CHONE FAUVELI. 291 
1877, Chone infundibuliformis, Marenzeller. Denksch. Kaiserl. Akad. Wissensch. Wien, Bd. xxxv, 
p. 36, sep. abd. 
Michaelsen. Polych. deutsch. Meere., p. 181. 
oP) 3) >} 
1878. a . McIntosh. Trans. Linn. Soc., ser. 2, Zool., p. 508. 
1879. 35 + Tauber. Annul. Danica, p. 137. 
- 3 im Théel. Kgl. Sv. Vet.-Akad. Handl., Bd. xvi, p. 66. 
1880. 53 x Marenzeller, Ann. Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. vi, p. 271. 
1883. 7 5 Wirén. Chetop. “Vega” Exped., p. 422. 
a 5 3 Leyinsen. Vidensk. Meddel., p. 186. 
1886. 5 Marenzeller. Polarforsch., p. 15. 
a i Leyinsen. Kara-Havets, etc., p. 13. 
1888. B 5 Cunningham and Ramage. ‘Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. xxxiil, 
p- 670, pl. xliv, fig. 32. 
1889. i +4, Marenzeller. Arch. f. Nat., lv, p. 132. 
1894. =, Hy Bidenkap. Christ. Vid.-selsk. Forhandl., p. 182. 
1896. 5 - Appellof. Berg. Mus. Aarb., xin, p. 12. 
1898. Pe As Michaelsen. Grdnland. Annel., p. 130. 
1909. ~ - ‘ Fauvel. Bull. Inst. Oceanogr., exlii, p. 45. 
i 6 - Moore. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. xxxvui, p. 145. 
1912. 4 - Ditlevsen. Danmark Eksped. Gronl., Bd. v, p. 429. 
1913. a a Augener. Zool. Anz., Bd. xli, p. 271. 
yi, hae 3 Fauvel. Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., p. 91. 
1914. F, idem. Campag. Scient. Monaco, xlvi, p. 319. 
1916. 5  _jfarerallo, Mitiatiosth Ann. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, vol. xvu, p. 36. 
Hatitat.—Tossed on the West Sands, St. Andrews, in considerable numbers after storms 
(R. M.), and also obtained from the lines of the fishermen (HK. M.). Stomach of plaice, Moray 
Firth ; Clyde area (as C. Duneri), Gemmill. 
[The distribution (of C. infundibuliformis) is extensive :— 
_ Greenland, Spitzbergen (Kiikenthal) and Finmark, Norway (Sars, Malmgren); Finmark 
(Norman). 300 fathoms off Norway (Sars) ; Atlantic Coast, U.S.A. (Verrill) ; Siberian and 
Behring’s Sea (Wirén) ; Kara-Havets (Levinsen); Barents Sea (McIntosh); Franz-Joseph- 
Land (Augener) ; N.E. America (Moore). It has not yet been found in British seas. ] 
The cephalic plate of C. fauvels is surrounded by an ample and continuous collar, cleft, 
however, at the dorsal fissure, and it ensheaths the base of the branchiz. At the dorsal 
fissure the thickened edges, after the collar ceases, are carried downward and end in a point 
above the inflection of the firm rim to which the branchiz are attached, and which has the 
outline of a horse’s hoof, the rounded vental arch forming the front, and the indented dorsal 
region the frog. After the branchiz are shed, a small papilla is usually found in the mid- 
dorsal and a larger in the mid-ventral line of the thickened inner rim. The mouth lies above 
the ventral papilla. 
The body of this form is generally more founded than in the Sabellids proper, reaches 
the length of 5—-6 inches, and has the thickness of a strong goose-quill. The segments are 
from fifty to ninety. The outline is somewhat spindle-shaped, for though the cephalic lobe 
is truncate, the body tapers to it, as well as more distinctly toward the tail. At the 
tip the vent in the younger examples sometimes shows two papille, a smaller dorsal and 
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