[Gil] INVERTEBRATE ANIMALS OF VINEYARD SOUND, ETC. 317 



NOTOMASTUS FILIFORMIS Verrill, sp. nov. (p. 342.) 



Body very long and slender, filiform, composed of very numerous 

 short segments. Head very changeable in form, usually long, conical. 

 and very acutely pointed. Proboscis smooth, obovate, or trumpet- 

 shaped, when extended, and bright red. In the anterior region there 

 are eleven setigerous segments, which bear small fascicles of slender 

 setae in both rami, those in the first five longer and acutely pointed ; 

 these segments are short, biannulate; the lower fascicles of setse are. 

 largest and fan-shaped. In the middle region the segments are about 

 as long as broad. Color, pale red to bright red, often mottled with 

 whitish, and more or less yellowish posteriorly. 



Length, 100 nim ; diameter, l mm . 



Great Egg Harbor, low-water to one fathom, in sandy mud; New 

 Haven; Watch Hill; Vineyard Sound. 



SABELLARIA VULGARIS Yerrill, sp. nov. Plate XVII, figs. 88, 88, 



(p. 321.) 



Body rather stout, thickest anteriorly, tapering backward to the base 

 of the long, slender caudal appendage. Two slender, red, oral tentacles 

 arise near the mouth, between the bases of the operculigerous lobes, 

 and, when extended, reach beyond the bases of the opercula. A. single 

 median lanceolate process also arises between the operculigerous lobes. 

 A deep emargination exists on the ventral side, back of the mouth; on 

 each side of this the front margin of the segment is prolonged into a 

 tridentate lobe, the teeth or lobes being unequal, the inner ones largest, 

 the middle ones more slender and acute, the outer one smallest and 

 shortest; beyond these, toward the sides, there is another small acute 

 process; two conical processes also project forward from the lateral 

 margins, and also a fascicle of setae. The ciliated prehensile cirri, or 

 tentacles, are long and slender when extended, and reach considerably 

 beyond the opercula. The seta3 composing the opercula are golden yel- 

 low; the outer circle white at base. A row of small conical papillae 

 surrounds the bases of the opercula. BranchiaB long, lanceolate, acute, 

 longer than the diameter of the body. Color of body yellowish flesh- 

 color, or pale reddish, often with two rows of brown spots along the 

 ventral surface; operculigerous lobes whitish or grayish, specked with 

 blackish; branchire reddish or yellowish, with a red central line, often 

 with a greenish tinge, or red centered with green ; tentacles pale flesh- 

 color, sometimes purplish; opercula blackish or grayish on the anterior 

 surface, golden yellow on the sides, white at base ; caudal process pale 

 red or flesh-color. 



Length about 25 mm , exclusive of caudal process: 2 Ilim to 2.5 mm in diam- 

 eter. 



Great Egg Harbor, New Jersey, to New Haven and Vineyard Sound ; 

 low-water to ten fathoms ; very common. Eggs are laid in May and 

 June. 



