PART 5 A MONOGRAPH OF THE EXISTING CRINOIDS 491 



History. In his preliminary account of the comatulids obtained by the Blake, 

 published in 1881, Carpenter said that among the large number of individuals of Anttdon 

 [i.e., Coccometra] hagenii from the Florida Straits he found a few examples of a species 

 with no pinnules at all on the second and fourth brachials, though the other pinnules 

 were developed as usual. 



In the Challenger report (1888) he inserted the name "dejecta, Carpenter, MS" in 

 a key to the species of "Antedon" which he was unable to place in any of the "groups" 

 into which he divided the 10-armed species. In his list of the known species of 

 "Antedon" he inserted "dejecta, Carp., MS., Caribbean Islands, 77-242 fathoms". 



After Carpenter's death the Blake material was turned over to Dr. Clemens Hart- 

 laub, and by him was assigned for preliminary study to Dr. Wilhelm Minckert. In 

 1905 Minckert published some notes on the distribution of the syzygies and the pinnu- 

 lation, as well as on regeneration in this species. 



In the Blake material Hartlaub found only two specimens of H. dejecta, a larger and 

 a smaller, with no locality label. Both of these appeared on a plate which had already 

 been prepared by Carpenter, and there is no evidence that the latter had had any others. 

 Hartlaub described these in detail, accompanied by figures of each, prepared by Car- 

 penter, and also original photographs of both. 



[NOTE BY A.M.C.] Neither of these specimens appear to have been preserved, 

 presuming the above locality list includes the specimens in the M.C.Z. (where the Blake 

 specimens belong) as well as those in the U.S.N.M. The basis for the species must 

 therefore be the description and figures given by Hartlaub. 



In the report upon the IngolJ crinoids (1923) the range of this species was given, 

 based upon unpublished as well as published data. 



Subfamily ZENOMETRINAE A. H. Clark 



Zenometrinae A. H. CLAKK, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 22, 1909, p. 176 (includes Zenometra, 

 Psathyrometra, Leptometra, Adelometra, and Balanometra) ; Mem. Australian Mus., vol. 4, 1911, 

 p. 725 (absent from Australia); Notes Leyden Mus., vol. 34, 1912, p. 142 (probably arose from 

 Trichometra-\ike forms); Crinoids of the Indian Ocean, 1912, p. 6 (number of East Indian genera; 

 number of genera also occurring in the West Indies; number represented by closely allied genera 

 in the Atlantic; number confined exclusively to the East Indies; number of East Indian species), 

 p. 9 (absent from Australia), p. 11 (occurs west to the west coast of the Malay peninsula), p. 14 

 (certain genera are characteristic of the Intermediate faunas), p. 2G (range, 78-1,588 fathoms), 

 p. 60 (in key); Bull. Inst. Ocdanogr. Monaco, No. 294, 1914, pp. 7, 8 (temperature relations); 

 Journ. Washington Acad. Sci., vol. 4, No. 19, 1914, pp. 559-563 (correlation of geographical and 

 bathymetrical ranges); No. 20, 1914, p. 582 (relation to temperature of habitat); Internat. Rev. 

 gesamt. Hydrobiol., und Hydrogr., vol. 6, 1914, pp. 5 and following (Atlantic and corresponding Indo- 

 Pacific genera); Die Crinoiden der Antarktis, 1915, p. 113 (synonymy; geological, geographical, 

 and bathymetrical range), p. 114 (key to the included genera), p. 1 17 (Eumorphometra, new genus), 

 p. 168 (shallow water Antarctic species); Amer. Journ. Sci., vol. 40, 1915, p. 68 (detailed phil- 

 osophical discussion of the bathymetrical range); Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 65, No. 10, 1915, 

 pp. 42 and following (phylogenetic study); Journ. Washington Acad. Sci., vol. 5, No. 4, 1915, 

 pp. 126-134 (bathymetrical range; phylogenetic and paleontological significance); vol. 7, No. 5, 

 1917, p. 127 (includes Balanometra, Psalhyrometra, Leptometra, Adelometra, Zenometra, Sarametra, 

 new genus and Eumorphometra) ; No. 16, 1917, p. 504 (in key), p. 509 (key to the included genera) ; 

 Unstalked crinoids of the Siboga-Exped., 1918, p. viii (gap between this subfamily and the 

 Bathymetrinae almost bridged by three small species of Psathyrometra discovered by the Siboga), 

 p. 196 (in key), p. 222 (key to the included genera); Univ. Iowa Studies in Nat. Hist., vol. 9, 

 No. 5, 1921, p. 12 (represented in the West Indies); Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 72, No. 7, 1921, 



