ANCHORELLA. 
337 
and which Cuvier has named Anchorella adunca. The 
name of Lerneomyzon was proposed by Blainville, in his 
Monograph, but the term Anchorella, as having the 
precedence in time, has been generally adopted by suc- 
ceeding authors. 
1. Anchorella uncinata. Tab. XXXY, fig. 9. 
Lern^ea uncinata, Muller , Zool. Dan., i, t. 33, f. 2; Enc. meth., Yers, 
t. 78, f. 7 (copied from Muller). 
— Lamarck , An. s. Yert., edit. 1st, iii, 231. 
— Johnston, Loudon’s Mag. Nat. Hist., viii, 565, f. 53. 
— Thompson , Report on Fauna of Ireland, div. In- 
vertebrata, in Report of Brit. Ass., 1813, 270. 
— Fabricius , Faun. Greenland., 338, No. 328. 
— Turtords Gmelin, iv, 111. 
— Bose, Hist. Yers, i, 59, t. 1, f. 1. 
Schisturus uncinatus, Oken, Lehrbuch der Naturg., B, iii, p. 183. 
Clavella uncinata, Oken, 1. c. 
Lerneomyzon uncinata, Blainville, Diet. Sc. Nat., xxvi, 122. 
Anchorella uncinata, Nordmann, Mikr. Beitr., ii, 102, t. 8, f. 8, 9, 
t. 10, f. 1-5. 
— - Kroyer, Tidsskrift, i, 290, t. 3, f. 8. 
— M. Fdwards, Hist. Nat. Crust., iii, 519. 
Anchorella lagenula, Enc. Brit., edit. 7th, xxi, t. 502, f. 11. 
Character. — Female. The body of the animal is thick, 
oblong, of a milk-white colour, smooth, and opaque. 
Head very small, situated at the extremity of a long, 
slender neck, which has a wrinkled appearance, and is 
nearly the length of the thorax. The arms spring from 
the upper portion of the thorax, and are rather short, 
terminating in a rounded knob or button. At the pos- 
terior portion of the thorax there is on the middle line a 
small protuberance, representing the abdomen. The 
ovarian tubes are cylindrical, straight, smooth, and about 
the length of the body. Length, from six to eight lines. 
Male. Body globular, terminated in front by a small, 
conical eminence, at the extremity of which is the mouth, 
and having at its base one pair of rudimentary appen- 
dages, and a pair of rudimentary foot-jaws. On the 
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