SCHIZOPODA. 
29 
M useum, informs me that only five spines are present on the lateral margins, so that 
the armature of the telson of P. sarsi approximates closely to that of P. belgicce. 
The only other species of Pseudomma having smooth ocular laminae is 
P. australe, G. 0. Sars (1885), from Bass Straits, Australia. The vastly different 
form of the antennal scale in the latter, however, abundantly distinguishes it from 
P. belgicce. 
Besides the single ‘ Discovery ’ specimen, this species is also known from the 
‘ Belgica ’ collections, and has been described by Hansen in MS. under the name which 
is here used. It is possible that the mutilated specimen noted by Sars (1885, p. 191) 
from 1675 fathoms in the Antarctic Ocean may have belonged to this species rather 
than to P. sarsi. Sars notes that it was much larger than the latter. 
Genus Dactylamblyops, Holt and Tattersall. 
Dactylamblyops, Holt and Tattersall, 1906 (1). 
Dactylerytlirops, Illig, 1906, non Holt and Tattersall, 1905. 
? Amblyops {pars), Olrlin, 1901. 
Dactylamblyops, Tattersall, 1907. 
This genus was established for the reception of the single rather mutilated specimen 
of D. hodgsoni in the present collection. Since the publication of the preliminary 
notice of the ‘ Discovery ’ Schizopoda, however, two closely allied species have been 
discovered oil' the west coast of Ireland (Tattersall, 1907). A clearer idea of the 
exact relationships of the genus has thus been gained, and while the species referred 
thereto appear, in the present state of our knowledge, to form a natural group, it is 
undeniably very nearly allied to Dactylerytlirops, Holt and Tattersall (1905), to 
which genus, indeed, the present species was referred by Illig (1906). 
The definition of the genus given by Holt and Tattersall, 1906 (1), may therefore 
be amended as follows :— 
Dactylamblyops, Holt and Tattersall. 
Characters generally as in Amblyops, G. O. Sars, except :— 
Eyes placed close together, but not contiguous, more or less pyriform in shape, 
furnished with distinct and definite peduncles ; visual elements imperfectly developed, 
numerous, reaching to the surface of the eye, and probably directly functional as 
organs of sight; outer distal corner rounded, and not produced into a digitiform 
process ; a short blunt process always present on the inner and upper surface. 
Second thoracic limbs with the endopods not noticeably short, but well developed, 
and considerably longer than the endopods of the first thoracic limbs. 
Telson not very long, triangular in shape, the distal parts of its margins armed 
with more or fewer spines ; median setae absent. 
Type species, D. hodgsoni, Holt and Tattersall, 
VOL. IV, 
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