well chitinized joint is more than half as broad as long, 
with the outer margin rather convex, while the inner margin has a little before the middle a conspicuous, 
robust, triangular, acute process, beyond which the inner margin is somewhat concave, while proximally 
it is convex. 
Length of the body 10 mm., the trunk 7.9 mm., the maxille 11.2 mm., an ovisac 5.5 mm. 
Remarks. — This new species is related to L. Galet Kr., but differs in having the posterior pro- 
cesses considerably shorter and the maxille much longer than in that species; besides the maxille do not 
seem to have been united at the end. In general aspect it is even more similar to Charopinus cluthe T. Scott, 
but is instantly separated in having the posterior processes ventral to the ovisacs instead of dorsal. — Male 
unknown. 
Occurrence. — Taken only by the “Tjalfe’ (Cand. mag. Ad. Jensen) at a single place. 
Davis Strait: Kangerdluarsuk (Lat. 61°53’ N.), 120—200 fathoms. On the head of Centroscyllium 
Fabrici; 1 female. 
71. Lernezeopoda longicaudata n. sp. 
(Pl. IV, figs. 2 a—2 o). 
Female. — Cephalothorax feebly inclined to the axis of the trunk, considerably longer than broad 
(fig. 2b) and somewhat depressed, flattened above. — Trunk very oblong, increasing gradually in breadth 
to a little before the end, and the first segment is well defined; the trunk terminates in a short protuberance 
(fig. 2 e) with the posterior margin incurved at the middle; on each side of this protuberance a sausage- 
shaped process originates which is fully, or a little more than four-fifths (fig. 2 a), as long as the trunk and 
inserted below the ovisacs, but distinctly nearer the median line. — Ovisacs only a little shorter than the 
body, seen from the side with four rows of eggs. 
