412 Friend: New Records for British Annelids. 
remarked to me at the time, have their value, and ought to be 
recorded. I found one adult at Welland, 1909.  Stylodrilus 
veydovskyt Benham has also been frequently taken. Psam- 
moryctes barbatus Grube has been found by me at Stratford-on- 
Avon, in the Thames and elsewhere. 
Among the Enchytreids much valuable work has been 
done. Henlea nasuta Eisen occurs at Sutton, Norfolk, with 
Buchholaa fallax Mich. 8B. appendiculata Buch. is common 
around Swadlincote. Pachydrilus subterraneus Vej. was re- 
ceived recently from Worcester, where it was found in the drip 
from a tap. Henlea puteana Vej. abounds at Ledbury in 
Herefordshire. 
Enchytreus albidus Henle, E. pellucidus Friend, and E. 
argenteus Mich. (= E. parvulus Friend) have received much 
attention. One or other of the forms, or each and all have 
been taken at Birmingham, Carlisle, Sutton Broads, Kew, 
Cambridge, Malvern, and elsewhere, and the question of their 
possible identity, with that of E. hyalinus Eisen, is being care- 
fully studied. FE. turicensis Bret. has this year been added 
to the English lists, as has also E. minimus Bret. Fridericia 
bulbosa lkosa is one of the most widely distributed species in 
this group, and has been found at Malvern, Hurstmonceux, 
Rugby, Newton near Penrith, Newark, and elsewhere, usually 
in the company of F. michaelsent Bret., while F. striata Lev., 
F. raizelt Eisen, F. leydigt Vej., and F. perriert Vej. have a 
similar distribution. Up till this year the various species of 
Acheta have evaded the Enghsh collectors, though three 
species have come into the hands of Mr. Southern in Ireland. 
We are, however, not without representatives of the genus. 
Our first record is A. bohemica Vej., Kew Gardens, August 
28th, 1911. Another species has to be noted later. 
I need say little about the earthworms as their distribution 
is being carefully worked out in my contributions to the Zoolo- 
gist. An interesting form of Eisenia vosea Sav. was found in 
the Botanic Garden, Cambridge, on August 26th. One speci- 
men of the rare Bimastus eisent Lev. was taken on Mr. R. 
Gurney’s estate near North Walsham ; Eophila icterica Sav., 
Aporrectodea similis Friend, and D. submontana Vej., with 
other interesting species at Kew on August 28th. Special note 
may be made, in conclusion, of Helodrilus oculatus Hoffm. and 
Octolastum gracile Oerley. The former is now known to occur 
near Edinburgh, in various localities on the eastern side of 
the Malverns, at Eastnor, in the Botanic Garden, Cambridge, 
abundantly in the Thames at Kew, with other rare worms new to 
Britain, and in the dykes of the Sussex marshes, as at Boreham 
and Hurstmonceux. The other worm (OQ. gracile) was the 
subject of a note in the last issue (see page 394). It has 
been found abundantly at Sutton Broads, where it was the most 
Naturalist, 
