_ of the second, third, and fourth pairs three-jointed ; the inner branc 
Part IIT,—Tenth Annual Report — 
Posterior antenne three-jointed, middle joint long, secondary branch 
jointed, shorter than the primary branch. Mouth organs as in Pse / 
clopia crassicornis. In the first pair of swimming feet the first jc of 
the outer branch is about as long as the other two together, while the — 
one-jointed inner branch is longer than the first joint of the outer one. — 
Each of the three joints of the outer branch is armed with a large spine at 
the outer distal angle ; both branches are furnished with several plumose a 
sete. The second pair is similar to those of Psewdocyclopia Crassicornis. 
The third and fourth pairs are also similar to those of that species, but 
the spine which springs from the inner distal angle of the first basal jomt 
of the third pair is curved, and is longer and more powerful, and extends 
beyond the extremity of the outer branch. ‘The fifth pair of feet in the 
female are very small and somewhat resemble those of Pseudocyclopia 
erassicornis, but the extremity is bluntly rounded and provided with three 
_ spinous sete, the middle one of which is the longest. The fifth pair in 
the male form very powerful grasping organs ; the left (?) foot consists of 
two very long branches, one of which is four-jointed, and one five-jointed ; 
the basal point of the first (the four-jointed branch) is moderately short 
and dilated, the second joint is very small, the third elongate and 
geniculate, and bearing a curved spine at the inner distal angle; the last 
joint is long and slender, with a rounded extremity ; the third and fourth 
joints of the other branch (which is rather longer than the first) are — 
elongate and slender, while the last joint is very short and produced into 
a digitiform process. The right (?) foot consists of a single four-jointed 
branch, the breadth of the first two joints of which is rather greater than 
the length ; the third joint is elongate, and bears exteriorly on its lower — 
half a dense fringe of plain spinous hairs, and two stout spines interiorly 
The last joint, which is very short, has three small subapical lobes. — 
Abdomen in the male five-jointed, in the female four-jointed. The second 
and third joints of the female abdomen are produced posteriorly on each 
side of the median dorsal line into sharp angular processes as shown in 
the figures (fig. 9); the male abdomen wants the dorsal processes. pos- 
sessed by that of the female. Caudal stylets short, each furnished with 
four long, plumose, terminal hairs, the two middle ones being stout and 
spiniform. | 
Habitat.—Oft St Monans, Firth of Forth ~ Several specimens of this 
species were obtained 
- 
Family HarpacticipZ. 
Neobradya, nov. gen. (provisional name). 
Near Bradya, Boeck, in form and structure. Anterior antenne# nine- 
or ten-jointed, scarcely if at all lenger than the first body segment ; those 
of the male hinged and adapted for grasping. Posterior antenne large, — 
three-jointed ; secondary branch of posterior antennz, fourjointed, the 
first joint as long as the entire length of the,other three. Mandibles well  ~ 
developed, possessing a broad biting part, and a large two-branched palp, 
one of the branches of which is one- and the other four-jointed. Maxille 
somewhat as in Longipedia. Anterior foot-jaws stout, five-jointed, the — 
first joint rather longer than the second, and furnished with three digiti- — 
form lobes, the three last joints small. Posterior foot-jaws not uneinate, — 
_ resembling somewhat those of Bradya. Both branches of the first pair of — 
_ swimming feet three-jointed and about equalinlength. The outer branches 
two-jointed ; the fifth pair small foliaceous. 
