18 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM VOL, 125 
Nephtys ferruginea Hartman 
This species has not been reported previously to possess recurved 
aciculae, but they are clearly recurved in our many specimens. The 
interramal cirri usually point downward or may appear to be involute; 
however, the pigmentation pattern, the appearance of the interramal 
cirri on the third setiger, and the shape of the posterior neuropodial 
acicular lobe make identification certain. 
Usually, the intestinal content is not conspicuous even in trans- 
parent posterior ends. A specimen with sediment boluses in the pos- 
terior intestine was dissected and was found to have numerous syllid 
bristles engulfed in the sediment. 
Females with eggs and young specimens, the latter presumably be- 
longing to this species, were observed from February through July. 
Family SPHAERODORIDAE 
Sphaerodoridium sphaerulifer (Moore) 
Spaerodorum sphaerulifer— Ushakov, 1955, p. 222. 
Spaerodoridium sphaerulifer —Liitzen, 1961, p. 415. 
Found at stations 4 and 7. New for Puget Sound. Previously known 
from California, the Sea of Okhotsk, and the Sea of Japan. 
Family GLYCERIDAE 
Glycera Savigny 
In addition to a note on G. siphonostoma (della Chiaje), we report 
observations on the intestinal contents of other species of this genus, 
occurring locally. 
Glycera siphonostoma (delle Chiaje) 
Glycera siphonostoma. —Imajima and Hartman, 1964, p. 164. 
Our specimens agree with the description by Imajima and Hartman 
(1964): Each aileron has a connecting plate, there are ridges on the 
proboscidial organs, the prostomium is 9-ringed, branchiae are absent, 
there are pointed postsetal lobes that are much shorter than the pre- 
setal lobes, and there are large ventral cirri. The ventral cirri of middle 
parapodia of our specimens reach nearly to the presetal lobes, agreeing 
with the figures given by McIntosh for the species (1910; pl. 76; fig. 
2b). 
Found at stations 2, 7, and 8. New for Puget Sound; hitherto known 
in the Pacific from Japan. 
