SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 
811 
Spongicola venusta, De Haan. Many specimens (in Euplectdla) ; obtained at no Station 209 . 
other locality by the Challenger. Eecorded from Japan. 
Penseus Jlssurus, n.sp. Ten specimens ; obtained also at Stations 190 and 204 
„ rectacutus, n.sp. One specimen; obtained also at Station 173. 
Anomura (Henderson, Zool. pt. 69). 
Homola orientalis, n.sp. One specimen; obtained also at Station 192. 
Latreillopsis hispinosa, n.g., n.sp. One specimen ; obtained at no other locality. 
Only species of the genus. 
Latreillia vcdida, De Haan. One specimen ; obtained at no other locality by the 
Challenger, Eecorded from Japan, 
GalatJiea grandirostris, Stimpson. One specimen ; obtained at no other locality 
by the Challenger, 
Lamellibranchiata (Smith, Zool. pt. 35), 
Pecten vitreus (Chemnitz). For distribution see Station 204. 
Tunicata (Herdman, Zool. pt. 38). 
Leptoclinum albidum, Verrill, var. grande, nov. Several specimens ; the species 
obtained also at Cape Verdes and Simon’s Bay. 
In addition to the foregoing, the following are recorded in the Station-book : — 
Lepadid, EEga spongip>hila parasitic in Euplectella, two specimens of Cymopolia (?), 
Stenorhynchid, Ihaccus, two specimens of Patella, Gasteropod attached to Ophiurid, and 
two species of Polyzoa. 
Excluding Protozoa, over 200 specimens of invertebrates were obtained at this 
Station, belonging to about 57 species, of which 32 are new to science, including 
representatives of 7 new genera ; 15 of the new species and 2 new genera were not 
obtained elsewhere. 
Willemoes-Suhm writes : “ Among the parasites inhabiting Euplectella the following 
were distinguished ; 1, ^ga spongiphila, the commonest inhabitant of the Sponge ; 
2, Palsemon sp. (?), very transparent and delicate (I succeeded in getting the Zoem out 
of the eggs, by keeping the mother in a globe, and found them to be ordinary 
Zoeee with, however, some appendages only, as a rule, seen at a later stnge) ; 
3, a whitish Aphroditacean Annelid, an inch in length ; and 4, a small white Pecten. 
The two latter are less common than the two former ; all are white and some 
transparent. An Ophiurid was taken with a Gasteropod attached having a likeness to a 
