MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 179 



merits or other processes. The specimen was not a male. The tentacles are 

 not "connate at their bases" in this or the next species, any more than in any 

 other Gastr()i)0(l with retractile prol)oscis. The tail end of the foot had no fila- 

 ment, but was (in spirits) merely narrow and ])ointed. Fragments of this 

 fine species, readily recognized by its polished surface, were obtained as above, 

 and one broken but living specimen at Station 293. 



Phos Candei Orbignt. 



Cancellaria Candei Orbigny, Atlas to Moll. Cub., pi. xxi. figs. 23-25, 1842 ; text of 

 the same, II. p. 129, 1847. (Not Nassa Candei Orbigny, of>. cit.) 



Phos crectus Guppy, Geol. Mag., 1874, pi. xvi. fig. 1 (extra copies, p. 8). 



Phos Candei Arango, Fauna Mai. Cub., p. 201, 1878. 



Phos antillarum Petit, Journ. de Conchyl., IV. pp. 238, 242, 418, pi. viii. fig. 9, 1853. 



Phos grateJoiipianus Petit, op. cit., p. 243, pi. viii. fig. 4, 1853. 



1 Phos veracjuaensis Hinds, Ann. Nat. Hist., XL p. 257, 1843; Voy. Sulph , p. 37, 

 pi. X. figs. 13, 14, 1844 ; Tryon, Man., IIL p. 219. 



? Buccinum zonale Krebs, Cat., p. 31, 1864, as of Brugiere. 



Habitat. Off Sombrero, 54-70 fms.; Barbados, 80-100 fms.; Station 36, off 

 Cuba, in 84 fms., bottom temperature 60°. F.; Station 128, off Santa Cruz, in 

 180 fms., sand, and Station 132, in 115 fms., rocky bottom, temperature 

 60° to 65° F.; Station 143, off Saba Bank, in 150 fms., temperature 63°.5; 

 Station 167, off Guadelupe, in 175 fms., sand, temperature 55°. 0; Station 155, 

 off Montserrat, in 88 fms., temperature 69°.0, and Station 247, off Grenada, in 

 170 fms., ooze, bottom temperature 53°. 5 F. Also at U. S. Fish Commission 

 Stations 2145, near Aspinwall, in 25 fms., mud; 2403, in the Gulf of Mexico, 

 between the delta of the Mississippi and Cedar Keys, Florida, in 88 fms., mud ; 

 and 2601, in 107 fms., sand, 36 miles S. \ W. from Cape Ilattera-s, North 

 Carolina, bottom temperature 67°. 4 F. 



I doubt the identity of this species with that of Hinds from AVest America, 

 but in any case the name and excellent figure of Orbigny have precedence, 

 though the text of his description was delayed. I have no doubt that Mr. Tryon 

 was correct in uniting the Phos grateloupianus of Petit with his P. antillarum.. 

 Most of the Antillean specimens are more like the figure of the former, said to 

 be from Senegal, than like the pattern of that from the "West Indies. There 

 is probably some error about the figure or the habitat. 



There is a small variety of this shell which is brighter colored and more 

 finely sculptured than the more common form, but they intergrade. There is 

 much variation in regard to the presence and position of varices, which are 

 often entirely absent on the upper whorls. The operculum is like that of 

 Chrysodomus or Phos senticosus. 



The nucleus is glassy, sharply peripherally carinate, and has three to five 

 otherwise unsculptured whorls. The soft parts and operculum are exactly like 

 those of Phos Beaui, but there is less of the blackish dotting, even the siphon 

 has not much. 



