BARBADOS-ANTIGUA REPORTS 5] 
At the bases of these sete are numerous very short slender needle-like 
colorless set#. Ventral to the acicula are two kinds of sete. In the 
dorsal region of the tuft there are a few (6 in the one drawn) very 
stout yellow sete with the apex slightly bent and blunt pointed. (Figure 
14) Subapically each has a tuft of minute spines visible only under high 
power. Ventral to these is a tuft of colorless sete each with a slender 
stalk which widens toward the end and then narrows to a very sharp 
apex, bending first to one side and then back to the original direction so 
that the terminal portion is parallel to the basal. (Figure 15) On 
either side of the entire terminal portion is a row of spines, (possibly 
a broad spine which extends entirely across the seta and shows on both 
margins.) Where these spines are largest they are obviously in the form 
of plates whose free margins are denticulated, and probably this struc 
ture persists in the smaller ones though this point is difficult to demon- 
strate. 
Toward the posterior end the pustules on the dorsal parapodial sur- 
faces described above change to finger-shaped or cylindrical lobes, but in 
other respects the structure of the parapodia is essentially as in the 
anterior somites and the same forms of sete occur, though they are less 
separated into groups, the different types intermingling. 
Most of the elytra had been lost. In life, they could hardly have 
covered the dorsal surface of the body. They are thin, delicate, trans- 
lucent, approximately circular in outline with a wavy margin. Against 
a dark background all except the border is seen to be dotted with opaque 
white spots. In transmitted light these spots do not show. 
One specimen collected at English Harbor. The bottle con- 
tained a thick walled tube of a soft, tough material coated on 
the outside by minute grains of sand. I am uncertain if the 
tube belongs with the animal. 
The type is in the Museum of the State University of Iowa. 
Family Phyllodocide 
PHYLLODOCE Savigny 
Phyllodoce oculata Ehlers 
Phyllodoce oculata Ehlers, (1887), p. 135, pl. 40, figs. 4, 5, 6. 
A single specimen doubtfully identified as this species though 
the characteristic dersal lobes are lost and the general preser- 
vation is poor. The locality label was unfortunately lost in 
transferring. 
EULALIA Savigny 
Eulalia quinquelineata Treadwell 
Eulalia quinquelineata Treadwell, (1901), p. 192, figs. 27 and 29. 
One imperfect specimen, lacking both anterior and posterior 
regions. I have identified it from the five longitudinal dark 
lines on the dorsal surface and the three on the ventral. 
