her:\ie.ea. 253 



wide as the body. Eye spots distinct behind and a little inside of 

 the tentacles. Length, one fonrth of an incli ; breadth, one twen- 

 tieth of an inch. 



Fonnd in Charles River and at Sonth Boston Bridge, with E. fus- 

 cata, in Jnly, npon Laomedea geniciilata. 



Well-developed specimens seem quite remote from the last spe- 

 cies on accomit of size, color, length, and form of papillae, and num- 

 ber of tufts. But they are found in company ; and there are speci- 

 mens of E. fuscata, with only here and there a cluster or a line of 

 dusky dots which would lead to the suspicion that they might blend 

 with each other. 



Family HERIVLEID^. 



Body elongated, not provided with a distinct mantle. Mouth 

 unarmed, or with corneous jaws ; tentacles sometimes wanting ; 

 when present two, dorsal, non-retractile. Gills papillose. Yent 

 usually central, on the posterior half of the back. Genital orifice at 

 the right side. 



The dorsal position of the vent, and the indistinct mantle distin- 

 guish this family from the Ebjsiida: ; perhaps those genera with 

 horny jaws belong to a distinct family. 



Oeiius HEROT.EA, Lotkx. 1844. 



Body elongated, attenuated, without a mantle. Head terminal. 

 Tentacles two, longitudinally folded ; jaws none. Branchiae long, 

 swelled, arranged at the sides of the back. Anus on the body in 

 front of the heart. 



Hermaea cruciata. 



Plate XVII. Fig. 256 

 Hermcea cruciata, Alex. Agassiz, MS. 



Body very slender, the tail much attenuated. Foot narrower than 

 the body, obtusely dilated at the anterior angles. Head small, semi- 

 circular. Mouth inferior. Tentacles dilated and obtusely pointed, 

 the superior face longer than the inferior. Branchige dilated, shaped 

 much like trefoil or the ace of clubs, the biliary organs within hav- 

 ing a rude cruciate form ; there are seven princi{)al ones on each 

 side and eight or ten intermediate much smaller ones. Length, — ? 



