. Discovery reports. Discovery (Ship); Scientific expeditions; Ocean; Antarctica; Falkland Islands. Fig. 7. Thalassinid D. II. a. Head and rostrum. St. 1375. b. Telson. St. 1375. c. Antenna. St. 1375. d. Palp of maxillule. St. 1580. e. Endopod of maxillipede i. St. 1580. /. Gills of legs 3 and 4. St. 1580. Legs I and 2 chelate. Exopod of leg 5 as long as merus. Epipods, with rudiments of podobranchs, and a pair of very large arthrobranchs on legs 1-4. Pleopods on somites 2-5 with rudiment of appendix interna. Though much less common than the preceding species, the distribution is about the sam


. Discovery reports. Discovery (Ship); Scientific expeditions; Ocean; Antarctica; Falkland Islands. Fig. 7. Thalassinid D. II. a. Head and rostrum. St. 1375. b. Telson. St. 1375. c. Antenna. St. 1375. d. Palp of maxillule. St. 1580. e. Endopod of maxillipede i. St. 1580. /. Gills of legs 3 and 4. St. 1580. Legs I and 2 chelate. Exopod of leg 5 as long as merus. Epipods, with rudiments of podobranchs, and a pair of very large arthrobranchs on legs 1-4. Pleopods on somites 2-5 with rudiment of appendix interna. Though much less common than the preceding species, the distribution is about the same, extending in the Atlantic to 14° N and to the equator off east Africa. The large epipods, with rudiments of podobranchs, point definitely to an Axiid genus. The extreme elongation of the arthrobranchs is a unique Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Institute of Oceanographic Sciences (Great Britain); National Institute of Oceanography of Great Britain; Great Britain. Colonial Office. Discovery Committee. London ; New York : Cambridge University Press


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