COE 



12. P. carnea. sp. nov. Pacific coast. Vancouver Island (Shearer). 

 Common. 



13. Amphiporus angulatus (Fabricius) Verrill. Pacific coast. 

 Abundant. 



14. A. bimaculatus sp. nov. Southeast coast. Uncommon. 

 Puget Sound (T. Kincaid). 



15. A. tigrimis sp. nov. Farragut Bay. Uncommon. 



16. A. nebulosus sp. nov. Kukak Bay, Alaska Peninsula. Un- 

 common. 



17. A. leuciodtis sp. nov. Southeast coast. Common. 



18. A. exilis sp. nov. Pacific coast. Abundant. 



19. Tetrastemma blcolor sp. nov. Kadiak. Not common. 



20. T". aberrans sp. nov. Glacier Bay ; Prince William Sound. 

 Uncommon. 



21. T. c<ecum sp. nov. Dredged by Dr. Ritter at Kadiak. Common. 



HETERONEMERTEA. 



22. Tceniosoma princeps sp. nov. Southeast coast. Uncommon. 



23. Lineus viridis (Fabricius) Verrill. Annette Island. Com- 

 mon. 



24. L. torquattis sp. nov. Prince William Sound. Common. 



25. Micnira verrilli sp. nov. Prince William Sound. Not un- 

 common. 



26. M. alaskensis sp. nov. Southeast coast. Common. 



27. Cerebratulus herculeus sp. nov. Sitka. Not uncommon. 



28. C. marginatus Renier. Sitka. Not uncommon. 



29. C. occidentalis sp. nov. Yakutat ; Prince William Sound. 

 Vancouver Island (Shearer). Abundant. 



30. C. longiceps sp. nov. Yakutat. Uncommon. 



31. C. montgomeryi sp. nov. Puget Sound to Unalaska Island. 

 Common. 



32. C. albifrons sp. nov. Near Sitka. One specimen. 



It must be remembered that the above list represents but a 

 few weeks' collecting, and sometimes with only a few hours 

 at a locality ; too much confidence therefore should not be 

 placed on the distribution or comparative abundance of the 

 various species. Further research will undoubtedly add greatly 

 to the number of species, and judging from the number found 

 in so short a time it seems not unlikely that the list may eventu- 

 ally be more than doubled. 



