352 Records of the Indian Museum. [Voi,. X, 



latter ; this single tube then turns inwards and ends just posterior 

 to the ending of the prostatic duct. 



The vesiculae seminales are two pairs, small, in segments ix 

 and xii. 



The prostates are in segment xviii. Each is a narrow coiled 

 tube, of greyish colour (not opaque white), the whole gland being 

 of comparatively small size. The windings of the glandular tube 

 are simple ; on the left side in the specimen dissected they con- 

 sisted merely of seven simple loops laid closely side by side. The 

 gland is continued at its anterior end into the duct, which lies in 

 xvii, is of about the same diameter as the gland, and is looped 

 once, the convexity of the loop being directed outwards. 



The female organs have the usual situation. 



The spermathecae are very small. The ampulla is approxi- 

 mately hemispherical in shape, and might be said to be sessile by 

 its base on the body- wall. At any rate there is only a slight con- 

 striction there, so that if a duct is described it must be said to 

 be broad and extremely short. There is a complete ring of seven 

 diverticula round the base of the ampulla. 



The penial setae (fig. 9) are small, in length up to "5 mm., in 

 breadth i8/x (maximum). The shaft is very gently curved, the 

 curvature increasing just at the tip, whi^^h is bluntly pointed. 

 vSculpturings are to be seen near the free end as a few fine 

 dots here and there, — so fine that they are hardly visible with the 

 ordinary high power ; under the oil immersion they are revealed 

 as minute triangular teeth, either singly placed or in very short 

 rows. 



The two pairs of testes and funnels, and two pairs of seminal 

 vesicles, mark this as one of the more primitive species of the 

 genus, along with E. incommodus . The continuation of the dorsal 

 vessel forwards to the pharynx, and the correlated extension of 

 the series of lateral loops, are also primitive features which occur 

 in both forms. Septum W, too, is here well-developed, and the 

 heart of segment xi has its normal relations (again compare E. 

 incommodus). The great distinction from this latter is the entire 

 absence of genital markings. 



Eutyphoeus waltoni, Mchlsn. 



Pusa (Bengal); Aug. 1911; Bishambar Das. Several speci- 

 mens. 



vSame place; io-ix-1912; Bishambar Das. Eight specimens. 



Baroda; a-viii-igi 2 ; Bishambar Das. Numerous specimens. 



BasijMuda (Hoshiarpur District, Punjab) ; Aug. 1913; Ibrahim. 

 Three specimens. 



Ivucknow; Aug. 1913; Ibrahim. Two specimens. 



Length 160 mm. ; breadth 4-5 mm. ; colour buff to light 

 brown. Segments 156-195 Prostomium as in E. incommodus 

 (v. ant.). 



First dorsal pore \l (only once B). 



