20 
PACIFIC SCIENCE, Vol. II, January, 1948 
Collections. Stations 12-40 (1); 35-40 (1, 
juvenile). 
The proboscis has only four rows of papillae 
on a side, with about four papillae in each row. 
This species has been recorded from Afognak 
Island, Alaska (Moore, 1908), and western 
Canada (Berkeley, 1945); the present records 
are from the vicinity of Pavlof Bay. 
Genus Eulalia Savigny 
Eulalia viridis (Muller) 
Fig. 5 a. 
Nereis viridis Muller, 1771: 156. 
Eulalia viridis Fauvel, 1923: 160, fig. 57; Berke¬ 
ley, 1924: 288; Berkeley, 1942: 189. 
Collections. Stations 21-40 (1); 20-40 to 
22-40 (4); 24-40 (1); 47-40 (1); 51-40 
( 3 ). 
Fig. 5. Species of Eulalia and Eteone. a, Eulalia 
viridis (station 24-40) : 118th or twenty-second last 
parapodium in anterior view showing long dorsal cir¬ 
rus, X 61. b, Eteone spetsbergensis (station D 14- 
41) : postmedian parapodium, X 48. 
The number of segments is about 140, length 
is 32 mm. The proboscis is closely covered with 
papillae. Dorsal cirri are considerably prolonged, 
fully three to four times as long as wide (Fig. 
5 a); ventral cirri extend distally beyond the 
setal lobes. 
This cosmopolitan species has been reported 
previously from the northeast Pacific (Berkeley, 
1924 and 1942). The present records are from 
southwestern Alaska, taken in shallow dredging. 
Genus Eteone Savigny 
Eteone spetsbergensis Malmgren 
Fig. 5 b. 
Eteone spetsbergensis Malmgren, 1866: 102, 
pi. 15, fig. 38; Bergstrom, 1914: 202-204, 
fig. 77; Berkeley, 1945: 325. 
Collection. D 14-41 (1). 
A single, large, robust individual, 60 mm. 
long, with eggs, has the 15 last segments re¬ 
generated. The dorsum is pale and has a broad, 
longitudinal, reddish-brown stripe on either 
side, most intense in the anterior half; the pig¬ 
ment does not cover the dorsal or ventral cirri. 
Throughout the body the dorsal cirri are broader 
than long and are asymmetrical; the ventral 
cirri are distally blunt (Fig. 5 b shows a para¬ 
podium from a postmedian segment). 
This Arctic species has been reported from 
the Bering Sea by Bergstrom (1914), and from 
western Canada by Berkeley (1945); the pres¬ 
ent collection comes from the Bering Sea, in 
36 fm. 
Eteone californica Hartman 
Fig. 4 a-d. 
Eteone californica Hartman, 1936^: 131, fig. 
49-51. 
Collections. Stations 47-40 (4); 60-40 (1); 
108-40 (7); Dolgai Harbor (3). 
The color (preserved) is dull green, most 
intense on dorsal and ventral cirri. These in¬ 
dividuals are fully four to five times as large as 
some from the type locality (San Francisco 
Bay, California). The prostomium has two em¬ 
bedded, dark eyes, and a tiny nuchal papilla at 
its posterior margin (Fig. 4 a). The proboscis 
terminates distally in 14 soft, subglobular papil¬ 
lae; its proximal portion is smooth. The first 
setigerous segment is smaller than those follow¬ 
ing and it lacks dorsal cirri. In the anterior 
region the ventral cirri extend distally about as 
far as the setigerous lobe (Fig. 4 b), but by the 
twenty-fourth segment the ventral cirri are 
shorter and come to be inconspicuous (Fig. 4 
