ANNELID GENUS CAJMBARINCOLA — HOFFMAN 333 



SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY: Nottoway Swamp, 3.8 miles east of Courtland on U.S. 

 Hy. 58, May 31, 1948, Holt and Bobb (PCH 219), 



North Carolina: wilson county: Saratoga, April 18, 1956, Horton H. 

 Hobbs (PCH 733). 



South Carolina: barnwell county: April 20, 1956, Hobbs (PCH 710). 

 CALHOUN county: 2.9 miles north of the Orangeburg County line, April 20, 

 1956, Hobbs (PCH 708). 



Georgia: decatur county: Tributary to Mosquito Creek, just north of 

 Chattahoochee, Florida, on Ga. Hy. 97, September 9, 1955, Hobbs and Hart 

 (PCH 662). SEMINOLE county: 3.1 miles north of Iron City, September 9, 

 1955, Hobbs and Hart (PCH 661). 



Florida: levy county: Southwest of Otter Creek, April 1948, Hobbs (PCH 

 163). CALHOUN county: 7.7 miles south of Altha, September 3, 1955, Hobbs 

 and Hart (PCH 664). 



In addition, the published records of Goodnight (1941) for Florida 

 and Georgia, under the name vitrea, probably apply to this form, and 

 may be provisionally accepted. These records extend the range 

 somewhat farther south onto the Florida peninsula. 



Remarks. — •This species is named for the Seminole Chief Osceola, 

 a heroic leader of the resistance of his people during their conflict 

 with the United States Government. 



INGENS GROUP 



The mountains of the southern Appalachian system are inhabited 

 by a very large and distinctive Cambarincola which fully warrants 

 segregation into a distinct group. 



Cambarincola ingens seems speciaUzed in the characters of size and 

 very long prostate, but nonetheless shows primitive features in the 

 prominent deferent lobes of the spermiducal gland and the relatively 

 slightly differentiated cuboidal epithelium of the prostate. I would 

 suspect that it, or its progenitor, separated from the main line of 

 evolution in the Philadelphica section at a fairly early stage. 



Cambarincola ingens, new species 



Figures 3, 4, 33, 34 



Cambarincola philadelphica (not Leidy, 1851) Ellis, 1919, Proc. U.S. Nat. 

 Mus., vol. 55, p. 260 (in part. West Virginia records only). — Goodnight, 

 1943, Journ. Parasitology, vol. 29, p. 100 (in part, Virginia record only). 



Type specimens. — Holotype, USNM 29944, from Camharus 

 sciotensis collected in Sinking Creek about 1 mile west of Newport, 

 Giles County, Virginia, by Ben I. Johns, June 27, 1953. Topoparatypes 

 from the same collection (PCH 499) and the following, both from 

 the type locality: July 1947, Horton H. Hobbs and others (PCH 234), 

 and July 3, 1950, Holt, Tuten, and Kizer (PCH 407). 



