464 PROFESSOR CHARLES CHILTON ON THE 
1904 Mr Watker added another species, A. tenwipes, from Ceylon, for which 
he established a new genus, Vijaya; but Mr Sreppine (1910a, p. 570) has pointed out 
that the difference in the male and female antennz on which the genus was founded 
occurs also in Amaryllas, and that the new genus is therefore not required. 
Genus CypHocaris Liitken and Boeck, 1870. 
Cyphocaris anonyx Boeck. (Pl. I. figs. 1-4.) 
Cyphocaris anonyx Boeck, Forh. Selsk. Christian., 1870, p. 104. 
= 55 Stebbing, 1906, p. 29. 
i. 5 Walker, 1903, p. 39, and 1903, pp. 227 and 232. 
x micronyx Stebbing, 1888, p. 656, pl. xil. 
Ps - Chevreux, 1900, p. 164. 
Station 414, lat. 71° 50’8., long. 23° 30’ W.; 8 ft. vertical net, from the surface 
to 1000 fathoms. 15th March 1904. One specimen, total length 20 mm. 
This specimen in all probability belongs to this species, although it differs from the 
description given in Das Tierreich in several minor points. The first segment of the 
pereeon is more produced in front and much more acute than is shown in STEBBING’s 
figure of the Challenger specimen; the antennze have more numerous joints in the 
flagella ; there is no accessory flagellum to be seen in either of the upper antennze— 
possibly it has been broken off, though I can detect no trace of this. The first and 
second perzopods (fig. 3) are simple or almost so, the propod being only very slightly 
widened and the finger apparently not folding back upon it. The basal joimts of the 
third to the fifth pereeopods have the margins less serrated. 
The enathopods (figs. 1 and 2), the uropod, and the telson agree fairly well with 
C. anonyx, which has been already recorded from Tristan da Cunha in the South Atlantic, 
and I think the Scotea specimen is only a larger and more fully developed specimen 
of that species. The whole integument is soft, there is no sign of eyes, and the animal 
was probably taken at a considerable depth. It is interesting to note that in 1903 
Mr WatkeEr stated that this species would probably be found to occur in Antarctic seas. 
It is also found in the seas of the northern hemisphere. 
Genus Lystanassa Milne Edwards, 1830. 
Lysianassa cubensis (Stebbing). (PI. I. fig. 5.) 
Lysianax cubensis Stebbing, 1897, p. 29, pl. vii.B. 
Lysianassa cubensis Stebbing, 1906, p. 38. 
Station 478, South Africa, Cape Town, Coaling Jetty No.). 14th May 1904. 
‘'wo specimens, the larger a female 13 mm. long. 
Station 483, South Africa, entrance to Saldanha Bay; trawl, 25 fathoms. 21st 
May 1904. ‘l'wo specimens, one a male 8 mm. 
