172 ON THE GENUS CIILOEIA. 
C. Branchiae commencing on the 5th segment. 
12. fusca M’Intosh, Challenger-reports, Zoology, Vol. 
XII, 1885, p. 14, pl. 2, figs. 1, 2; pl. 1A, figs. 14, 
155 pl TEA, figs. 1,02, 
Banda. 
Chloeia bengalensis Kinb. and Chl. malaica Kinb. (Öfver- 
sigt af Kongl. Vet.-Akad. Förh. 1867, p. 86) are “nomina 
nuda’’, neither description nor figure having been published. 
Chl. egena Gr., found by Grube in the Zoological Museum 
of the Petersburg-Academy, is also a very doubtful species, 
for it was not only quite discolored, but also the points 
of the bristles were broken off. 
Chl. furcigera Qtrf., — inermis Qtrf. and — nuda Qtrf. are 
based upon specimens in an indifferent state of preservation. 
Chi. spectabilis Baird is also a doubtful species, because 
the bristles of the ventral and dorsal feet are described 
as being “simple”, 
Chloeia amphora, n. sp. 
Siboga-Exped.: 5 spec. near Banda, depth from 9 to 
45 M., Stat. Soeloe and Stat. Haingsisi (Samau). 
1 spec. coll. by van Kampen in the Strait of Malacca. 
The length of the largest specimen 26 mm., its greatest 
breadth (without bristles) 7 mm.; the number of segments 
24—26. Body somewhat heavy, not tapering posteriorly, 
of a buff colour; the bristles pale yellow. The skin wrinkled 
in the middle of the dorsum. Here each segment shows a 
violet spot, somewhat resembling a roman amphora, sur- 
rounded by a white band. Moreover in the anterior segments 
an oblique band is visible, running over the front-side of 
the parapodium. A violet stripe runs over the middle of 
the caruncle. The dorsal cirri are dark violet, the ventral 
ones colourless. The anal cirri rather long, finger-shaped. 
Labial folds dark. The caruncle bears about 20 lateral 
folds and extends till upon the anterior border of the 4th 
segment. The unpaired antenna does not reach the posterior 
end of the caruncle; of the paired antennae the superior 
‚ Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XXXII. 
