122 



CIL^TOPTERITS VARIOPEDATUS. 



1880. 

 1882. 

 1883. 

 1884 

 1885. 

 1886. 

 1887. 

 1890. 



>> 

 1891. 



>> 

 1893. 

 1894. 



1896. 

 1897. 



}) 

 1900. 

 1901. 

 1904. 



1906. 



1908. 

 1909. 

 1912. 

 1913. 

 1914. 



Chset opt eras Valencinii, Cosmovici. Arch. Zool. exper./t. viii, p. 306, pi. xxvi, figs. 1 — 17. 

 pergamentaceus, Verrill. U.S. Comm. Fish and Fisheries, x, p. 665. 

 norvegicus and Sarsii, Levinsen. Vidensk. Meddel. Foren. Kjobenh., p. 108. 

 variopedatus, Delage. Bull. Soc. Linn. Normandy 3 e ser., t, viii, p. 376. 



„ Carus. Fauna Medit., p. 257. 



„ Griard. Bull. Sc. Nord. France, 2 e ser., t. ix, p. 335. 



„ Sirodot. C. R. Assoc. franc. Havana, etc., 1886, l e part, p. 160. 



„ Joyeux-Laifuie. Arch. Zool. exper., 2 e ser., t. viii, p. 244, pis. xv — xx. 



; , Malaquin. Annel. Boulonn., p. 47. 



inslgnis, Hornell. Trans. Biol. Soc. Liverp., vol. iii, p. 158. 

 pergamentaceus, Andrews. Proc. U.S. Nation. Mus., vol. xiv, p. 290. 

 variopedatus, Lo Bianco. Atti R. Accad. Sc. Nap., 2 ser., vol. v, No. 11, p. 35. 



„ De St. Joseph. Ann. Sc. nat., 7 e ser., xvii, p. 147, pi. vii, figs. 189 — 199. 



norvegicus, Bidenkap. Christ. Vidensk. -Selsk. Forhaudl., 1894, No. 10, p. 96. 

 Sarsii, idem. Ibid., p. 97. 

 variopedatus, Benham. Camb. Nat. Hist., vol. ii, p. 323. 



„ Ehlers. Hamb. Magel. Samm., p. 109. 



Sarsii and norvegicus, Michaelsen. Polych. deutsch. Meere, p. 1 56. 

 variopedatus, Ehlers. Schwed. Magell. Annel., p. 15. 



„ idem. Polych. Magell. u. Chil., p. 182. 



„ Crossland. Proc. Zool. Soc, 1904, i, p. 270. 



„ Journ. M. B. A., vol. vii, p. 228. 



„ Gravier. Nouv. Arch. Mus. Paris, 4 e ser., t. viii, p. 186, pi. iii, figs. 



205—208. 



„ Mcintosh. Ann. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, vol. ii, p. 533. 



„ Fauvel. Bull. Inst. Ocean., cxlii, p. 17. 



„ Orawshay. Journ. M. B. A., vol. ix, p. 343. 



„ Giard. CEuvres Div., p. 57. 



„ Southern. Proc. Roy. Irish Acad., vol. xxxi, pt. 47, p. 106. 



Habitat— Dredged off St. Peter Port, Guernsey, in 15—20 fathoms on ground 

 composed of gravel and shell debris. Those procured at Herm under stones in certain 

 pools between tide-marks have shorter tubes than those stuck in sand and gravel, and 

 which are only got at spring-tides. In Lochmaddy numerous tubes were attached to 

 tangle-roots throughout the bay, and a living example occurred in Ardmaddy Bay 

 between tide-marks. The tube is occasionally contracted at one end. Shetland, tubes of 

 parchment or coated with grey mud; and off the Hebrides, small parchment-like tubes (J. G. 

 Jeffreys). St. Andrews Bay, tubes are not uncommon and occasionally a living example; 

 stomach of haddock, St. Andrews (E. Mcintosh); 15—30 fathoms S.W. of Peel; Ply- 

 mouth (Spence Bate and Rowe) ; Firth of Clyde (D. Robertson) ; forty fathoms off the 

 coast of Cornwall, Polperro, Beaumaris, Anglesey (Dr. Baird). The tubes are largely 

 coated with mud, from which algge and long tufts of Obelia spring (W. C. M.). Birtur- 

 bury Bay, Ireland, in beam-trawl (A. C. Haddon) ; S. W. Ireland, log. 31, 39J fathoms 

 amidst Gellepora and Nullipores (R. I. A.) ; Aran Islands (E. P. Wright) ; Clare Island 

 district (Southern). 



Foreign localities are Norway, Sweden, and Finmark (Malmgren). Shores of France, 

 Mediterranean (Marion and Bobretzky, De St. Joseph). Adriatic and Naples (Grube, 



