OP THE SCOTTISH NATIONAL ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. 



307 





PAGE 





PAGE 



Percnon ...... 



. 267 



Scyllaridse .... 



. 281 



Petalidium . . . 



284 



Scyllaridea .... 



. 281 



Phye .... 



294 



Scyllarides .... 



281 



Pilumnoplax ... 



264 



Sergestes 



. 284 



Plagusia .... 



266 



Sergestidae . 



. 284 



planatus (Halicarcinus) 



271 



Squilla .... 



. 300 



Planes ... 



266 



sqnilla (Leander) 



. 286 



planissimus (Percnon) . 



. 267 



Squillidae 



. 300 



Podochela .... 



. 259 



Stomatopoda . . 



. 300 



Podonema . 



259 



subrugosus (Munida) 



279 



Portunidse . 



263 



Sympasiphaea 



. 294 



Probopyrus . 



301 







Psathyrocaris 



294 



talismani (Calcinus), Plate XXVIa. . . 278 



Pseudodromia 



. 273 



tenuicornis (Leander) . 



. 288 



punctatus (Cyclograpsus) 



265 



thomsoni (Auhseopsis) . 



258 







thomsoni (Dorynchus) . 



258 



rathbunae (Phye), Plate XXXI. 



. 295 











verrucosus (Lambrus) . 



. 261 



sayi (Lupa) ...... 



. 263 







Scliizopoda ...... 



. 298 



Xanthidee .... 



262 



scotise (Phye), Plate XXX. . 



. 294 



Xanthodius . 



262 



Addition to Notice of Mursia cristimanus (p. 272). 



The third, finely illustrated, edition of Cuvier's Regne Animal has two undated 

 volumes on Crustacea. Each is entitled " Les Crustaces. Avec un Atlas, par M. 

 Milne-Edwards," with the additional word " Texte " in one volume, and " Atlas " in the 

 other. Internal evidence makes it completely certain that the text is by Latreille, 

 who died in 1833. But it is also clear that the text is independent of the plates, 

 since it mentions the genus Mursia (p. 54) without attaching to it any specific name, 

 and on p. 262 names Caligus risculus, Leach, for pi. 77, figs. 1, 2, 3, figures which 

 Milne-Edwards in his explanation of the plate distributes among three separate 

 species of the genus. There may be evidence that pi. 13 of the atlas which records 

 " Mursica cristata, Latr.," was published earlier than 1837, the year in which Milne- 

 Edwards gives a reference to it under the name " Mursia cristiata," but the atlas 

 itself is silent on the point.— T. R. R. S., March 27, 1914. 



