ISOPODA. 
53 
Metasome with one distinct segment spinose and a bulbous urosome with minute 
preterminal uropoda. 
Pereiopoda ambulatory, except the first, which is prehensile. 
Pleopoda, first pair forming an operculum over the remainder. 
This genus is established for two closely allied species which cannot be located in 
any existing genera. It is unquestionably a member of the family Janiridse and its 
nearest relations would appear to be the genera Iolanthe Beddard, and Iolella Richardson. 
COULMANNIA AUSTRALIS. 
(Plate IX., fig. 2.) 
Specific characters :— 
First segment of mesosome with epimera cleft to form two blade-like processes. 
Urosome pointed. 
The body is 5 mm. long, vaulted with the elongated, though not separable, 
epimera of the mesosome divided by a deep and wide cleft so as to produce them as 
narrow blades. Each of these segments as well as the first of the metasome bears a 
slight ridge produced in the mid-dorsal line into a stout backwardly curved spine. 
The entire body is covered, but not thickly, with fine setae. 
The cephalosome is a little longer than the first segment of the mesosome, 
rounded in front and having, near the posterolateral angle, a slender finger-like 
process which carries a small eye. The posterior margin is very nearly straight. 
The first four segments of the mesosome are subequal in length, the third is the 
widest, and the epimeral blades of this and the succeeding are subequal in size, those 
of the first two segments graduate from the first to the fourth. The mid-dorsal 
spines are well in front of the posterior border of their respective segments. The last 
three segments are more or less curved backwards, particularly the last, though in the 
last segment it would be more correct to say angulated. Their dorsal spines are on 
the posterior border of their segments. The first and only distinct segment of the 
metasome is quite small and wedged in the curvature of the preceding one. Its 
mid-dorsal spine, though not so large, is quite as prominent as any of the others. 
The urosome is smooth, finely setose and peg-top shaped. 
The uropoda are quite small, single jointed finger-like processes with a few 
distal setse. They lie at five-eighths of the length of the urosome. 
The first antenna arises just in front of the eyestalk. The peduncle consists of 
two small joints, and seen from the dorsum these are subequal in length, though the 
first is very much stouter than the second. The multi-articulate flagellum is twice the 
length of the peduncle, and is composed of joints of very variable length and almost 
devoid of setse. 
The second antenna is longer, and has a peduncle of six joints. The first two are 
extremely short; the third is longer than the two first together, swollen externally and 
setose; the fourth is short, forming a sort of elbow in the appendage ; the other two 
