Gephyrea. 285 



in full in l)i\ Micliaelsen's article recorded from the Mediterranean 

 and Indian Oceans, the species has not been met with again until we 

 reach a latitude of about 50° S. The genus too seems also bipolar 

 in its distribution. P. hicaudatus lives in the North Sea and Arctic 

 Ocean, and is represented in habits and its two tails by M. de 

 Guerne's Pinaiyuloides australis from the neighbourhood of the 

 Magellan Straits. F. glandifer, Ehlers, and P. hrcvicaiodatas, Ehlers, 

 are, in the opinion of Koren and Danielsen^ and of Dr. Michaelsen, 

 not specifically distinct from P. caudatus, and in fact Professor 

 Ehlers^ himself regarded these species as requiring confirmation.^ 



Mr, Shipley was also good enough to determine three specimens 

 of Phascolosoma capsiforme (Baird, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1868, 

 p. 83) from Cape Adare, 20-24 fathoms.— E. J. B. 



XIV. NEMATODA. 



Dr. von Linstow has been so good as to examine the few round 

 worms in the collection. They all belong to Leptosomatum 

 antardictim (see v. Linstow, JB. Hamburg, wiss. Anstalt IX. 

 (1892), 2, p. 59. 



XV. CESTODA. 



Dr. von Linstow is also my authority for recording Bothriocephalus 

 tectus (t.c, p. 73) from Ptoss's Seal. 



1 ' Faima littoralis Norwegiae.' III. Heft. Bergen, 1877. 



2 Zeitschr. wiss. Zool., XL, 1862, p. 205. 



^ It is not Mr. Shijjley's fault that this report did not appear before Feb. 15th, 

 1902, when were published Mr. Storikow's remarks on the geograpliical distribution 

 of some Priapulids (Zool. Anzeig., xxv, p. 15.'i). — F. J. B. 



