MEDUSA. I. 25 



wanting in others. The predominant colonrs of the gastro-genital organs are bhiish or greenish in the 

 Indo-Pacific forms as also in the Tropical-Atlantic form, whereas the reddish, yellowish, or brownish 

 colonrs are predominant in the North-Atlantic forms; bine, green, and violet may, however, also 

 be met with in the latter. 



I am inclined to suppose, that all the forms of Laodicea described np to now, with the exception 

 of Laodicea piilchra Browne, belong to one and the same species: Laodicea itndiilata Forbes and Good- 

 sir, a species which attains its most exuberant development in the North-Atlantic; in the tropical At- 

 lantic, the tropical Pacific, and the Indian Ocean the species is represented by forms, which may be 

 called more or less well-marked local varieties; in some cases the described differences from the typical 

 L. itiiditlata may even possibly be due to bad preservation. 



If this view be correct, the Geographical Distribution of Laodicea iiiiditlata is the following : 



i) Atlantic Coasts of Northern Europe. — {L. midiilata Forbes and Goodsir). — The occurrence 

 within this area will be discussed in a more detailed way further below. 



2) Mediterranean. — Neapel, "occasionally during the winter of 1907 — 08" [L. criiciata, Mayer 

 1910). Messina, winter 1852 — 1853 [Thainnanfias mediterranean Gegenbauer 1856). Triest [L. crnciata, 

 Graeffe 1884, L. bigelowi, Neppi & Stiasny 1911). Villafranca [L. critciata, Metschnikoff 1886). 



3) Atlantic Coasts of North-America., south of Cape Cod (Z. calcarata A. Agassiz). — Naushon, 

 Vineyard Sound, between Delaware Bay and Chesapeake Bay, Woods Hole (A. Agassiz 1865, Har- 

 gitt 1904, Mayer 1910. Bigelow 1914b and 1915). — During the numerous investigations of the 

 "Grampus" in the Massachusetts Bay Laodicea was never found. During the investigations in July and 

 August 1913, ranging from Nova Scotia to Chesapeake Ba)- (Lat. about 44' '2° to 37° N.) the species 

 was found at four of the southernmost stations, between Delaware Bay and Chesapeake Bay (i. e. Lat. 

 37° to 38°26' N.) at the end of July (Bigelow 1915, p- 318 and the list p. 316 — 317). 



4) Tropical Atlantic {L. ulothrix Haeckel). — Canary Islands (Haeckel 1879, Van h of fen 

 1912). Bahamas (Mayer 1904). Tortugas, Florida, common during the summer-months (Mayer 1900). 



5) Fiji Islands, common in December {L. fi/iana and marama, Agassiz and Mayer 1899). 



6) Torres Straits., September— October [L. fjiana, Mayer 191 5). 



7) North-Coast of Neiv Guinea and several places in the Malayan-Archipelago [L. Jijiana \ar. 

 indica, Maas 1905, L. maasii, Browne 1907). 



8) West-Coast of Ceylon {L. indica, Browne 1905). 



9) Gulf of Aden (/,. maasii., Vanhoffen 1911). 



All records agree, that this species occurs exclusively in the neighbourhood of the coasts. 



Distribution and Occurrence in the north-eastern Atlantic. 



The material at my disposal has been collected at 28 different localities, which are here men- 

 tioned in the following order: the waters south of Iceland, round Rockall, west, north, and east of 

 Scotland, North-Sea, Skagerrak. (See Chart II p. 26.) 



I) — Lat. 64°o6' N., Long. 23°i4' W., Faxebugt, Iceland. July 2nd 1908. Depth 98 m. Young-fish 

 trawl, 65 m wire. "Tlior" stat. 45 (08). — i specimen, 12 mm wide. 



The Ingolf-Expedilioii. V. S. 4 



