J0718-09 (HIZSS 006) must be a low surface brightness galaxy, as it is not J0718-09 easily discernible at the relatively low extinction level of J0718-09 A_B_=1.9mag. There are two extended patches of LSB emission visible J0718-09 on the DSS I image, which are confirmed on the DSS II(R) image; one J0718-09 patch of ~2.0'x1.5' centered on 07h18m20.8s, -09{deg}03'20.2", and a J0718-09 slightly smaller one of ~1.0'x1.0' centered on 07h18m14.5", J0718-09 -09{deg}02'59.6". Both together might define one very extended, J0718-09 face-on LSB source of up to 4'. In either case the morphology is hard J0718-09 to determine. Type = Sd/Sm. J0730-22 (HIZSS 012) is an edge-on, late-type spiral galaxy with a large J0730-22 angular size of ~11' on DSS II(R), not corrected for a Galactic J0730-22 extinction of A_B_=7.8mag. The infrared counterpart is J0730-22 2MASXi J0730080-220105. For a detailed discussion of the H I and J0730-22 infrared properties of this remarkable galaxy, see Hurt et al. J0730-22 (2000AJ....120.1876H). Type = Scd/Sd. J0742-34 (HIZSS 019) is a nearly face-on, late-type spiral galaxy with an J0742-34 angular extent of ~1.5'x1.0' (A_B_=6.1mag). Its infrared counterpart J0742-34 is 2MASXi J0742379-343827. Type = Sc/Sd. J0744-35 is an edge-on spiral galaxy with a distinct bulge, very clear on J0744-35 DSS II(R) and 2MASS images (A_B_=4.3mag). Type = Sc. J0746-28 (HIZSS 021) is a nearby, irregular galaxy with an angular extent of J0746-28 ~40"x20", (A_B_=4.3mag). It is not visible on the 2MASS image. J0746-28 Type = Im. J0833-37 (HIZSS 045) is a galaxy with an angular extent of ~25"x20" with a J0833-37 bright bulge/nucleus and a small LSB envelope. It seems a bit small J0833-37 for the velocity (v_sys_=958km/s) and the extinction (A_B_=3.78mag) J0833-37 but could have an obscured LSB halo. Type = Sm? or bulge/nucleus of J0833-37 earlier type galaxy. J0904-37 is an extremely LSB, extended (1.75'x1.5'), face-on spiral dwarf J0904-37 galaxy. It has a bright, small bulge or nucleus and an extended LSB J0904-37 disk (A_B_=2.2mag). Type = Sc/Sd. J0917-53 (HIZSS 053) is an edge-on, irregular galaxy with an angular extent of J0917-53 ~1.0'x0.2' (A_B_=3.6mag). The surrounding field is very crowded with J0917-53 stars. Type = Sc. J0957-48 (HIZSS 060) is a spiral galaxy with an angular extent of ~40"x30" J0957-48 (A_B_=2.5mag). It consists mainly of a bulge with some LSB halo J0957-48 around it (one star very close to the center). The morphology is J0957-48 difficult to classify. Type = middle- to late-type spiral. J1430-54 is an extremely LSB face-on spiral disk with a very small possible J1430-54 nucleus, visible but even fainter on DSS II(R) (A_B_=2.9mag). See J1430-54 also the ATCA image in Figure 14. Type = Sc. J1436-53 (WKK3285) is an LSB dwarf galaxy (A_B_=3.4mag), visible on SRC-J film, J1436-53 very weak on DSS I and DSS II(R), roundish, no structure. Its angular J1436-53 extent is 24"x17", B=17.7mag. See also the ATCA image in Figure 14 J1436-53 and Woudt & Kraan-Korteweg (2001, Cat. ). Type = Im. J1451-50 has a small bright nucleus with a symmetric outer envelope J1451-50 (A_B_=1.4). See also the ATCA image in Figure 14. Type = Sm. J1522-49 (WKK 4860) is a galaxy with LSB extended features, a bit clumpy on J1522-49 SRC-J film (A_B_=2.6mag). It is not visible on DSS I and very weak on J1522-49 DSS II(R). Its angular extent is 67"x20" (see also Woudt & J1522-49 Kraan-Korteweg, 2001, Cat. ). B=16.6mag. Type = Im. J1605-57 (HIZSS 101, HIZOA J1605-57, WKK 5834) is a galaxy with multiple stars J1605-57 superposed (A_B_=2.1mag). See also Juraszek et al. J1605-57 (2000AJ....119.1627J) and Woudt & Kraan-Korteweg (2001, J1605-57 Cat. ). Type = spiral. J0255-10 is a bright dwarf irregular galaxy with one or two bright H II J0255-10 regions, not visible on 2MASS images. Type = Im/BCD. J0403-01 is an LSB galaxy just east of the bright star HD 25571; it is barely J0403-01 visible on the 2MASS image. Its large 20% H I velocity width, J0403-01 w20=247km/s, as compared with w50=96km/s (see Fig. 6), is probably J0403-01 due to confusion with H I in and around the galaxy NGC 1507 J0403-01 (=HIPASS J0404-02, v_sys_=863km/s; see Koribalski et al., J0403-01 2002, in pre), located ~20' away. Type = Im. J0447-57 is another LSB galaxy just to the northwest of the bright star J0447-57 HD 30804. It is possibly confused. Type = Im. J0532-67 is an early-type spiral galaxy that lies within the boundaries of the J0532-67 LMC. One can recognize a prominent bulge and a low surface brightness J0532-67 disk component. The light distribution is too regular for a BCD (see J0532-67 also the 2MASS image). This galaxy was also cataloged by Kilborn et J0532-67 al. (2002, Cat. ). The H I position coincides with the J0532-67 infrared sources 2MASXi J0531491-672133 and IRAS 05319-6723. J0532-67 Type = Sa or Sb. J0605-14 is associated with a group of galaxies (see Fig. 7) including two J0605-14 possible LSB optical counterparts. The positions and types of three J0605-14 optical galaxies are given in Table 2. The H I spectrum of HIPASS J0605-14 J0605-14 peaks quite sharply between 3000 and 3100km/s. Additional J0605-14 low-level emission is seen between 3100 and 3200km/s. By integrating J0605-14 separately over the two velocity ranges, we can associate the bright J0605-14 H I emission with the Im-type galaxy at the center, whereas the J0605-14 other two late-type galaxies are probably contained within the lower J0605-14 intensity H I gas envelope to the east. J0617-17 is a bright dwarf irregular galaxy with one bright H II region; it is J0617-17 not visible in the 2MASS data. Type = Im/BCD. J0751-55 is a spectacular very low surface brightness, irregular galaxy close J0751-55 to the stars CD -55 1980 and CD -55 1979. It was recently also J0751-55 discovered by Karachentseva & Karachentsev (2000A&AS..146..359K, J0751-55 [KK2000] 24). Type = Sm/Im. J1004-73 has a small bulge with smooth transition into the disk. Some spiral J1004-73 structure is visible in the outer regions (low surface brightness). J1004-73 This galaxy was also cataloged by Kilborn et al. (2002, J1004-73 Cat. ). Type = SBm. J1015-34 is an H I source close to ESO 375-G003, but at a lower systemic J1015-34 velocity. The Nancay H I spectrum of ESO 375-G003 shows a systemic J1015-34 velocity of v_sys_=3091km/s and a velocity width of w20=191km/s J1015-34 (Fouque et al., 1990A&AS...86..473F). Its H I flux density is J1015-34 FHI=4.5Jy.km/s with a peak flux of ~30mJy, slightly too faint for a J1015-34 HIPASS detection. Interestingly, the Nancay H I spectrum of J1015-34 ESO 375-G003 also includes HIPASS J1015-34. Both sources are part of J1015-34 the IC 2558 galaxy group (Hopp & Materne, 1985A&AS...61...93H). ATCA J1015-34 H I observations have been obtained. There is a small, high surface J1015-34 brightness galaxy 2' southwest of the H I center. Type = BCD. J1106-14 is a large LSB dwarf irregular galaxy without prominent H II regions. J1106-14 It was recently discovered by Karachentsev et al. J1106-14 (2000A&AS..145..415K, [KKS2000] 23). Type = Im. J1118-17 is a compact, high surface brightness galaxy of irregular shape. J1118-17 Type = BCD. J1225-06 is possibly associated with two galaxies (see Fig. 8); a high surface J1225-06 brightness dwarf galaxy (LCRS B122316.1-061244) and another similar J1225-06 galaxy at 12h25m39s, -06{deg}33'08". The H I profile is very narrow, J1225-06 suggesting a single galaxy, but there could be additional low-level J1225-06 H I emission. Type = Im/BCD. J1244-08 could be associated with several galaxies (see Fig. 9), although we J1244-08 note that the H I spectrum shows a typical double-horn spectrum J1244-08 indicative of a single gas-rich galaxy. The integrated H I J1244-08 distribution shows a point source. The narrow profile either J1244-08 indicates a face-on galaxy or a slowly rotating dwarf galaxy as the J1244-08 main component. The full HIPASS spectrum reveals no other H I sources J1244-08 at this position. There are at least four galaxies visible in the J1244-08 surroundings of the HIPASS position: (1) a spectacular, nearly J1244-08 face-on Sm galaxy at 12h45m13s, -08{deg}21'31", (2) a small, but J1244-08 bright edge-on galaxy, possibly in the background, (3) an edge-on Sm J1244-08 galaxy at 12h45m08s, -08{deg}23'05" (the infrared counterpart is J1244-08 2MASXi J1245078-082305), and (4) an Im/BCD galaxy at 12h45m04s, J1244-08 -08{deg}23'46" (NPM1G -08.0394). The latter two show some signs of J1244-08 interaction. Numerous small and faint galaxies are visible to the J1244-08 north of this group. H I synthesis imaging is needed to study these J1244-08 galaxies in more detail. J1247-77 is a nearby irregular, LSB dwarf galaxy. An ATCA H I image has been J1247-77 published by Kilborn et al. (2002, Cat. ; their J1247-77 Fig.15). HIPASS J1247-77 has the lowest H I mass (~5x10^6^M_{sun}_) J1247-77 among the newly cataloged galaxies in both the HIPASS BGC and the J1247-77 SCC sample (Kilborn et al., 2002, Cat. ). Type = Im. J1248-08 is a high surface brightness galaxy just east of the bright star J1248-08 HD 111310. It is also visible in the 2MASS image. The galaxy has a J1248-08 tiny bulge and a strong disk component. Type = late spiral, Sc. J1255-03 is an LSB dwarf irregular galaxy, not visible in the 2MASS image. J1255-03 Type = Im. J1258-33 is a late-type galaxy, similar to the LMC. Type = SBm. J1300-13B is similar to HIPASS J1258-33, except for an LSB extension of the disk J1300-13B to the north. Type = SBm(pec). J1321-31 is a dwarf irregular galaxy in the Centaurus A group. It was also J1321-31 discovered by Karachentseva & Karachentsev (1998, Cat. J1321-31 , [KK98] 195) and Banks et al. (1999ApJ...524..612B). J1321-31 Type = Im. J1337-39 is also a dwarf irregular galaxy in the Centaurus A group (see Banks J1337-39 et al., 1999ApJ...524..612B). Type = Im. J1415-04A is another barred late-type spiral. Its infrared counterpart is J1415-04A 2MASXi J1415167-042131 (v_sys_=2899+/-64km/s, Colless et al., J1415-04A 2001MNRAS.328.1039C). The diameter is approximately 1.1'x0.4'. J1415-04A Magnitude = 15. Type = SBd. The galaxy, HIPASS J1415-04B (see below), J1415-04A is a close neighbor (separation 18.6', or 190kpc). J1415-04B is a barred Sb or Sc galaxy. It has also recently been discovered by J1415-04B Colless et al. (2001MNRAS.328.1039C, 2dFGRS N145Z235; J1415-04B v_sys_=2880+/-89km/s). A second galaxy, 2dFGRS N145Z228, closer to J1415-04B the H I position, has a much higher velocity of 16912km/s. The J1415-04B diameter is approximately 0.8'x0.7'. Magnitude = 14.8. Type = SBb/c. J1424-16B is a late-type spiral galaxy. No bar or bulge is visible on the J1424-16B DSS II(R) image, but there is some evidence of a disk. Type = Sm/Im. J1434-47 is a very LSB dwarf galaxy in a crowded field of stars. See also the J1434-47 ATCA image in Figure 14. Type = Im. J1513-44 is a small galaxy. It appears too bright for an Im galaxy. J1513-44 Type = BCD/Im. J1558-10 is a dwarf galaxy. Type = Sm/BCD. J1647-00 is associated with a group of galaxies (see Fig. 10 at the center of J1647-00 the H I detection: a peculiar-looking merged galaxy pair of type Sm J1647-00 at 16h47m59s, -00{deg} 22' 59", another spiral at J1647-00 16h48m10s, -00{deg}21'48", and an edge-on Sd at J1647-00 16h47m59s, -00{deg}19'47" (see also Table 2). J2020-04 is a late-type spiral galaxy. Type = Sm/Im. J2200-56 is confused. The surrounding field shows a galaxy group or cluster in J2200-56 the background. The H I source is most likely associated with the J2200-56 galaxy APMUKS(BJ) B215715.27-564246.0 (Maddox et al., J2200-56 1990MNRAS.243..692M) just to the west of the bright double or J2200-56 multiple star HD 208877. Type = BCD.