Uroptychus ciliatus (Van Dam, 1933)
(Figs. 5, 12 B)
Chirostylus ciliatus Van Dam, 1933: 12, figs 17–19. Uroptychus ciliatus .—Baba, 2005: 33, fig. 9.
Material examined. Female, ovigerous, (cl 9.2 mm), Western Australia, off the Kimberley plateau (13°15.9'S, 123°22.45'E – 13°16.35'S, 123°21.4'E), 394– 390 m, 0 7 Jul 2007 (stn SS05/2007 180), CSIRO acquisition number 41, NMV J55998.
Colour. Yellow–orange body and appendages and pale pink abdomen. Spines red–orange.
Distribution. Kei Islands, Taiwan and north-western Australia. 204– 390 m.
Remarks. This specimen is more spinose than the Kei Island and Taiwan material described by Baba (2005) and Baba et al. (2009). Baba (2005) described the species as having a few spines on the dorsal surface of the branchial region. The north-western Australian specimen has two large spines and six smaller spines on the branchial region. This is the fifth specimen collected of this species. Our female carried 26 eggs of 1.2 mm diameter.