134 
ANNELIDES. 
Chloeia, Sav., 
Where the head is furnislied with five tentacula, and the branchiae 
resembles a tripinnate leaf. 
The Indian Ocean produces one of them, the Amphinome che- 
t’e/Zae, Brug. ; Terebella jlava, Gm. ; Pall., Miscell. VIII, 7 — 
11, very remarkable for its long bundles of lemon-coloured setae, 
and the beautiful purple plumes of its branchiae. Its form is 
broad and depressed, and it has a vertical crest on the snout. 
And into the 
Pleione, San . — Amphinome, Blainv., 
Where, with the same tentacula, the branchiae are tufted. I’he 
Pleiones are also from the Indian Ocean, and some of them are very 
large* * * § . To these he adds the 
Euphrosine, Sav.-\ 
Where the head has but a single tentaculum, and the tree-like 
branchiae are very complex and greatly developed. To this sub- 
genus, Messrs. Audouin and Edwards approximate the 
Hipponoe, 
Which has no caruncle, and but a single bundle of setae, and a 
single cirrus to C/ach foot. 
Hip. G audio hail dii, Ann. des Sc. Nat. t. XVIII, pi. vi. A 
species from Port Jackson. In the 
Eunice^ 
The branchiae are also plumose, but the proboscis is well armed with 
three pair of differently formed horny jaws ; each foot is furnished 
with two cirri and a bundle of setae, there are five tentacula above 
the mouth and Uvo on the nape. In some species only, we find 
two small eyes. 
Eun. giejaniea, Cuv. The largest of the known Annelides, 
being upwards of four feet in length. From the sea of the An- 
tilles. 
Several smaller species are found on the coast of France §. 
* Terebella canmculata, Gm., Ampli. ear,, Pall., Miscell., VIII, 12, 13; — Ter. 
7 ‘ostrata, 14 — 18; — Ter. complanata, Ib., 19 — 26 ; — Pleione aleyonia, Sav., Eg., 
Annel., II, f. 3. 
•f- Euphrosine laiireata, Id. Ib., f. 1; — E.mirtosa, Id., Ib., 2. 
N.B. The genus Aristenia, Sav., Eg., Annel., pi. ii, f, 4, should also come 
near the Amphinomes ; but it is only established on a mutilated specimen. 
X Eunice, the name of a Nereis in Apollodorus. M. Savigny makes it the name 
of a family, and calls the genus Leodice. M. de Blainville has changed these names, 
first to Branchionereis, and then to Nereidon, 
§ Ne 7 -eis norveyica, Gm., MiilL, Zool. Dan., I, xxi.x, 1; — N. pinnate, Ib., 2; — 
N. cvprea, Bose., Ver. I, v, 1 ; — Leodice gallica, and L. hispanica, Savig. — Add 
Leod. antennata, Sav., Annel., V, 1 ; — Eunice bellii, Aud., and Edw., Litt., de la 
Fr., Annel., pi. iii, f. 1 — 4 ; — Eun. harassii, Ib.,f. v, 11. ' 
