122 DR. G, HERBERT FOWLER ON THE [ Feb. 3, 
Chierchia, as occurring at various points in the tropics at depths 
between 382 and 546 fathoms; it occurs also in the Gulf of 
Naples. Brady! records it as having been taken by the ‘ Chal- 
lenger’ Expedition off Kandavu, Fiji, and between Marion and 
Crozet Islands at unrecorded depths. 
HALOCYPRIA GLOBOSA Claus. 
Six specimens in haul 137. 
This species is known from the surface and at various depths 
in the Atlantic’, and is recorded from Gibraltar as taken by the 
‘Vettor Pisani’*. Of specimens taken by the ‘Challenger,’ the 
record was in one instance lost *; other specimens were captured 
at the surface between Api and Cape York’. It seems to be a 
form widely distributed both vertically and horizontally. 
CONCH@CILLA DAPHNOIDES Claus. 
Only three complete specimens, and one empty carapace, refer- 
able to this genus were obtained. The specimens on which Claus 
founded the genus (with this single species) were all young males : 
larger specimens of the genus, including females, were obtained by 
Sir John Murray on H.M.S. ‘Triton’ in 1882, from the Cold 
Area of the Faeroe Channel, and were described by Canon 
Norman and Dr. Brady under the specific name of lacerta, not 
without the “suspicion that they may perhaps belong to the adult 
form of C. daphnoides”°. My own specimens were too few to 
settle the point ; but as the two smaller specimens most resembled 
in outline the figure of Claus, and the two largest that of Brady 
and Norman, I have left them provisionally under the older specific 
name. 
Tn addition to Chun’s hauls IIT. and IV., it has been captured 
at 200 fathoms off Achill Head (daphnoides), the Faeroe Channel 
as above (lacerta), and off Kandavu, Fiji, at an unrecorded depth” 
(daphnoides). 
CoPEPODA. 
Mr. I. C. Thompson was kind enough to report on the 
Copepoda in No. IV. of this series of papers*. Since that date, 
the arrangement of three then doubtful hauls has required modi- 
fication: 12a, which was suspected at the time of capture to have 
remained open too long, proves to have no apparent contamination 
of undoubted surface forms, and has been moved to the Meso- 
plankton; 13e was also suspected, in this case with justice, as 
1G. 8S. Brady : “ Myodocopa of the ‘Challenger’ Expedition,” Trans. Zool. Soc. 
Xiv. p. 95. 
C. Claus, op. cit. p. 79. 
G. W. Miller: Zool. Jahrb. Syst. v. p. 270. 
G.S. Brady & A. M. Norman: Trans. Roy. Dublin Soc. (2) v. p. 705. 
G. 8. Brady: Trans. Zool. Soc. xiv. p. 97. 
G.S. Brady & A. M. Norman: Trans. Roy. Dublin Soc. (2) v. p. 697. 
G.S. Brady: Trans. Zool. Soc. xiv. p. 95. 
Proc. Zool. Soc. 1898, p. 540. 
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