are present. Hartmann-Schroder ( 1963) reviewed 

 the synonymy of the genus My^tidts and its 

 subgenera and showed that these names could 

 not be used for Southern's species. She re- 

 ferred it to a Et('o)iides Hartmann-Schroder but 

 this in turn is a synonym ofHeaioiiu ra Hartmann- 

 Schroder. 



Records. — Eleven specimens from 10 to 200 

 m off Beaufort (*). 



Dif<trihntiou. — Ireland; Bimini Islands; in 10- 

 20 m. 



Eiilalia (Pterocirrus) macroceros Grube, 1860 



Eulalia (Pterocirrus) macroceros. -Fauvel, 1923: 

 167, Fig. 60 d-g (partim). - Day, 1960: 301, 

 Fig. 5 g-i; 1967: 152, Fig. 5.4. a-c. 



Description. - Body up to 20 mm long, rather 

 broad, greenish. Prostomium bilobed poste- 

 riorly with a brownish swelling between the 

 lobes. Eyes large; median antenna long and 

 well forward. Proboscis with a narrow ring of 

 elongate papillae basally but mainly smooth 

 distally. First tentacular segment mainly fused 

 to prostomium; second and third segments 

 separate but without setae. Four pairs of ten- 

 tacular cirri; tentacular formula: 1 + 1- 0— - 



1 N 

 but second ventral cirrus (V2) flattened on one 

 margin. Normal body segments with cordate 

 dorsal cirri; superior part of setigerous lobes 

 slightly produced and ventral cirri slightly 

 pointed. Setae with markedly striate shaft-heads 

 and long blades. 



Records. — Common on coral in 6.5-18 m off 

 Beaufort (20, *). This is a new record for the 

 Atlantic coast of the United States. 



Distribi(tio)i. — Mediterranean; Morocco to 

 Senegal; South Africa; Washington; 5 to 30 m. 



Eulalia (Eiimido) sangiiinea (Oersted, 1843) 



Eulalia (Eu»uda)sa)i(ji(i)iea. -Fauvel, 1923: 166, 

 Fig. 59 f-k. - Day, 1967: 155, Fig. 5.5. a-c. 



Enmida sa)igHiiiea. - Pettibone, 1963a: 88. Fig. 

 21 a, b. - Hartman, 1968: 275, Fig. 1-3. 



Records. — Several records between Cape 



Hatteras and Beaufort from the shore to 40 m 

 (3, 11, 13, 15, 17, 18.20,21, *). 



Distribiitio)!. — Cosmopolitan from cold tem- 

 perate to .subtropical seas; intertidal to 600 m. 



Eulalia bilineata (Johnston. 1840) 



Eiihilid hiliiHdia. - Fauvel. 1923: 162, Fig. 58 

 a-e. - Pettibone, 1963a: 86. Fig. 20. - Hart- 

 man, 1968: 261. Fig. 1.2. 



Eulalia (Hiipoeulalia) bilineata. -Day, 1967: 164, 

 Fig. 5.4. k-m. 



Records. — North Carolina, intertidal (17, *). 



Distribution. — Arctic; North Atlantic from 

 Norway to the English Channel and Nova Scotia 

 to North Carolina; South Africa; Pacific from 

 North Japan Sea to the Yellow Sea and Van- 

 couver Island to southern California; intertidal 

 to 2,000 m. 



Eulalia ririetis (Linnaeus, 1767) 



Eulalia viridis. - Fauvel. 1923: 160, Fig. 57 a, b. 

 -Pettibone, 1963a: 85. Fig. 19. - Hartman. 

 1968: 267. Fig. 1-3. 



Reco)-ds. — Cape Hatteras to Beaufort, inter- 

 tidal (18). 



Disti'ibution. — Arctic; Atlantic from Norway 

 to Cape Verde Island and Iceland to North 

 Carolina; Pacific from northern Japan to China 

 and Alaska to Panama; ? Indian Ocean; inter- 

 tidal to 200 m. 



Paranaitis kosteriensis (Malmgren, 1867) 



Auaitis kosteriensis. - Bergstrom. 1914: 156, 



pi. 1: Fig. l.text Fig. 52a-c. 

 Phijllodoce (Anaitis)k()steriensis. - Fauvel, 1923: 



157, Fig. 56 a-c. 

 Paranaitis kosteriensis. - Pettibone, 1963a: 77, 



Fig. 17 d. 



Records. — One small specimen from 160 m 

 off Beaufort (*). 



Distribution. — North Atlantic from Sweden to 

 Ireland and Labrador to New England; 10- 

 2,000 m. 



20 



