302 CANON A. M. NORMAN ON THE POLYZOA 



Smittina Landsborovii {Johnston). W. 



Tbe specimen, named by Waters, is in the Funchal Museum, and is quite 

 the typical form. 



Smittina marmorea {Hinchs). H. 

 In deep water, two or three examples. 



Smittina trispinosa (Johnston). W. 



On coal in the neighbourhood of the coaling ship {A. M. N.) ; Porto Santo 

 and the Salvages [De Noronha). 



ESCHARINA VULGARIS [Moll] . B., W. 

 1867. Lepralia Botterii, Heller, Bryoz. xldriat. Meeres, p. 30, pi. 2, fig. 4. 



Very common ; dredged on stone, coals and shell {A. M. N.); Porto Santo 

 and Grand Salvages [De Noronha). 



A cotype of L. Botterii, given to me by Professor Heller, is undoubtedly 

 the present species. 



ESCHARINA PES-ANSERIS (Smitt). B., W. (PI. 40. fig. 7.) 



1860. Lepralia Woodiana, Busk, Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. vol. viii. p. 284 (not L. Woodiana 



of the Crag). 

 1873. Hipjoothoa pes-anseris, Smitt, Floridan Bryozoa, ii. p. 48, pi. 7. figs. 159, 160. 

 1899. &'cJnzopo7-ella pes-anse7-is,Watevs, "Bryozoa from Madeira," Jour. Roy. Micr. Soc. 



p. 11, pi. 3. figs. 7, 8. 



In about 70 fathoms on shell and coral in small zoaria. Dead specimens 

 which I at first found, were taken to be a variety of L. Dutertrei (see fig. 7) ; 

 and it seems clear that Busk fell into the same mistake, for the observations 

 which he makes on the Madeiran specimens which he called L. Woodiana 

 {= L. Dutertrei) exactly accord with the present species. 



ESCHARINA HyNDMANNI (e7oA?15i^O?2). H. 



Common in 40-50 fathoms and deeper. Among the specimens a curious 

 variety had a series of large pits all round the zooecia just within the outer 

 margin [A. M. N.). South of Cima, Porto Santo, in 90 fathoms, and Grand 

 Salvages [De Moronha). 



ESCHARINA JOHNSTONI {Quelcll) . 



1880. Schizoporella simplex, Hincks, Brit. Marine Polyz. p. 246, pi. 35. figs. 9, 10. 

 1884. Schizoporella Jolmstoni, Quelcli, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 5, vol. xiii. p. 217. 



Four specimens from deep water ; three of these show no sign of the usual 

 suboral umbo ; the fourth, on Ditrupa, has some of the zocecia without the 

 umbo, others with it, and others with the umbo of gigantic size. 



