THE MOLLUSCA—HEDLEY. 439 
TriFORIS DOLICHA, Watson, 
Watson, Chall. Report, Zool., xv., 1886, p. 565, pl. xlii., fig. 1. 
One specimen from the Funafuti lagoon agrees exactly with 
another now before me from Prince of Wales Island, Torres 
Straits. Young specimens were collected off Cape Sidmouth, 
Queensland, by Mr. A. U. Henn, and presented to this Museum. 
The “Challenger ” collected it a little west of Cape York. 
The two adult specimens I have seen are pure white, punctuated 
between the gemmules with orange; in neither is the lip more 
developed than in the ‘‘Challenger” example. It may be that this 
species does not attain the spurred lip of its congeners. 
TRIFORIS HGLE, Jowsseaume. 
(Fig. 27) 
Jousseaume, Bull. Soc. Mal. France, 1884, p. 256, pl. iv., fig. 12 ; 
Tryon, Man. Conch., ix., 1887, p. 185, pl. xxxix., fig. 40. _ 
o~ 
Fig. 27. 
Jousseaume’s account, as reflected in Tryon’s Manual is too 
scanty to allow of a proper determination, and with much doubt 
I assign here a Funafuti species. A single specimen of 7’. egle, 
from Noumea, presented by Mr. R. C. Rossiter, now before . 
me, is too immature to show the aperture. It is a larger and 
lighter coloured shell than those from Funafuti, and the gemmules 
seem rather closer together. As, however, it fairly corresponds 
to the Ellice shells in apex and sculpture, I prefer, instead of 
adding another name to the long list of 7’riforis, to assume that 
the one figured and described below is a variety of Jousseaume’s 
species. The still more scanty information published relative to 
T. collaris, Hinds, suggests that it should also be compared. 
* Hinds—Proc. Zool. Soc., 1848, p. 28; and Journ. Conch., vili., 1897, 
p. 409. 
