PART 5 A MONOGRAPH OF THE EXISTING CRINOIDS 157 



but his account of it is misleading in that he compared it onl}' with Ilathrometra 

 sarsi, quite overlooking its affinities with the other species of Antedon as now under- 

 stood. In 1910 I reexamined Hartlaub's type at Hamburg, thanks to the courtesy of 

 Prof. Georg Pfeffer, and found there another from Goree, Senegal, which had also been 

 collected by Capt. Hupfer. Later I found three more from Goree in the British Museum. 

 In 1911 I gave Goree among the locahties from which this species is known, in the 

 following year describing the type in detail and listing the specimen from Goree in the 

 Hamburg Museum. In 1913 I recorded those from Goree in the British Museum. 



[Notes by A.M.C] In 1914, however, Mr. A. H. Clark included Goree among the 

 localities for his new species moroccana and certainly this change is supported by the 

 British Museiun specimens which have the short, curled, distally expanded cirri typical 

 of moroccava. 



In 1925 Dr. Th. Mortensen gave the name hupferi to some specimens of Antedon 

 collected off the Atlantic coast of Morocco by the Vannemt. It seems more likely 

 that these too are moroccana. 



In 1938 Cadenat recorded A. hupferi from the dredgings of the President-Theodore- 

 Tissier to the west of Sierra Leone, the depth of one station being 120 meters. 



The following year Dr. D. DUwyn John recorded under this name a single speci- 

 men lacking the cirri, taken on the shore at St. Vincent, Cape Verde Islands, by the 

 Scottish Antarctic Expedition en route. He reckoned it belongs to the same species 

 as the thi-ee from Goree which had been labeled hupferi by Mr. Clark (though since 

 referred to moroccana). 



Gislen (1955) has recorded specimens from a number of West African stations 

 under the name of A. dubenii of which nearly all those that I have seen from localities 

 south of Sierra Leone prove to be distinct as A. hupferi. 



ANTEDON INCOMMODA INCOMMODA (Bell) 



Figure 10,a 

 [See also vol. 1, pt. 1, fig. 107, p. 173] 



Antedon incommoda Bell, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 6, vol. 2, 1888, pp. 402, 404 (Port Phillip; de- 

 scription); vol. 3, 1889, p. 292. — Hamann, Bronn's Klassen und Ordnungen des Tier- Reichs, vol. 

 2, Abt. 3, 1907, p. 1580 (listed). 



Antedon, sp. nov. P. H. Carpenter, Proc. Roy. Soc. Victoria, new ser., vol. 1, for 1889, 1890, p. 135 

 (Port Phillip). 



? Compsometra lacertosa A. H. Clark, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 38, 1910, p. 275 (Port Jackson); 

 Mem. Australian Mus., vol. 4, 1911, p. 718 {= Antedon, sp. nov. Carpenter, 1890), p. 790 (com- 

 pared with loveni). 



Compsometra incommoda A. H. Clark in Michaelsen and Hartmeyer, Die Fauna Sudwest-Australiens, 

 vol. 3, Lief. 13, Crinoidea, 1911, pp. 442, 443, 444, 464, 465 (detailed discussion; localities; com- 

 parisons); Mem. Australian Mus., vol. 4, 1911, pp. 722, 735, 792 (detailed account; localities); 

 Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 43, 1912, pp. 382, 405; Crinoids of the Indian Ocean, 1912, pp. 10, 

 229 (localities; discussion); Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 61, No. 15, 1913, p. 52 (specimens in 

 the British Museum); Die Crinotden der Antarktis, 1915, p. 124 (exhibits the same features as 

 Solanomelra anlarclica), p. 167 (range); Internat. Rev. gesamt. Hydrobiol. und Hydrogr., 1915, 

 p. 227 (distribution).— H. L. Clark, Biol. Results Fishing Exper. F.I.S. Endeavour, 1909-14, 

 vol. 4, 1916, pt. 1, pp. 5, 26 (range; locality). — Hartmeyer, Mitt. Zool. Mus. Berlin, vol. 8, 

 No. 2, 1916, p. 236 (southwestern Australia; No. 5958).— .\. H. Clark, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 

 ington, vol. 31, 1918, p. 42 (listed from Tasmania); Unstalked crinoids of the Siboga-E-aped., 

 1918, p. 205 (in key; range), p. 208 (synonymy); Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 72, No. 7, 1921, 

 pi. 12, fig. 48.— H. L. Clark, Rec. South Australian Mus., vol. 3, No. 4, 1928, p. 362 (listed), 

 p. 369 (two specimens, locality unknown; notes); Mem. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. 55, 1938, p. 44 



