aga CRUSTACEA. 



464 



Clibanarius longitarsis [Be Haan), Dana. 

 Caldera, Mindanao. 





Length of body, two inches. Eyes shorter than the frontal margin. 

 Anterior legs a little unequal, the right the larger in males; hands elon- 

 gate (longer than in other Clibanarii described), granulate above and 

 somewhat pilose * Tarsi longer than the preceding joint, subterete, 

 with numerous tufts of hairs above and below; similar tufts scattered 

 on upper and lower surfaces of fifth joint, and also on preceding. 

 Fifth joint of left leg of third pair somewhat flattened on outer sur- 

 face (though still convex), and having an obtusish edge above, which 

 is a little pilose, the surface below naked, or nearly so. A longi- 

 tudinal band of white, bordered by red, along outer surface of second 

 and third pairs. Basal scale of eyes pointed. 



Pagurus longitarsis, De Haan, Faun. Japon., 211, pi. 50, f. 3. 

 Pagurus asper f Edwards, Ann. des Sci. Nat., 1848 [3], v. 62. 



2. Tarsus compressus articulo pedum precedente brevior. 

 Clibanarius ^QUABILIS. 



Oculi elongati, niargine carapack antico vix breviores. Manus sive 

 cequce sive sinistra major. Pedes 2di Stii nudiusculi et nitidi, super- 

 ficie externa nudd, marginibus paulo Jiirsutis, pedibus paris tertii 

 inwquis, articulo sinistro penidtimo extus planiuscido, nudo, et superne 

 subacuto. 



Eyes elongate, hardly shorter than anterior margin of carapax. Hands 

 equal, or the left a little the larger. Feet of second and third pairs 

 nearly naked and shining, outer surface naked, margins somewhat 

 hirsute ; feet of third pair unlike, the penult joint on left side flat- 

 tened on outer side, and having a subacute edge above. 



* The Pagurus symmetricus of Randall (Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci., viii. 133, 1840), is 

 another species of Clibanarius, having the tarsus a fifth longer than the preceding joint. 



