
HALE—AUSTRALIAN CUMACEA 211 
Subadult male. This is figured because, like some adult females, it has the 
tubereles of the carapace rather more distinetly arranged in rows. The honeycomb- 
like seulpture is very distinct aud some of the tubercles above the lateral depres- 
sion are larger than the others. The small tubercles on the pleon are rather more 
distinet than in the female and the fifth somite is strongly cingulate; the dorso- 
lateral ridges are feebly serrate. 

. 2 0 < 
pre \. ae 
Tig. 46. Campylaspis aspera, paratype female; mxp. 1-2, distal portions of first and second 
maxillipeds (X 144); mxp. 3, prp. and urop., third maxilliped, peraeopods, and uropod with 
fifth pleon and telaonie somites (X 50; distal portions with plumose setae omitted, X 7H). 
uvop., juv., tropod of young male ( 50). 
The carapace is narrower than in the female; the ocular lobe is wider, is 
slightly constricted at the base, and slightly incised at apex. 
There is a pair of dorsal tubercles on the telsonic somite and a broken median 
carina, 
The maxillipeds are as illustrated for the female. 
The uropod (fig. 46, urop. juv.) has the peduncle shorter and wider than in 
the adult. 
Although this male is as large as the ovigerous females, the abdominal 
antennal groove has not yet developed (the second antennae are still short). 
Lov. New South Wales: 5 miles east of Port Hacking, 100 metres, on mud 
(“Cronulla’? Trawl Station, July, 1943); 4 miles east of Eden, 70 metres, in 
