282 
paper (1907); his description entirely agrees with the drawing given 
here. The maxilla shows a small, although distinet notch which is 
not mentioned by Hoek. 
Heteralepas (Pavalepas) Dannevigi n. sp. 
38° 10’ S., 149° 55’ E., 190—240 fathoms. „Endeavour“ 11/IX 14. One 
specimen. 
38° 05’ S., 150° E., ,200—260 fathoms. „Endeavour“ 12/IX 14. One 
specimen (type). 
37° 45’ S., 150° 10’ E, 150—260 fathoms. „Endeavour“ 14/IX 14. One 
specimen attached to a gastropode shell. 
Capitulum ovoid, laterally somewhat compressed and sharply 
defined from the rather thin, and cylindric peduncle, with a pro- 
nounced carinal keel, gradually disappearing towards the base of 
the capitulum. The orifice comprises about one third of the ventral 
side of the capitulum; its margins are little prominent. Small chit- 
inous scuta are present. 
The animal is brownish-yellow in aleohol. Its surface is quite 
smooth with neither wrinkles nor tubercles. The scuta appear as 
somewhat darker brownish, triangular spots just below the orifice. 
Owing to contraction the peduncle exhibits tranverse constrictions. 
The body of the animal is furnished with one rather large 
digitiform appendage on each side, at the base of cirrus I. 
In the cirri the rami are always well developed and of al¬ 
most equal size in each cirrus, although always differing in the 
number of segments. The numbers of segments counted were: 
Cirrus 
I 
II 
III 
IV 
V 
VI 
Inner 
ramus 
9 
20 
19 
15 
18 
21 
Outer 
8 
18 
18 
18 
21 
16 
this 
table 
we 
must 
add the 
following 
remark 
that 
basal segment of the rami judging from the armature with spines 
always consists of two or three coalesced segments. The basal 
segment of the inner rami consists of three, that of the outer 
rami of two fused segments; nevertheless the basal segment never 
exhibits more than twice the length of the following segments. — 
In the cirri II to VI the posterior thorns as in other Paralepas- 
species have developed into large, rather clawlike spines and cur- 
