328 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [June. 



annelids are much pigmented both above and below with chocolate 

 brown. 



Stations 4199, Queen Charlotte Sound, off Fort Rupert, Vancouver 

 Island, B. C, 68-107 fathoms, soft green mud and volcanic sand; 4228 

 (type), vicinity of Naha Bay, Behm Canal, southeastern Alaska, 41-134 

 fathoms, gravel and sponges; 4300, off Shakan, Sumner Strait, south- 

 eastern Alaska, 185-218 fathoms, rocks and mud. 



Trypanosyllis gemmipara Johnson. 



Trypanosyllis gemmipara Johnson, Proc. Bos. Soc. Nat. Hist., XXIX, 1901, 

 pp. 405', 406. 



This species is represented in the collection by two specimens. As 

 one of them permits the verification of Johnson's very interesting dis- 

 covery of collateral budding in this genus, it is unfortunate that the 

 preservation is altogether too imperfect to enable me to describe the 

 conditions fully. The buds are all quite young and occur in several 

 close tufts arranged in a transverse row about 35 segments anterior 

 to the anus, and all on the ventral surface, where the integuments are 

 split open at their place of origin. Collateral budding of a type 

 similar to that described by Johnson in T. geinmipara and T. nigens 

 has recently been found by Tzuka in a Japanese species, T. misakiensis, 

 also. 



Taken only at Station 4197, Gulf of Georgia, Halibut Bank, 31-90 

 fathoms, sticky green mud and fine sand. 



PHYLLODO OID^, 

 Phyllodoce citrina Malmgren. 



Phyllodoce citrina Malmgren, Ofvers. Kgl. Vet.-Akad. Forh., 1865, p. 95. 

 Two poorly preserved specimens which agree closely with the descrip- 

 tions of this species were taken at Afognak Island. The eyes are much 

 larger than shown in Malmgren's figures and both specimens are filled 

 with eggs. Marenzeller reports this species from Bering Sea. 



Stations 4271, Afognak Bay, Afognak Island, lH-20 fathoms, hard 

 gray sand and rocks; 4272, the same, 12-17 fathoms, sticky mud. 



Phyllodoce mucosa Oersted. 



Phyllodoce mucosa, Oersted, Ann. Dan. Consp., p. 31. 



A single much relaxed specimen of this species, 75 mm. long, includ- 

 ing the protruded proboscis, closely resembles the figures and descrip- 

 tions of this species, but possesses a greater number of setae than is 

 usually attributed to it. 



This example is No. 281, Coll. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., collected by 

 Dr. Benjamin Sharp at Icy Cape, Alaska. 



