92 AUSTRALASIAN ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. 



It is very similar to the .Northern TMepus cincinnatus Fabricius, as Willey has 

 pointed out, with which indeed he suggested that it is conspecific. But there appear 

 to be a few differences from that Northern form, which has recently been described at 

 length by Mcintosh ( 1915, p. 26). 



Under the circumstances, it seems worth while to give the essential facts about 

 the worm. 



The animal grows to a large size, frequently attaining a body length of 140 mm. 

 or even more (in one specimen it reaches 190 mm.). To this length of body must be 

 added that of the tentacles, which measure some 30-40 mm., though of course they are 

 much coiled and contracted, so that in life they nuist exceed tliis measurement. 



The mimber of segments is 90-100 ; the diameter of the worm first mentioned is 

 7-5 mm. 



The sides of the body are thick, rough, brownish, and very glandular ; and this 

 is continuous with the large ventral gland shields. 



The cephalic collar or platform which bears the tentacles, carries num.erous 

 eye-spots over its entire extent. 



There are two bunches of gill filaments on each side of segments 2 and 3, which 

 latter is also the first chaetigerous segment. Each bunch consists of a single transverse 

 row of simple unbranched filaments— about 15 in a row on each side in the first gill — 

 leaving a small gap in the median dorsal line equal to aboiit the width of three filaments. 

 The anterior gill extends downwards to below the level of the notopod. The second gill 

 is smaller, and consists of some twelve filaments, and the dorsal gap is slightly wider. 



In twenty-five individuals, taken at random out of a jar containing more than one 

 hundred, every one had two pairs of gills. Not one of all those examined showed any 

 variation in this respect, which seems to justify the use of the genus Thele/pus for two- 

 gilled forms, or at any rate to refute the idea that variation in this matter commonly 

 occurs in a species. 



The first notopod occiirs on the thii'd segment and is rejjeated on every segment 

 throughout the worm, though in the hinder ones the number of chsetae becomes much 

 fewer (in T. cincinnatus, Mcintosh states that the notopod is absent in the last forty 

 segments). The first neuropod lies in the 5th segment. It is of considerable extent, 

 reaching down to the margin of the gland shield. But after the 10th segment it begins 

 to dwindle in height and at the same time to project outwards, so that by the 20th 

 segment the neuropod has quite a short vertical extent not more than twice that of 

 the notopod, and so remains throughout the greater part of the animal, as oar-lilce 

 appendages. 



The margin of the anterior neuropods is darkly pigmented. The cluiet* of the 

 first notopod and of those that follow are of two kinds, as in T. setosus. 



