DALL] REVIEW OF AMERICAN VOLUTID&. apt 
_Voluta (Aulica) junonia Crosse, Journ. de Conchyl., xrx, p. 285, 1871; 
Tryon, Man., tv, p. go, pl. xxv1, fig. 67, 1882. 
Scaphella junonia Swainson, Malac., p. 108, 1840; Dati, Bull. Mus. 
Comp. Zool., xvii, p. 148, pl. xxx1v, figs. 5, 5c, 5d, 5e, 1889; Trans. 
Wagner Inst., 111, p. 79, pl. vir, fig. 9, 1890. 
Maculopeplum junonia Dau, Nautilus, xrx, no. 12, p. 143, April, 1906. 
Habitat——North Carolina southward to the northern edge of the 
Bahamas and Barbados, and on both coasts of the Florida peninsula, 
reefs and keys; seventeen miles off Cape Lookout, North Carolina, 
in 22 fathoms, sand, bottom temperature 78.2° Fahr. ; Gulf of Mexico, 
in 26 fathoms, sand; off Barbados in 100 fathoms, dead (Hassler 
exp.) ; Clearwater Harbor, Florida. 
U. S. Nat. Mus., 27,339 (Tarpon Springs), 53,750 (Florida 
Keys) ; 53,751; 54,540 (off Tampa Bay) ; 60,735; 83,864 (North 
Carolina) ; 83,865 (Nassau, N. P.) ; 129,236; 126,800 (Barbados) ; 
168,847 (Sanibel Id., Florida) ; 187,223 (off Cape Sable, Florida). 
The species is fully discussed in the Blake Report, above cited, 
and since that publication a small live specimen was collected on the 
Florida Keys. It was a female and of a light flesh color with dark 
reddish flecks, and subgranulose surface. There is no operculum or 
radula. The tentacles are short and subtriangular, each expanded 
at the base into a rounded disk, with the eyes just outside the root 
of the slender part of the tentacle. The disks do not unite in the 
median line, where their edges overlap a little. The siphonal appen- 
dages are short and the foot duplex at its anterior edge. 
The specimens dredged by Pourtalés in the Straits of Florida 
seem to have belonged to the next species. 
MACULOPEPLUM DOHRNI Sowerby 
Voluta dubia Dourn, Jahrb. d. Malak. Ges., v1, pp. 150-156, pl. rv, figs. 
I-3, 1879; copied by Tryon, Man., 1v, pl. 27, figure 77; not of 
Broderip. 
Voluta dohrni Sowrrsy, Journ. Malac., x, p. 74, pl. v, fig. 8, June, 1903. 
Habitat—Florida reefs, along the Straits of Florida (Pourtalés) ; 
Gulf stream, off Key West, at station 7282, in 109 fathoms, sand, 
U. S. steamer Fish Hawk; also at station 7279, in 98 fathoms; 
station 7296, in 122 fathoms; and station 2316, U. S. steamer 
Albatross, in 50 fathoms, coral, off Key West; a dead specimen. 
U. S. Nat. Mus., 83,862, 187,219-22. 
The pedigree of this species is discussed under the remarks on 
Aurinia dubia. All the museum specimens were dead shells occu- 
pied by hermit crabs. The large number obtained would indicate 
that. living individuals were numerous at no great distance. The 
