bo 
e 
Or 
GNATHOPHAUSIA WILLEMOESII. 
Lat. 29° 52’ 30” N., long. 138° 24’ 0” W. 
f182. 38030 IN Om OT 5730 W: 
COP 2° 3A" ONG. Ec 92 OF Wie 
20 36 ONG? ce oe O22 ARNO WE 
10° 18) 0" S59 842752) OW. 
Spence Bate and Ortmann consider this species to be Lucifer reynaudi 
M. Edw., but Milne Edwards’s description and figure are not sufficient for 
identification. 
Lucifer acestra has an enormous horizontal distribution throughout the 
warmer parts of both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. See Ortmann, /. c. 
SusporpER SCHIZOPODA.* 
Famity LOPHOGASTRID A, 
GNATHOPHAUSIA W.-Sunm. 
Nature, VIII 400, 1873; Trans. Linn. Soc. London, Zodl., 2d Ser., I. 36; 11875. 
Gnathophausia zoea W.-Sunm. 
Nature, VIII. 401, Fig. 6, 1873; Trans. Linn. Soc. London, Zodl., 2d Ser., I. 32, Plate IX. Fig. 2-15, 
Plate X. Fig. 4, 1875. 
Station 3403. 384 fathoms. 3 specimens. 
Ce oL0Gie ool ns 1 specimen. 
Gnathophausia willemoesii G. O. Sars. 
Plate K, Fig. i. 
Forhandl. Vidensk.-Selsk. Christiania, 1883, No. 7, p.6; Rep. Challenger Schizopoda, p. 38, Plate V. 
Fig. 1-6, 1885. 
Station 3392. 1270 fathoms. 1 specimen. 
io” ALTE AGS, 1 ee 
ce St20. O64 + 1 ol 
<3 42 55 | 1680) i f 
The dorsal spine is longer than in the type specimen figured by Sars, and 
it is minutely denticulated along the margins, as in G. sarst Wood-Mason,t 
a form probably not specifically distinct from G ewillemoesii. 
* Only the deep-sea Schizopods of the expedition are included in this report. An account of the pelagic 
species, by Dr. Arnold Ortmann, has been published in the Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy, 
Vol. XXV., No. 8, pp. 97-111, 1 Plate, 1894. 
+ Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 6th Ser., VII. 187, 1891. 
