882 
BULLETIN OF THE UNITED STATES FISH COMMISSION. 
Dimensions. — Male, station 3859, length to median sinus 12.5, to tip of horns 16.4, width without i 
spines 9.3 mm. 
Distribution. — South coast of Molokai Island, 134 to 130 fathoms, station 3854; Pailolo Channel, i 
127 to 148 fathoms, stations 3856, 3859 (type locality), and 3886. Cat. No. of type, 29699. 
In the arrangement of the dorsal spines this species resembles C. spatulifer (Haswell), but in the j 
latter the spines of the posterior half are spatuliform, the supraocular eave is more projecting, the \ 
horns more spreading. 
Named for Mr. E. L. Goldsborough, one of the Fish Commission collectors on the Hawaiian |i 
expedition of 1901. 
With regard to Chlorinoides Haswell, 1880, vs. Acanthophrys A. Milne Edwards, 1865, both Alcock || 
(Jour. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, LXIV, 1895, 241) and Miers (Challenger Brachyura, 52, 1886) have over- ' 
looked the fact that Miers himself designated the type of Acanthophrys (Jour. Linn. Soc. London, XIV, I, 
1879, 657 ) as A. cristimanus A. Milne Edwards; the type therefore can not be changed and the important j 
point yet to be determined is, not whether C. tenuirostris Haswell (the type of Chlorinoides ) is conge- -j 
neric with A. aculeatus A. Milne Edwards, but whether it is congeneric with A. cristimanus A. Milne 
Edwards. If this proves to be the case, then the name Acanthophrys must take the place of Chlorinoides. I 
Schizophrys hilensis, sp. nov. 
A smaller species than S. aspera. Surface hairy except the chelipeds, which are nearly naked. j 
Carapace nongranulous, punctate; three gastric spinules in a narrow triangle, base forward; two j 
cardiac tubercles side by side ; a short intes- ; 
tinal spine; a branchial spinule on either j 
side of it; two longer spines on posterior [■ 
margin, either side of middle; five spines 
forming a marginal curve on each side, the | 
first hepatic. 
No accessory spines on rostrum; horns j 
straight, sharp, one-sixth as long as post- \ 
frontal portion of carapace. 
Supraocular eave thick, its posterior t f 
angle projecting as an acute tooth; post- ! 
ocular spine simple, broad at base; inter- 
mediate spine long. . 
Chelipeds smooth. Meral joints of 
legs ending in a sharp tubercle. 
Otherwise much as in S. aspera. 
Length of largest specimen, a female, j: 
on median line 17.3, length to tip of horns 
19.8, width without spines 12.8 mm. 
Hilo, Hawaii, H. W. Henshaw, 1 male, 
4 females, types (Cat. No. 29794). West coast of Maui, A. Garrett, October 27, 1859, in Museum of j 
Comparative Zoology.. Hawaiian Islands, A. Garrett, April 25, 1860, in Museum of Comparative J 
Zoology. 
Ophthalmias a cervicornis (Herbst). 
Stenocenops cervicornis Cano, Boll. Soc. Nat. Napoli (1), III, 1889, 102 and 177. 
Stenocionops cervicornis Alcock, Jour. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, LXIV, 1895, 248. 
Honolulu (Cano). 
Micippa philyra (Herbst). 
Micippa hirtipes Dana, Crust. U. S. Expl. Exped., I, 90, 1852; pi. i, fig. 4 a-e, 1855. 
Micippa philyra Alcock, Jour. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, LXIV, 1895, 249, and synonymy. 
Oahu, H. Mann, 1864, in Museum of Comparative Zoology. 
Ophthalmias Kathbun, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, XI, 1897, 157. 
