j66 copepoda 



3/9 12 p. m. 68°22 N. if IS W. F. 300 I ? (V). 



■8/9 12 p. m. Kap Dan F. 347 i cT (V). 



^4/9 10 p. m. 6i°o6 N. i6°26 W. F. 391 i J" (V); i c? (IV). 



12 p. 111. F. 392 I ? (IV). 



Distribution. Eucho'te norvegica is recorded from the Atlantic at least as far south as 51° L,. N. 

 from the west coast of Greenland at little Karajak-Fjord (Vanhoffen), and north of Iceland (Paul- 

 sen). It has been found abundantly in the Fceroe channels, and in the Norwegian Sea, but onl)' in the 

 northern part of the North Sea. It is, according to Sars, frequent in deeper layers along the whole 

 coast of Norway, and so it is in the Skager Rak. It is recorded as common in the Barents Sea. The most 

 common species of Euchwfe found in the Polar basin crossed by Nan sen was E. glacialis^ not nor- 

 vegica as originally proposed by Sars, but the latter sjDecies was nevertheless (Sars 1903 p. 39) found 

 occasionally in two different places. As Mrazek says that his specimens attain a length of about 

 10 mm., he has probably confounded the two species. 



Etichfete norvegica has been taken by the Due d'Orleans (from 7/^ — i/g 1905) at most stations 

 between c. 10° Long. East and the east coast of Greenland as far north as 80° I^at. North, but was never 

 common. The species was never common between c. 300 — 100 meters, where adult females with ovi- 

 sacs or spermatophores and males (sometimes with spermatophores attached to pes V) were often found; 

 between o — 100 met. mature specimens were never found, but now and then a few young ones (1907 

 p. 407). Wolfenden has found the same to be the case in the Atlantic and writes (p. 133) "Young 

 and undeveloped specimens are not uncommon near the surface, but the adult animal appears to prefer 

 the deep water down to 500—600 fathoms". My material, as far as it goes, tells the same story. 



Though the species has a wide distribution in the northern seas, and though it is occasionally 

 found propagating here, I think we are right in regarding it as a species which belongs to the North 

 Atlantic, and by the Atlantic currents are carried to the polar regions; it seems in any case to be 

 distinctly more common in the Fseroe channels and the west of Iceland than in the ocean between 

 Norway, Greenland and Spitsbergen. 



47. Euchaete tonsa Giesbrecht. 

 (PI. VI figs 4 a— b; text-figs 46 a— g). 



1895. Euchsete tonsa n. sp. Giesbrecht, p. 251, pi. IV figs 9 — 10. 

 iSg8. — — Giesbr. Giesbrecht & Schmeil, p. 40. 



1904. — — — Cleve, p. 190. 



1905. — — _ G. O. Sars, p. 5. 



1905. — — — Farran, p. 35. 



1906. - — — Pearson, p. 17. 



1906 Euchaete tonsa Giesbr. EsterK-, p. 64, pis 9 — 10. 



190S. — — — V. Bremen, p. 55, fig. 62. 



1908. — — — Farran, p. 40. 



1909. — — — A. Scott, p. 72, pi. XIV figs 8—15. 

 191 1. — — — Wolfenden, p. 298, text-figs 50 a-d. 



Description. % Size of specimen from St. 72 Thor 1905 was 6-4 nun.; head -|- first thoracic 

 tergite 2-8, four posterior thoracic somites i-8; urosome i-8 mm. 



The lateral corner is like Wolfenden's figure, and more pointed than figured by Scott and 

 Esterly for Pacific species; the point is, as shown in text-figs 46a— b, more prominent on the left than 

 on the right side; no lateral tuft of hairs is found. 



