393 
Campbell Island: Calvasterias lævigata (Hutton), Henricia 
liikinsii (Farquhar), Åmphioplus basiliciis 
(Koehler), Cucumaria leoninoides Mrtsn. 
Stewart Island: Åsterina regularis Verrill, Calvasterias 
Suteri (de Loriol), Coscinasterias cala- 
maria (Cray), Ophionereis fasciata Hut¬ 
ton, Amphipholis squamata (D. Ch.), Pec- 
tinura maculata (Verrill), Pect. gracilis » 
Mrtsn., Psolidiella nigra Mrtsn. 
In the Narrative of his Fiji—New Zealand Expedition (Univ. 
of lowa Studies. Studies in Natural History. X. Nr. 5. 1924, p. 
206 — 8) Professor C. C. Nu tting mentions some Echinoderms 
dredged in the Hauraki Gulf. It would appear that there is a new 
Comatulid, perhaps also a new Asteroid (apparently allied to Pen- 
tagonaster pulchellus) and an Ophiurid “with a leathery disk allied 
to Ophiocoma. Although nothing definite can be said about these 
forms from the brief preliminary mention given in the narrative 
quoted, I have thought it proper to call attention here to these 
presumable additions to the New Zealand Echinoderm fauna. 
Zoogeographical remarks on the Echinoderm fauna of New Zealand 
and the Auckland-Camphell Islands. 
It may be practical to begin this chapter on the zoogeographical 
relations of the New Zealand Echinoderm fauna with a list of all 
the species known with certainty to occur in New Zealand seas, 
with a tabellaric view of their distribution. 
As appears from this list no less than 98 of the total 
number of 119 species known from New Zealand 
se as, or 82.4 %, are not known to occur outside the New 
Zealand area, taken in a wider sense so as to include, besides 
the Chatham and Auckland-Campbell Islands, also the Macquarie 
and Kermadec Islands. This truly astonishing high percentage 
of endemic forms most probably will ultimately be somewhat redu- 
ced, partly, because it is to be expected that some of the species 
hitherto known only from the deeper water off the North of the 
