110 AUSTRALASIAN ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. 



We must therefore regard them as ohler. perliaps imich ohler, stages of 

 development than the smaller ones. 



I will deal with the two groups separately. 



Group A. — The Ma-cquarie Island Form. 



Masses of densely aggregated, small, brown, horny tubes set side by side 

 horizontally, with the free ends curving away from the main axis, were obtained from 

 rock scrapings, and from the under-side of stones at low water, at the North end of the 

 Island. The free end of the tube is thinner and has sand grains adherent to it. 



The contained worm, removed from one such tube, has a total length of 35 mm., 

 of which the gill-plume occupies about 5.6 mm.; the body is 2.5 mm. in width, and 

 contains 65 segments. 



The gills are speckled with red-brown dots and splashes, closely set along the inner 

 side of the filaments, the shaft being unpigmented. The filaments are loose and curl 

 outwards; I find 15-20 filaments on each side. There is no inter- filamentary membrane. 



Eggs were attached to the gills, as has been stated by other writers. The thorax 

 in these small forms contains usually 8 segments; though sometimes only 7. 



Group B. — Commonwealth Bay Forms. 



Of these I have seventy-two specimens, some still within their tubes, others 

 have been removed therefrom before preservation. 



The tubes are of tough parchment-like material of a yellow-brown colour; but 

 those from greater depths, 110-120 fathoms, are more darkly coloured, and are rather 

 olive-brown. 



The longest tube measured came from 25 fathoms; it attains a length of 400 mm. 

 with a diameter of 8 mm.; the surface is smooth, the upper end thinner, flexible, and 

 paler in tint. It has some sand grains adherent to it. 



Another tube from the same haul is much paler in tii^t, and much slenderer than 

 the majority; measures 90 mm. by 1.5 mm. 



Still another tube is 270 mm. long, and contains a worm nreasuring 226 mm. 

 inclusive of the gills, which account for 44 mm. 



A worm of 150 mm. exclusive of the gills, which are 40 mm. long, contains 190 

 segments. Its breadth at the collar is 6 mm.; its greatest breadth is 8 mm., and the 

 height of the body 5 mm. 



I measured a nunaber of these worms from various depths in order to see whether 

 there was any correlation between size and depth, Imt I find none. 



