10 Hector F. E. Jungersen. 
Eunephthya rubiformis Broch: Alc. d. Kolafjordes. Trav. Soc. Imp. Natur. 
St. Pétersbourg. Vol. XLI, 4, 1911, p. 5. | 
bis = Broch: Arkt. Aleyon .Tromso Mus. Tromso Mus. 
| Aarshft. XXXIV, 1913, p. 179. | 
= — Broch: Coelentérés du Fond. Duc d’Orléans Camp. 
aret; de 1907 (1912), p.:19. 
mee — Jungersen: Alcyon. etc. Conspectus Faunæ Groenlan- 
dicæ. Medd. om Grønland. Vol. XXIII, Xml, 1915, 
fs UES) | 
_— Jungersen: The Aleyonaria of East Greenland. Ibid. 
Vol. XLIII, No. Xvi, 1916, pp. 4 & 7. 
Gersemia rubiformis pro parte + ?? G. uvæformis 1916 (pro parte) Molan- 
der: Alcyonacea. North. and arct Invertebr. etc. VII. 
K. Sv. Vet. Ak. Hdlø. Vol. LI, No. 11190609 
* Fram”. | 
1900. %s. Havnefjord: 76° 29' N, 84° 4’ W; 15 Fathoms (one small specimen). 
1901. 19%. Gaasefjord: 76° 48' N, 88° 39' W, (4 well sized specimens). 
“Michael Sars”. 
1900. %/s. St. 26. Jan Mayen (1 specimen). 
— %/s, St. 53: Porsanger Fjord, 200M. (109 Fathoms); 3° 61 C (2 speci- 
mens; an E. fruticosa ?) 1) 
— 5/y St, 61; 74006' N, 18° 50' E., 90 M. (49 Fathoms); — 0.99 C. (3 spe- 
cimens). The St. 61 is near Beeren Eiland. 
The species has not been found by the Danish investiga- 
tions in Baffins Bay or in Davis Strait or at the western 
coasts of Greenland.?) But curiously enough it has long been 
known to occur farther south at the American side of the 
Atlantic, viz: on the Newfoundland banks and at Maine (East- 
port). Its distribution is actually known to comprise: East 
Greenland (Tasiusak, Hurry Inlet, Henry Land and S. of Cape 
Bismarck); Jan Mayen, Spitsbergen, Barents Sea, at Nova Zembla, 
Kara Sea, off the Siberian north coast to east of Cape Schelags- 
koi, N. of Bering’s Strait, in Bering’s Strait and in Bering’s 
Sea; further in the eastern part of the Murman Sea, Kola Fjord 
1) The specimens do not possess the usual brick-red colour, only 
showing a faint pink colour, and upon the whole very much the resemble 
E. fruticosa. 
2) Molander, however, states (1. c. p. 53) that it has been found by 
Swedish expeditions in Baffin’s Bay as well as in the N. W. Atlantic south 
of Davis Strait; but I am not quite convinced that M. and I fully agree 
in our conception of this species; some forms which I have referred to 
E. fruticosa evidently are regarded by M. as belonging to rubiformis, and 
vice versa (cfr. p. 12). 
