NO. IO CRINOIDS OF HAMBURG MUSEUM — CLARK 3 



A specimen of Solanometra magellanica collected by Dr. H. Reh- 

 berg was recorded by Hartlaub in 1895, while a part of the material 

 collected by Professor W. Kiikenthal at Spitsbergen .and at Ternate, 

 recorded by Professor Pfeffer, and of that collected at Spitzbergen 

 by Romer and Schaudinn, recorded by Professor Ludwig Doderlein, 

 is in the Hamburg Museum. 



The present author's report upon the crinoids collected by the 

 Hamburg West Australian Expedition, under Drs. W. Michaelsen 

 and R. Hartmeyer, was based upon material which is now divided 

 between the Hamburg Museum and the Museum fur Naturkunde at 

 Berlin. 



ANNOTATED LIST OF THE SPECIES 



The following list includes reidentifications of all the specimens in 

 the Hamburg Museum previously recorded with, when necessary, 

 redescriptions. There are also notices of many specimens which have 

 been received from various sources since the publication of Hartlaub's 

 memoir, and which are here identified for the first time. A few 

 specimens collected by the Hamburg West Australian Expedition, 

 which were sent to me with the collection of the Plamburg Museum, 

 were unfortunately overlooked at the time I prepared my memoir 

 upon the West Australian crinoid fauna ; these are recorded herein. 



The citations given under the species headings refer only to the 

 specimens recorded, as indicated by the numbers in parentheses 

 following. 



Family COMASTERIDJE 



Subfamily CAPILLASTERIN^ 



COMATELLA STELLIGERA (P. H. Carpenter) 



Actinometra stelligera 1891. Hartlaub, Nova Acta Acad. German., vol. 58, 

 No. 1, p. 104 (1). 



1. Samoa and Fiji. — Two specimens, each with thirty arms. 



2. ? Chinese Coast (the accompanying label reads, in Chinese 

 characters, "very deep water"). — One specimen; the centrodorsal 

 is thick discoidal with a fiat dorsal pole 4.5 mm. in diameter; the cirri 

 are XVIII, 20-21, 20 mm. long; there are thirty-eight arms about 80 

 mm. long; the distal edges of the brachials are produced and finely 

 spinous and the distal ends of the elements of the division series are 

 prominent, these two features together giving the animal a very 

 rugose appearance. 



