66 ANNELIDS. I. 



Eteone spetzbergensis Mgrn. 



PI. V., figs. 12, 14, iS. 

 1865. Eteone spetzbergensis, Malmgren: Nord. H. Ann. p. 102. 

 1908. — . Mc. Intosh : A iiionogr. II. p. 104. 



1913. — , Augener: Polych. v. Franz-Jos. Land p. 218. 



Locality : 



The Ingolf Expedition has taken this species in : 



Seydisfjord, 20—50 fins. Iceland. 



Further, it has been taken by Dr. A. C. Johansen in Seydisfjord, 40 fms. Clay. 



Bakkefjord, Iceland 12 — 15 fms. 



A single specimen is present from each of the above named localities. They agree well with 

 the description of Malmgren, tolerably with his figures; it is without hesitation that I refer them 

 to Malmgren's species. As the name indicates, Malmgren's specimens originate from Spitzbergen. 

 Augener states that it is found in Franz-Josephs land and adverts to its not being found in Greenland. 



Eteone striata Levinsen. 



PI. V., fig. n, 17 and 19. 

 1883. Eteone striata, Levinsen: Nord. Ann. p. 55. 



Locality: 



The Ingolf Expedition has taken the species in Seydisfjord, Iceland 20—50 fms. 



Further, it has been taken: 



Iceland. 



Bakkefjord, 20 — 28 fms.: sand mixed with clay. 



Lodmundarfjord; clay. 



How far this species is identic with E. picta Quatrefage or E. fucata Savigny I do not venture 

 to decide. That it is not identic with Ehler's Eteone picta from Nova Zembla is a matter of course, as 

 Augener names this species as a synonym for Et. spetzbergensis, from which it is decidedly different. 



Levinsen has described his species from Danish specimens, and the specimens present in im- 

 material from Iceland agree well with his description. I shall add the following: 



Especially characteristic of the species are the dorsal tentacular cirri which are three times the 

 length of the corresponding ventral cirri, and further the colour, well characterized in the name of the 

 animal, three longitudinal strise — Levinsen indicates them as "violaceo-fuscis, " — running along the 

 entire dorsal side of the animal. 



The setse (PI. V, fig. 17) call to mind those in Eteone flava, a species to which it does not seem 

 however to be nearly related. 



