142 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol.37. 



TEREBELLIDES STRCEMI Sars. 



Egg Harbor, August 10, T fathoms, mud ; halfway between Cape 

 Mugford and Hebron, August 23, GO fathoms, mud and sand ; 55 miles 

 east of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, October 6, 85 fathoms, mud. 



A species of wide distribution and frequent occurrence, known on 

 our coast as far south as Vineyard Sound, where it was discovered by 

 Verrill. 



Family MALDANID^. 



LUMBRICLYMENE, species? 



Oft' Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, 14 miles south, October 4, 45 fathoms, 

 rocky. The anterior ten segments with a color j^attern like Arwids- 

 sons figure of L. cylindricauda but with differently shaped crochets. 



PRAXILLELLA GRACILIS (Sars) Verrill. 



Egg Harbor, August 8, 7 fathoms, mud. The head and anterior 

 ten setigerous segments of a large individual TO mm. long and 5 mm. 

 in diameter. Except that the number of uncini in anterior setigerous 

 segments (II-IV) is greater, it agrees fully with descriptions of 

 specimens from northern Europe. 



PRAXILLELLA PR^TERMISSA (Malmgren) Verrill. 



Egg Harbor, August 10, 7 fathoms, mud. Represented by a caudal 

 end 1.3 nun. in diameter. The caudal funnel bears 15 very regular, 

 bluntly pointed papillae as long as one-third of the diameter of the 

 funnel and an umpaired neural filament nearly twice as long. Both 

 this and the preceding species have been reported by Verrill and 

 others from the northern New England coast. 



PRAXILLELLA, species? 



One mile north of Battle Harbor, September 14, 50 fathoms, fine 

 sand. A much contracted caudal end consisting of four short 

 achsetous segments and an anal funnel exactly like Arwidssons P. 

 a-fjinvs (Taf. fig. 147), but with 3G short, blunt, regular marginal 

 papillae, which become somewhat shorter and more crowded dorsally ; 

 the unpaired ventral one in the neural line about twice as long as the 

 others. Crochets unknown. 



MALDANE SARSI Malmgren. 



Shoal Tickle, near Nain, August 15; Port Manvers, August 21, 

 30 fathoms, sticky mud. From the first recorded station comes one 

 and from the second twenty or more fragments of anterior ends, 

 including the head, and from one to ten setigerous segments. The 



