594 EOLIDIDiE. 



side, each of several rows of about four papillae. Angles 

 of the foot produced. 



Between tide marks, and in the laminarian zone on the 

 east coast of England and Scotland, in the Fritli of Clyde, 

 and Irish sea. 



8. E. PUNCTATA, Alder and Hancock. 



Ann. Nat. Hist. vol. xvi. p. 315, and Monog. part 2, fam. 3, pi. 15. 



Body (an inch long) linear-lanceolate, yellowish- white, 

 speckled with opake white spots. Dorsal tentacles yel- 

 low, rather short, conico-subulate, obliquely laminated; 

 oi*al ones very long, tapering white. Branchiae oblongo- 

 subulate, brownish, with pale tips, arranged on each side 

 in six or seven clusters, the anterior ones of three and 

 two rows each, thirty or forty papillae in the first clus- 

 ter. Angles of the foot much produced. 



In rather deep water, Torbay (A. and H.). 



9. E. LiNEATA, Lov^n. 



Eolis Uneata, Loven, Ind. Moll. Scand. p. 8. — Alper and Hancock, Ann. 

 Nat. Hist. vol. xviii. p. 294, and Monog. part 5, fam. 3, 

 plate 16. 



Body (an inch long) linear, white, with three longitu- 

 dinal opake white lines. Dorsal tentacles subulate, faintly 

 wrinkled, yellowish, with an opaque white line on their 

 backs ; oral ones slightly longer, similarly marked. 

 Branchise linear, crimson, with a white ring near their 

 tips, and a line down their fronts, arranged in 4-5, 

 mostly imdefined clusters, of about sixteen and fewer 

 papillae. Foot with the anterior angles moderately pro- 

 duced. 



In the littoral and laminarian zones. Ayrshire (D. 



