ANNELIDA FROM BERMUDA. 315 
Fam. EUNICIDA. 
EUNICE Cuvier. 
EUNICE MUTILATA, n. sp. 
(Plate 1X, Figs. 36, 36a-d—40.) 
This species is represented in Mr. Goode’s collection by an anterior 
fragment composed of 39 segments, length 30™™; and by a posterior 
fragment, 180 segments, length 90™. These may have belonged to 
the same specimen, but do not make up the whole of any specimen, an 
intermediate part, of unknown length, being lost. 
The head is distinctly and deeply bi-lobed. 
The antenne rather delicate, cylindrical, smooth, bluntly rounded at 
apex; median antenna 3.5™™ in length, reaching back to the middle of 
the fifth (third setigerous) segment; inner pair, length 3""; outer pair 
a mere trifle shorter than the inner. 
Hyes small, black, circular, between the bases of the paired antenne. 
Buccal segment equal in length to the three segments following it, 
taken together; second segment a little shorter than the third. 
Tentacular cirri as long as the buccal segment, conical, apex blunt. 
The branchiz begin on the seventh setigerous segment; on the sev- 
enth, eighth, and ninth segments, a single filament; on the tenth, elev- 
enth, and twelfth, two filaments; on the thirteenth, fourteenth, and 
fifteenth, three filaments; from the sixteenth to the thirty-seventh, 
four filaments (Fig. 36b); on the posterior fragment the branchize have 
but a single filament (Fig. 36c), becoming very delicate and short on 
the posterior segments (Fig. 36d). 
‘The dorsal cirri, largest on the first setigerous segment (Fig. 36), 
growing progressively smaller (Fig. 36)); at first finger-shaped, then 
conical. On the first segment of the posterior fragment this cirrus 
shows considerable increase in length, but is shorter than the branchia 
(Fig. 36c); while on the last segments (Fig. 36d), though the length of 
the cirrus is about the same, it is much longer than the branchia. 
The ventral cirri are stout, conical, base swollen; outer third, on 
anterior segments, cut off by a shallow constriction; longest on first 
segments. 
Anal segment cylindrical, small. Anal cirri short. 
The upper (capillary) (Fig. 27) sete are very long and delicate; long- 
est on the posterior third. The comb-like sete (Fig. 40) have their outer 
