346 Messrs. T. and A. Scott on some 
Cletodes longicaudata, Brady & Robertson. 
One or two specimens apparently belonging to Cletodes 
longicaudata occurred in a sample of bottom-material from 
100 fathoms collected on July 13th in lat. 76° 24’ N., long. 
33° 43! E. 
Cletodes tenuipes, T. Scott. 
1897. Cletodes tenuipes, T. Scott, Fifteenth Ann. Rept. Fishery Board 
for Scotland, pt. ii. p. 170, pl. i. figs. 19-27. 
The sample in which Cletodes tenutpes was obtained was 
collected in 60 fathoms in lat. 76°17' N., long. 21° 36! E., on 
July 20th, and was the only gathering in which the species 
was observed. 
Cletodes linearis (Claus). 
This fine species was observed, though very sparingly, in 
a sample of bottom- material collected in 20 fathoms off Kostyn 
Point, Novaya Zemlya, and in another from 100 fathoms 
collected on July 13th in lat. 76° 24’ N., long. 33° 43’ K. 
OCletodes similis, T. Scott. 
1895. Cletodes similis, T. Scott, Thirteenth Ann. Rept. Fishery Board 
for Scotland, pt. iii. p. 168, pl. ili. figs. 22-26, pl. iv. figs. 1-3. 
One or two specimens of this species occurred in a gathering 
from 60 fathoms collected on July 20th in lat. 76° 17’ N 
long. 21° 36’ E. 
a) 
Cletodes Brucet, T. & A. Scott (sp. n.). (PI. V. figs. 9-11.) 
A single specimen of a slender Cletodes occurred in a sample 
of bottom-material collected on the 13th of July, at the depth 
of 100 fathoms east of Hope Island, in lat. 76° 24’ N., long. 
33° 43! E.; and as it belongs to an apparently undescribed 
species we submit the following description, which, owing to 
the want of specimens for dissection, is somewhat incomplete. 
The specimen, which appeared to be a female, measured 
about ‘°6 mm. (2), of an inch) in length. The animal, seen 
from above, is of a narrow cylindrical form, and each segment 
is furnished with one or two pairs of minute lateral bristles 
(fig. 9) ; the rostrum is very short, and the forehead some- 
what truncate; the caudal furca are moderately elongated, 
slender, and wide apart, and about equal in length to the last 
abdominal segment. ‘The antennules are very short, but we 
were unable to make out the structure of these and of the 
mouth-appendages. 
