NO. 1 HARTMAN : POLYCHAETOUS ANNELIDS 139 



15. L. Candida Treadwell (1921, p. 96) from the West Indies. (This 

 is said to have simple, hooded hooks in anterior segments; in all 

 other respects, i.e., its short, broad mandibles, the nearly edentate 

 maxillary plates and digitate postsetal lobes, it bears a remarkable 

 resemblance to L. paucidentata, which is said, however, to have 

 composite hooks in some anterior segments.) 



16. L. chilensis Kinberg (1865, p. 569) from Valparaiso, Chile. (Sim- 

 ple hooded hooks are present from the first setiger; the posterior 

 parapodial lobes are bilabiate, about equally long.) 



17. L. cingidata Ehlers (1897, p. 76) from Ushuaia, Patagonia. (Not 

 Ehlers, 1901, or Treadwell, 1917.) (Composite hooded hooks are 

 present from the first parapodium; posterior parapodial lobes are 

 short. See also the next 2 entries.) 



18. L. cingulata Ehlers (1901, p. 136) from Ushuaia, Patagonia. 

 (Simple, hooded hooks are present from the first parapodium; the 

 posterior parapodial lobes are long ; composite hooks are absent. The 

 specimens on which this record is based are deposited in the Swedish 

 State Museum. See also nos. 17 and 19.) 



19. L. cingulata Treadwell (1917, p. 263) from Tortugas, Florida. 

 (This may be referable to L. inflata, p. 160.) 



20. L. ehlerst van tenuisetis Mcintosh (1885, p. 253) from off New 

 England, in 1,340 fms. (This is an abyssal form, provided with 

 very long, slender, limbate setae.) 



21. L. erecta (Moore), p. 149. 



22. L. floridana Ehlers (1887, p. 103) from Key West, Florida. 



23. L. floridana polygnatha Monro (1933, p. 260) from Dry Tor- 

 tugas, Florida. 



24. L. fragilis (O. F. Miiller) well known from western Europe and 

 reported off New England and eastern Canada. 



25. L. hebes Verrill (1874, p. 367) from Maine. (This name was pro- 

 posed to replace L. obtusa Verrill, not Kinberg; it is poorly known.) 



26. L. heterochaeta (Schmarda) (1861, p. 116) from Valparaiso, 

 Chile. (This is incompletely known.) 



?27. L. heteropoda Marenzeller. (See Hartman, 1942, pp. 121-123, 

 fig. 10.) 



28. L. impatiens Claparede, well known from southern Europe, has 

 been reported from Elkhorn Slough, California (MacGinitie, 1935, 

 p. 693), and from southern South America (Monro, 1936, p. 155). 



29. L. index (Moore), p. 162. 



30. L. inflata Moore, p. 160. 



