308 ANNELIDA FROM BERMUDA. 
EURYTHOE Kinberg. 
Ofvers. af Kongl. Vetensk-Akad. Férhandl., p. 13. 1857. 
EURYTHOK MACROTRICHA Baird. 
(Plate VII, Figs. 6-9.) 
Amphinome macrotricha SCHMARDA. Neue Wirbell. Thiere, vol. i, part 2, p. 144, figs. 
a, b, c, in text, and pl. xxxiv, fig. 290. 1861. 
Amphinome macrotricha QUATREFAGES. Hist. Nat. des Ann. vol. i, p. 406. 1865, 
Euryihoé macrotricha BaiRD. Linnean Society, Journal, Zodl., vol. x, p. 225, pl. iv, 
figs.5a, b. 1868. 
Schmarda’s description of this species is very short, and I am with- 
out information as to the original color of the specimens sent me. The 
reference, however, is probably correct. On the anterior margin of the 
ventral ramus is a series of short, flattened sete, 6 to 9 in number (Fig. 
9). The ventral sete are not so much curved externally as in Schmarda’s 
figure. 
The collection includes a single specimen belonging to this family, 
too much injured for identification. 
Fam. CHRYSOPETALID. 
BHAWANIA Schmarda. 
Neue Wirbellose Thiere, vol. i, part ii, p. 164. 1861. 
BHAWANIA GOODEI n. sp. 
(Plate VII, Figs. 10-15.) 
No good view of the head was obtained. The anterior segments curve 
directly forwards, embracing the head and reaching beyond it; pale 
and set both projecting far beyond it, and in alcoholic specimens it 
seems impossibie to free the head from the surrounding parts. 
On the ventral surface there is an oval caruncle reaching through 
five segments, its length about double its breadth. 
The pale (Fig. 10) are broadly rounded externally, sides slightly con- 
vex, attached by a long narrow process. The inner edge is denticulated. 
to near the end. The surface is covered by numerous longitudinal 
raised lines, of which three are wider than the others. All these lines, 
except the outer one of the wide lines, are covered with raised scales, 
which are very numerous and small on the narrow lines, presenting, when 
moderately magnified, the appearance of series of beads. The external 
wide band is smooth. Some of the raised lines are continued on the 
insertion plate. The pale are very numerous; from the middle line of 
each lateral half of the body they curve—the external, outward; the 
internal, inward. Tig. 10 represents one of the pale taken from about 
