COE 



hands, and must stand as new for the present. One other spe- 

 cies (JE. burgeri Coe), although undescribed at the time, was 

 incorrectly referred to E. violaceum Burger. Three of the four 

 remaining forms were correctly identified with European spe- 

 cies, while the one species remaining, Linens striatus, is pos- 

 sibly identical with M. tmpressa (Stimpson), as stated above. 



ALASKA SPECIES FOUND ON THE COAST OF CALIFORNIA 



Of the species recorded in the first part of this report (pp. i- 

 110), the following were collected in the summer of 1901 on 

 the California coast in the localities indicated below. 



Paleonemertea. 



1. Carinella capistrata Coe. Monterey Bay. 



2. C. sexlineata Griffin (= C. dinema Coe) . Monterey Bay ; 

 San Pedro. 



3. Carinoma mutabilis Griffin (= C. griffini Coe). San 

 Pedro. 



4. Cephalothrix linearis (Rathke) Oersted. Monterey Bay ; 

 San Pedro ; San Diego. 



Hoplonemertea. 



5. Emflectonema gracile { Johnston) Verrill. Monterey Bay. 



6. Paranemertes -peregrina Coe. Monterey Bay; San 

 Pedro. 



7. Amfkiporus bimaculatus Coe. Monterey Bay. 



8. A. angulatus (Fabr.) Verrill. Monterey Bay ; San Pedro. 



9. A. im-parisfonosus Griffin (= A. leuciodus Coe). Mon- 

 terey Bay ; San Pedro ; San Diego. 



10. A. formidabilis Griffin (= A. exilis Coe). Monterey 

 Bay. 



Heteronemertea. 



11. Micrura verrilli Coe. Monterey Bay. 



12. M. alaskensis Coe. San Pedro; Monterey Bay. 



13. Cerebratulus marginatus Renier. San Pedro. 



14. C. albifrons Coe. San Pedro 



In the first portion of this report 32 species were enumerated. 

 Nearly half of these, or the above 14 species, were found also 

 on the California coast during a single summer. Eleven of 



