32 A. E. Verrill — Additions to the Fauna of the Bermudas. 



Color of mautle and foot and gills pale, translucent, yellowish 

 white, with whiter specks, due to spicules ; near each lateral margin 

 of the mantle there is a row usually of five small, round, golden 

 yellow spots, to which the name refers. A greenish visceral organ 

 often shows through on the back. Rhinophores yellowish. 



Length, 10"'™ ; breadth, o""^, in life. 



Harrington Sound, in shallow water, under corals, April 28, 1901. 



Ijam.ellidoris miniata V., sp. nov. 



Plate III. Figure 1. 



See figtire 3, below. 



A small, bright red, finelj' papillose species. Head rounded, 

 emarginate in front, with a pair of slender oral tentacles. Body 

 elliptical, strongly convex. Foot thin, wider and much longer than 

 the mantle, its anterior angles produced into folded lobes. Rhino- 

 phores rather large, fusiform or subclavate ; thick and strongly 

 plicated, basal part smooth ; tip naked, acute and white ; no evident 

 sheaths. Gills about eight, rather large, simply pinnate, with fine 

 filaments, retractile. Surface of mantle covered with minute, conical, 

 pointed papill?e. 



Color of mantle bright red or deep orange-red, with an obscure 

 median brownish stripe ; gills and middle of rhinophores darker red, 

 surrounded at base with grayish blue ; the rhinophores are tipped 

 with white. Foot and head paler orange or pinkish. 



Length of foot, of largest, in extension, 10"™ ; of mantle, 7 '5°"" ; 

 another was 6"'™ long, 3-5™™ broad. 



Castle Harbor, under stones at low-tide, April 10th and 17th, 1901. 



Lamellidoris lactea Ver. 

 These Trans., x, p. 548, 1900. 



Plate IV. Figures 8a, 86. 



A few additional specimens of this rare species were obtained. 

 In these the dorsal surface of the mantle and the sides below its 

 border were milk-white, spotted and specked with purplish gray or 

 pale lavender, some of the spots near the middle being larger and 

 roundish ; there was a tinge of orange around the bases of the gills 

 and on the low thick sheaths of the rhinophores. The gills are 

 rather long, simpl}^ pinnate ; about 7 to 9 were counted. The 

 rhinophores are small, conical, dark gray. 



