REPORT ON THE NEMERTEA. 17 



the Challenger specimen contained no proboscis (which had apparently been expelled), I 

 cannot refrain from giving a woodcut of the curious and divergent armature of the 

 proboscis as it was observed by me both in young and in older specimens of Drepano- 

 phorus from the Mediterranean. In young specimens the number of pointed stylets 

 and of reserve sacs is less considerable. This proboscidian armature is certainly one of 

 the most marked and distinctive features of the genus, although, as we shall presently 

 see, I feel justified in assigning other species to it even when the presence of a similar 

 armature has not been definitely demonstrated. 



The specimen was a female ; the generative products are, however, yet very far from 

 ripe. 



Drepanophorus serraticolUs, Hubrecht (PL IX. figs. 5, 6 ; PI. X. fig. 5 ; PI. XI. 

 fig. 8 ; PL XII. fig. 6 ; PL XV. fig. 17). 



Drepanoplu/rus serraticolUs, Hubrecht, Aanteekeningen over Anat. van eenige Nemertinen, 



Utrecht, 1874. 



Concerning the specimens here referred to this species, I find the following notice in 

 M'Intosh's preliminary MS. : — 



" Two specimens were dredged at Station 162 (ofi" East Moncoeur Island, Bass Strait), 

 38-40 fathoms, sand, length about 30 mm., with a diameter of about 7 mm., but both 

 are broken. 



" The ventral surface is marked by a median and two lateral longitudinal grooves. 



" Externally the dorsum is tinted of a pale madder-brown without stripes. A darker 

 patch runs in the centre of the head in front of the cephalic furrows. The under surface 

 is pale. 



" The head is wider than the neck and seems to have been somewhat bluntly conical. 

 The aperture for the proboscis is slightly inferior. It is marked by a prominent ridge 

 indicating the cephalic furrows, which slope slightly forward on each side to the middle 

 line, where they are separated by a short interval. Inferiorly they slope more distinctly 

 forwards and inwards, and are separated by a wide interval, from which a median ridge 

 goes forward to the proboscidian aperture. In front of this furrow, both dorsally and 

 ventrally, there are a series of secondary furrows about thirteen or fourteen in number, 

 running forward from the main groove 



" In regard to the structure of the proboscis it agrees with the others of the genus, 

 presenting no stylets. 



" The proboscidian sheath presents a regularly interwoven or basket-like pattern of 

 circular and longitudinal fibres, and the inner surface is pajDillose in transverse section. 



No diverticula seem to be present Many ova are found partially projecting 



through apertures a little external to the nerve-cord and corresponding to the very evident 

 raised line on the ventral surface." 



(ZOOL. CHALL. EXP. — PABT LIV. — 1886.) Hhh 3 



