INDEX OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS 



159 



PAGES 



CLASS, ORDER, 

 ETC. 



Pisces 62, 78, 79, 84. 



Microcyprini 



Pteridophyta 46, 48-50. 



Filicales 



Decapoda 

 Palinuridae 



27- 



Echinoidea 18,24,25,26, 

 Diadematoida 57,61,76,82- 



87, 89,90,99, 



129. 



NAME OF ORGANISM, SYNONYMS AND COMMON 

 NAME, WHEN KNOWN 



(85) Orysiias latipes (Temminck & Schlegel) 



Medaka, Killifish 



(86) Osmunda javanica Blume 



(87) Ostraea comniercialis Iredale & Roughley, see 



(123) 



(88) Palinurus interruptiis Randall, see (89) 



(89) Pamdirus interriiptus (Randall) 



Palinurus interriiptus Randall 

 Senex interruptus Ortmann 

 Spiny Lobster, Sea Cra^tish 



(90) Paracentrotus lividus (Lamarck) 



Strongylocentrotus lividus (Lamarck) 

 Toxopneustes lividus (Lamarck) 

 Sea-urchin 



(91) Parascaris equorum (Goeze), see (8) 



(92) Parechinus miliaris (P. L. S. Muller), see (104) 



(93) Patiria miniata (Brandt) 



Asterias miniata Brandt 

 Webbed Sea Star, Sea Bat 



(94) Patiria pectinifer (J. Muller & Troschel) 



Asterina pectinifer (J. Muller & Troschel) 

 Starfish 



(95) Pelodytes punctatus (Daudin) 



Mud Diver 



(96) Petromyzon appendix De Kay, see (45) 



(97) Phascolion strombi (Montagu) 



(98) Pityrogramma sulphtirea (Schwartz) 



Gymnogramma sulphurea (Schwartz) 

 Golden Fern 



(99) Platynereis megalops (Verrill) 



(100) Platypus anatinus Shaw & Nodder, see (83) 



(loi) Pnetimonoeces variegatus (Rudolphi) 

 Lung-fluke 



(102) Pomatoceros triqueter (Linn.) 



(103) Psammechinus microtuberculatus (de Blain- 



ville) 

 Sea-urchin 



(104) Psammechinus miliaris (P. L. S. Muller) * 



Echinus miliaris P. L. S. Muller 

 Parechinus miliaris (P. L. S. Muller) 

 Psammechinus miliaris L. Agassiz & Desor 

 Psanunechinus pustidatus (L. Agassiz) 

 Sea-urchin 



* References are sometimes found to 'Psammechinus miliaris Z' or 'Psamme- 

 chinus jniliaris S'. These are private designations in which Z and S refer re- 

 spectively to littoral and deeper (35 m.) habitats. There are morphological 

 differences between the two forms (Lindahl & Runnstrom, 1929). 



