ENTOMOSTRACA OF THE SCOTTISH NATIONAL ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION, 537 
Candacia bipinnata, Giesbrecht. 
1889, Candace bipinnata, Giesb., Atti Acc. Lincet Rend., ser. 4, vol. v. p. 815. 
1892, ei ie idem, F, Fl. Neapel, vol. xix. p. 424, pl. xxii. fig. 20 et seq. 
1898, Candacia y Giesb. & Schmeil, Das Tierreich, vol. vi. p. 129. 
1904, i, 3 Cleve, Mar. Invest. S. Africa, vol. iii. p. 186. 
A few specimens were obtained in a surface gathering collected 5th May 1904 off 
Cape Peninsula, South Africa, Station 477, 34° 21’ 8., 18° 29’ H. 
Candacia xthiopica, Dana. 
1849, Candace xthiopica, Dana, op. cit., vol. il. p. 23. 
The only gathering in which this species occurred was collected at Station 12 in 
99° 19/ N., 22° 07’ W. 
Candacia bispinosa, Claus. 
1863, Candace bispinosa, Claus, Die freilebenden Copepoden, p. 191, Taf. 27, 28. 
This species occurred sparingly in gatherings from the following seven Stations: 
Meme, 72, 83, 85, and 86, 22° 19’ N., 22° 07’ W., to 24° 26’ S., 40° 25’ W. 
Candacia sinvplex, Giesbrecht. 
1889, Candace simplex, Giesb., op. cit., ser. 5, vol. v. sem. 1, p. 815, and Fauna u. Flora des Golfes von 
Neapel, vol. xix (‘“‘Copep.”), p. 424, pl. xxi. figs. 10, 30, 31 e¢ seg. 
This species was tolerably rare in gatherings from Stations 11, 59, and 83, 23° 50’N., 
mia W., to 22° 32’S., 39° 22’ W. 
Candacia longimana, Claus. 
18638, Candace longimana, Claus, op. cit., p. 190, Taf. 27 and 33. 
A single specimen of this Candacia was obtained in a gathering from Station 49, 
1° 53’ N., 27° 26’ W. 
Fam. PoNnTELLIDA. 
Genus Calanopia, Dana, 1852. 
Calanopia americana, Dahl. (Pl. XIII. figs. 1-6.) 
1894, Calanopia americana, Dahl, Berichte naturf. Gesells. Freiburg (N.S.), vol. viii. p. 21, Taf. 1, 
figs. 23-26. 
In this species the inner ramus of the first four pairs of thoracic legs in the female 
are two-jointed. The female fifth pair are simple, and consist each of a single two- 
jointed ramus ; the proximal joint is moderately stout, but the end one is narrow and 
rather longer than the other, and terminates in a tolerably long spine, and there are 
also two short spines on the outer and one on the inner margin (fig. 4). 
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