REPORT ON THE ANNELIDA. 
XXV 
Station 194a. Off Ceram; lat. 4° 31' S., loug. 129° 57' E. ; 360 fathoms; volcanic 
mud (trawled). 
Scalisetosus ceramensis, n. sp. 
Near Banda, off the Moluccas. 
Chloeia fiisca, n. sp. 
Admiralty Islands ; 16 to 25 fathoms. 
Thalenessa digitata, n. sp. 
E. Philippine or Japanese Region. 
This region (E), like D, contains many species common to the shores of Hindustan, 
as shown by a series of beautifully coloured drawings made under the superintendence of 
Sir Walter Elliot of Wolfelee,^ and of the collections made by Dr. Anderson of the 
Imperial Museum of Calcutta. The Chloeia group is as well represented as in the former 
area (D), and in this respect agrees with the Bengal series. A variety of Lattmonice 
'producta is common to this region and C, while the rich waters of Japan add a new 
species to the genus, amidst a profusion of other remarkable t}^es. The area is specially 
rich in new Polynoidse, such as those commensalistic in Euplectella, and in the Hexac- 
tinellid Sponge lodging the branched Syllis. It is also the region of Palmyra and 
Eupholoe, and of the large-eyed Genetyllis oculata. 
Station 201. Basilan Strait, south of the Philippines; lat. 7° 3' N., long. 121° 48' E.; 
82 fathoms ; stones and gravel (trawled). 
Notopygos lahiatus, n. sp. ' Polynoe{Lepidonotus)iphionoidesp.?p. 
Eunoa mindanavensis, n. sp. Eupholoe philippensis, n. sp. 
Eunice mindanavensis, n. sp. 
Station 205. Offthe Philippines; lat. 16° 42' N., long. 119° 22' E.; 1050 fathoms; blue 
mud (trawled). 
Serptda philippensis, n. sp. 
Off Hong Kong; 10 fathoms (dredged). 
Dasychone orientalis, n. sp. 
1 I have to thank Sir Walter Elliot for so kindly permitting me to have these for several years. Unfortunately, 
no specimens accompanied the drawings, and thus much less could be accomplished with them than I at first 
anticipated. 
(ZOOL. CHALL. EXP. PART XXXIV. 1885.) 
LI d 
