286 BRITISH ENTOMOSTRACA. 
2. Dinemoura lamile. Tab. XXXIII, fig. 8. 
Pandartts LAMNi®, Johnston, Loudon’s 'Mag. Nat. Hist., viii, 204, 
f. 22 a, b. 
Seelatjs yom Hemorfisch, Herbst, Berlin Gesellsch. Skrift., i, t. 3, 
f. 1-8. 
Description. — Body linear oblong. Cephalo- thorax 
round, slightly notched in front, convex dorsally, and of 
a pale colour, with a brown blotch in front. 
Dorsal plates, or elytra, much smaller in proportion than 
in preceding species ; narrower, and occupying only about 
a fifth of the length of the body ; oval, smooth, rounded 
at their posterior margin, and of a uniform pale colour. 
The last segment of thorax is long and narrow, about 
twice the length of the elytra, and rounded at the posterior 
extremity. The centre of the upper part is marked with 
a long, black spot. 
Caudal appendages of abdomen large, oblong, and 
giving off four stout, plumose spines. Oviferous tubes 
long, more than twice the length of the whole body. 
Hah. — Taken from a Beaumaris shark {Lanina Mo- 
nensis), in Berwick Bay, September 1834 ; Dr. Johnston. 
Genus 2 — Pandarus. 
Pandarus, Leach , Latreille, Desmarest, Say, Burmeister, Kroyer, 
M. JEdwards, Dana. 
Caligus (sp.), Lamarck. 
Character. — Lamellar elytraform appendages, several 
pairs in number. All the feet fitted, to a certain extent, 
for walking, and armed near their extremities with short, 
thick hooks. 
Bibliographical History. — This genus was first esta- 
blished by Dr. Leach, in the Supplement to the ‘ Ency- 
clopaedia Britannica/ in 1816, and afterwards in the 
‘ Diet, des Sc. Nat./ 1819. He described several species 
