LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS M A N U A OF ONCHOLOGY; STRUCTURAL AND SYSTEMATIC. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE SPECIES. BY GEORGE W. TRYON, JR. CONTINUATION BY HENRY A. PILSBRY, CONSERVATOR OF THE CONCHOLOGICAL SECTION OF THE ACADEMY OP Nehete8 LEACH (MS. 1819) in GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 169 ; Guide, p. 186.— Sown., Conch. Man., edit. 2, p. 57 (1842).— Acanthochiton HERRMANNSEN, Indicis Generum Malacozoorum Primordia, i, p. 2 (vid. ibid., " Acanthochitus"). — Acanthochiton of CARPENTER and many modern authors. — Acanthochistes COSTA, Faun. Reg. Nap., p. 2. — Phakellopleura GUILDING, Zool. Journ. v, ACANTHOCHITES. p. 28 (1829) ; type Ch. fascicularis Sow. Gen., f. 3—Stectoplax CPR. in DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1881, pp. 284, 288, 289, 291 (1882) ; type S. porrecta CPR. Valves partly covered, the anterior lacking radiating ribs; the posterior valve having the insertion-plate with a single slit on each poster-lateral edge, and a wide, toothless sinus in the middle behind. Girdle with large, dense tufts of glistening spicules. Type, C. fasci- cularis L. In this, the typical section, the tail valve has been further differ- entiated from the primitive type than in the other sections. The hairs of the girdle, and especially the tufts, are more exuberantly developed than in any other group of Chitons. The valves vary greatly in the degree to which they are buried in the girdle. The species are numerous, but owing to the similarity of the sculpture they are very hard to distinguish, even when well described. (1) Species of European and African Seas. A. FASCICULARIS Linne. PL 4, figs. 77, 78, 79. Shell elongated, moderately convex, more or less distinctly car- mated. Surface dull, varying much in color, "brown, chocolate, orange, yellow, pinkish or red, now and then mottled or streaked with white, pale green or brown." Median valves broadly subtriangular (seen detached), the beak slightly projecting, latero-anterior outline of tegmentum convex. Latero-pleural areas covered with flat or concave granules, which are ovate-oblong or drop-shaped and rather remote. Dorsal areas tri- angular, not abruptly defined at the edges, rather flattened and longitudinally obsoletely striated. Anterior valve granulated, the lower edge of the tegmentum slightly and obsoletely angular. Pos- terior valve with subcentral elevated mucro. Interior greenish, often roseate along the cavity. Insertion-plate of posterior valve having between the two slits a small posterior wave or sinus with a slight lobe on each side. Girdle moderately broad, more or less closely covered with short spicules which are usually tawny or grayish ; and a thick tuft of greenish or whitish bristles at each suture, four such tufts around the head valve. Periphery of girdle fringed with spines longer than those covering the rest of the girdle, but shorter than those of the tufts. 10 ACANTHOCHITES. Length 25, breadth 11, mill.; divergence 110.° Length 15, breadth 7 mill. Finmark and Great Britain, south to Mogador ; off the Strait of Gibraltar, (and perhaps the Canaries) ; Mediterranean and Adriatic Seas. On rocks, stones and oyster shells from low tide to 25 fins. Chiton fascicularis LINN., Syst. Nat. xii, p. 1106 (1766), and of many authors, including LAM., PAYRAUDEAU, PHILIPPI, WEIN- KAUFF, FORBES & HANLEY, Hist. Brit. Moll., t. 59, f. 5.— JEFFREYS, Brit. Conch, iii, p. 211 ; v, p. 197, t. 55, f. 3 ; Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 1870, p. 10; P. Z. S. 1882, p. 666, WOODWARD, Man. of Moll., t. 11, f. 30.— SOWB., Conch. Illustr., f. 87, 87a.— AUDOUIN, Ex. PI. Savigny, p. 127; Savigny, pi. 3, f. 5. — Acanthochites fascicularis SARS, Moll. Keg. Arct. Norv., p. 117. — Anisochiton (Acanthochiton) fascicularis FISCHER, Manuel de Conchyl., p. 881, f. 623 (bad). — Anisochiton (Acanthochites') fascicularis BUQ., DAUTZ. and DOLLF., Moll. Kouss. i, p. 502, t. 61, f. 17-20 ; t. 62, f. 6.— Acanthochites car- inatus Kisso, Hist. Nat. Eur. Merid, iv, p. 269 (l&26).—Acantho- chcetes vulgaris LEACH, Synops. Moll. Gt. Brit., p. 229 (1852).— Chiton crinitus PENNANT, Brit. Zool. iv, p. 71, t. 36, f. 1, Al (1777) ; edition of 1812, vol. iv, p. 142.— REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 26, f. 176. Not Ch. crinitus SOWB. — ? Chiton globulosus CHIEREGHINI MS., Brusina's Ipsa Chier. Conch., p. 43, 1870. This species is smaller than A. discrepans and the valves are much more coarsely granulated, the granules being ovate, at least toward the beaks. The median smooth area is wider than in discrepans, and less raised ; the tufts are larger, and the girdle is fringed at the margin. Var. attenuata Jeffr. Much longer and narrower in proportion to the breadth. England. A. JEN BUS (Risso) Monts. This Chiton resembles the other species of the group, but is more arched, reddish or bright colored, having distinct granules, and with the hairs of the tufts copper colored ; border thick and spinous. This beautiful species belongs to the laminarian zone, and has occurred at various points in the Mediterranean. The A. fascicularis is littoral, smaller, black with the keel chalky white ; and moreover its granulations are less numerous and more prominent. A. discre- pans Brown is also littoral, is larger and better known. Its colora- tion is ordinarily greenish, its granules minute and numerous; the hair-tufts are a beautiful silvery green. ACANTHOCHITES. 11 Back subcarinated, blackish ; margin wide, tuberculate ; tufts white, bronzed. The back is oblong, blackish, bordered by a wide tuberculous band ornamented with bunches of white or bronze hairs. Length 15 mill. Animal light red ; head rounded, gills reddish, etc. (Eisso.~) Balearic Is. (Hidalgo) ; Nizza (Risso) ; Genoa (Issel) ; Gorgona (Caifassi); Naples; Palermo (Monts.) Acanthochites cencus Risso, Hist. Nat. de 1'Eur. Merid. iv, p. 269 (1826). — CARUS, Prodromus Faunae Mediterranese ii, pt. 1, p. 182 (1889). — Chiton (Acanthochites^) ceneus MONTEROSATO, Journ. de Conchyl. 1878, p. 147. — Chiton gracilis JEFFR., Ann. Mag. N. Hist. (3), iii, p. 106, t. 3, f. 9a, b (1859).— SOWB., Illustr. Index Brit. Sh., t. 10, f. 6. — C. fascieularis var. gracilis JEFFR., Brit. Conch, iii, p. 212. With this form Monterosato identifies C. gracilis Jeffreys, the description which follows : " C. fascieularis var. gracilis Jefft\ PI. 4, fig. 83. Longer than usual, with finer sculpture; girdle broader and membranous, sparsely set with spines and mostly having an extra tuft (occasionally two) at the tail. Weymouth and off Milford Haven. Dredged in deep water. Differs from A. fascieularis in being slender, the girdle more sparsely pilose, and having one or two tufts behind the posterior valve, 19 or 20 tufts in all. The granulation of valves is finer than in fascieularis, coarser than in discrepans. As I have seen no Mediterranean specimens I cannot affirm their identity with those of the south of England ; but they are probably the same. The Mediterranean form has not been figured. Jeffreys in his later writ- ings considered this a delicate deep-water form offaseicularis, a con- clusion with which I am disposed to coincide. Further study with abundant material from the Mediterranean and Atlantic is necessary to establish the true status of the form. The form described by Rochebrune as A. hamatus is probably a synonym of A. ceneus. The. original description follows: Acanthochites hamatus Rochebr. Shell elongated, ovate, roseate, intensely carinated, the carina very high, linear, rugulose, posteriorly acute. Anterior valve rounded, intermediate valves with the lateral areas intensely granulated all over, the grains polygonal, flattened, subumbilicated. Marginal ligament pale rufous, with 9 shining 12 ACANTHOCHITES. whitish bunches. Length 17, breadth 8 mill. Oran, Algeria, collected by Deshayes' expedition of 1842; types in the Paris Museum. (Rochebr. in Bull. Soc. Philomath. 1881-1882, p. 191.) A. DISCREPANS Brown. PI. 4, figs. 80, 81, 82. Shell oblong, rather elevated, carinated. Color grayish, variously mottled with dull reddish-brown ; the ridge often marked with lilac or blackish. Median valves, when detached, showing a broadly triangular tegmentum, slightly beaked in the middle of the subconcave poste- rior margin, the latero-anterior margin sigmoid, convex at the outer, concave or subconcave toward the anterior termination ; length of tegmentum contained If times in its breadth, except the 2nd valve, which is longer. Later o-pleural areas sculptured with very fine and numerous round flat-topped granules, arranged in curving slightly irregular series, radiating from the beaks. Dorsal area narrowly triangular, elevated at the edges, somewhat convex, finely striated longitudinally. Anterior valve granulated, its lower margin feebly scalloped. Posterior valve with central, slightly projecting mucro ; the tegmentum oval, wider than long. Interior white, faintly tinged with blue, and more or less suffused with lilac-pink along the middle of the cavity. Sinus rather deep angular. Posterior valve having no posterior sinus or wave in the insertion-plate, which has the usual single slit on each side, sometime, doubled on one side. Girdle broad, grayish, covered with a thick velvety pile, and hav- ing ttffts of white, yellowish or greenish spicules at each suture, with four additional around the anterior valve ; periphery of girdle not furnished with a fringe of spicules longer than those covering the sur- face. Length 36, breadth 19 mill. ; divergence 105°-115°. Channel Islands to Morocco and Madeira; Mediterranean and A driatic Seas. Low water to 25 fms., on stones. Chiton discrepans BROWN, 111. Conch. Gt. Brit., p. 65, t. 21, f. 20 (1827).— FORBES & HANLEY, Hist. Brit. Moll, ii, p. 396, t. 58, f.4. — SOWB., Illustr. Index Brit. Sh., t. 10, f. 7.— JEFFREYS, Brit. Conch, iii, p. 214; v, p. 198, t. 55, f. 4 ; P. Z. S. 1882, p. 667.— WEIXKAUFF, Conchyl. Mittelm ii, p. 413. — Chiton fascicularis var. major PHIL., Enum. Moll. Sicil. i, p. 108, t. 7, f. 2 ; ii, p. 83.— C. fascicularis (part) DESK., in Lam., An. s. Vert. (2), vii, p. 492, and of POT. & MICH., REEVU, Conch. Icon., t. 10, f. 53, PETIT, Journ. ACANTHOCHITES. 13 \ de Conch. 1852, p. 71, WEINKAUFF, L c.t 1862, p. 333, et al— Chiton crinitus SOWB., Conch. Illustr., p. 2, f. 88, 88a, 93.— THORPE, Brit. Mar. Conch., p. 251, 1844; not of Pennant. — Anisochiton discrepans BUQ. DAUTZ. & DOLLF., Moll. Kouss. i, p. 505, t. 61, f. 21-25 ; t. 62, f. 7. — ? Acanthochites communis Risso, Hist. Nat. de FEur. Merid., iv, p. 269. Smith (P. Z. S. 1891, p. 392) reports this species from Aden, and remarks that he cannot separate C. scutiger Ad. & Rv., Coreari Archipelago, and C. carinatus A. Ad. & Ang. from Port Jackson, from this species. A. discrepans is readily distinguished from A. fascicularis by its larger size, the much smaller, more numerous and round instead of oval granules ; the less conspicuous tufts, etc. A. ADANSONI Rochebrune. PL 8, figs. 33, 34. Shell elongated, whitish -violaceous, with black and green spots ; anterior valve semilunar ; posterior valve small ; intermediate valves triangular, nearly concealed, closely and very minutely squamulose; anterior areas of valves narrow, very smooth and longitudinally strio- late ; marginal ligament wide, pilose, hairs coarctate, generally red- dish, and with 9 bunches of glossy, roseate, slightly yellowish bristles. Length 20, breadth 8 mill. (Kochebr.') Strait of Santiago ; Saint Vincent, Cape Verde Archipelago ; Goree and Dakar, West Africa. Acanthochites adansoni ROCHEBR., Journ. de Conchyl. (3) xxi, p. 44 (1881); Bull. Soc. Philomath, de Paris, 1880-'81, p. 116; Nouv. Arch, du Mus. (2), iv, p. 238, t. 17, f. 9o, b.—Kalison ADANSON, Voy. au Senegal, pt. 2, p. 42, t. 2, f. 11 (young individual, teste Rochebr.) The posterior valve is excessively narrow, rounded, almost entirely covered by the girdle ; median valves triangular, carinated, the carina obtuse, covered with ovoid scales regularly arranged in radiating lines ; middle of the valves narrow, very finely striated longitudinally. (Rochebr.') The notes given under A. bouvieri on Rochebrune's figures of that species, apply also to this. They are false in most particulars. A. BOUVIERI Rochebrune. PI. 3, figs. 65, 66. Shell elliptical, carinated, black. Anterior valve elongated ; pos- terior valve rounded ; median valves triangular, wide, beaked, covered with minute points ; anterior area very narrow, transversely 14 ACANTHOCHITES. most minutely radiate. Marginal ligament wide, black or brownish, having 9 dense, elongated bunches, whitish or reddish. Length 15, breadth 9 mill. (Rochebr.} Strait of Saint Lucie ; Santiago, Cape Verde Archipelago. A. bouvieri ROCHEBR., Journ. de Conchy 1. 1881, p. 45 ; Bull. Soc. Philom. 1880-'81, p. 117; Nouv. Arch, du Mus. (2)iv,p. 239, 1. 17, f. 10a, b. The front valve is triangular, the posterior valve quite wide, rounded. It occurs also at Dakar and Goree, on the mainland of Africa, living with A. adansoni. The artist who drew Rochebrune's figures omitted the slits in the insertion-plates ; he supplied several extra girdle-tufts ; and finally, he represented only seven valves, and these are very incorrect at the sutures. To what extent the figures may be otherwise faulty I can- not tell, but I have very grave doubts about the correctness of the sculpture of the dorsal areas represented in the detail figure. A. GARNOTI Blainville. PI. 14, figs. 11-16. Shell elongated, rather depressed, not carinated. Brownish, with two slightly diverging whitish stripes bounding the dorsal area. The median valves are rather beaked when not eroded. The tegmentum varies on different valves from subpentagonal to sub- quadrangular: Latero-pleural areas closely and evenly covered with elongated granules. Dorsal areas triangular, rather wide in front, no* sharply defined at the sides, closely striated longitudinally, the striae coarser at the sides, and becoming transformed into the gran- ulation of the side areas. Posterior valve small, the tegmentum broader than long. Posterior sinus shallow, with a slight lobe and on each side a slit. Mucro behind the middle. Interior a rather dark blue-green, the cavity and central callus of each valve purple-brown. Sinus wide and rounded ; sutural laminae very large, well rounded at their anterior extremities, about equal in area to the tegmentum, side slits inconspicuous, posterior. Girdle "dirty-green, closely covered with clear or dark-green bristles, white at the periphery, and having 18 bunches of numerous radiating bristles, which are dirty-green, hyaline, very brittle and over 2 millim. in length." Length 20, breadth 10 mill, (specimen.) Length 1 inch, 6 lines, breadth 1 inch (Quoy & Gaim.) Table Bay, Cape of Good Hope. ACANTHOCHITES. 15 Chiton garnoti BLAINV., Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 552 (1825). — QUOY & GAIMARD, Voy. de 1'Astrol. Zool. iii, p. 401, t. 73, f. 9-14. —LAM., An. s. Vert., vii, p. 517.— KRAUSS, Die Siidafrik. Moll., p. 42. — ? Chiton danielli SOWB., Conch. Illustr., p. 7, f. 48. The valves are more or less encrusted or eroded in most adult adult specimens. The Ch. danielli of Sowerby, figured in the Con- chological Illustrations, but never described, has been considered synonymous on account of its locality ; but as Krauss has pointed out, the figure represents that species with an additional pair of well developed tufts behind the tail-valve. It may prove distinct; but as the figure was drawn from a badly eroded example and in other respects agrees well with garnoti, it may be left here for the present. A. penidllatus differs from this species in both coloring and sculpture, v. Martens reports garnoti from Mauritius and Reunion (Mobius' Reise, p. 300.) A. PENICILLATUS Deshayes. PL 4, fig. 84 ; pi. 8, figs. 29, 30. Shell elongated, moderately elevated, carinated, the side-slopes nearly straight. Surface lusterless, varying from uniform cream- white to heavily blotched and maculated with blackish. Median valves slightly beaked. Dorsal areas not elevated at the edges, rather narrow, closely and finely longitudinally striated. Latero-pleural areas covered with rather coarse, flat or subconcave scale-like granules, varying from drop-shaped to angularly oblong in form, arranged in radiating rows, and less obviously in serie parallel to the outer-anterior contours of the tegmentum (fig. 81). Posterior valve having the tegmentum small, round, and equal in length and breadth, the mucro moderately elevated and near the pos- terior margin. Interior white ; sinus broad and angular. Slits of side insertion- plates posterior and small. Posterior valve having a slight upward wave behind, at each side of which there is a projection or angle ; the plate straight or concave from this angle to the lateral angles. Slits as usual. Girdle covered with short pile, having a rather small bunch of white spicules at each suture, four bunches around the head valve, and a fringe of similar long glassy spicules at the periphery. Length 22, breadth 11 mill.; divergence 110°. Reunion (Desh.) ; Mauritius (V. Robillard.) Chiton penidllatus DESH., Moll. Reunion, p. 41, t. 6, f. 8-10 (1863). — Aemithochcetes p., MARTENS in Beitrage zur Meeresfauna der 16 ACANTHOCHITES. Insul Mauritius u. der Seychellen, (Mobius' Reise nach Mauritius), p. 300 (1880.) This species may be readily known by the light ground-color, the proportions of the posterior valve, and the fringe of long peripheral spicules, when these are retained. The sculpture differs markedly from the Cape species, the pustules being notably elongated, of a narrowly drop-shaped contour, averaging one-fifth of a mill, in length. (2) Species of New Zealand and Australia. A. ZELANDICUS Quoy & Gaimard. PL 14, figs. 9, 10. Shell elongated, moderately elevated, hardly carinated. Greenish or gray, or " yellowish dotted with brown, some valves with a black line at the summit." The median valves are hardly beaked. Latero-pleural areas covered with closely crowded, ovate, flattened granules. Dorsal areas narrowly triangular, closely and finely striated longitudinally. Posterior valve having the tegmentum small, transversely oval, decidedly wider than long. Interior dark blue-green, often stained with purple along the cavity. Sinus very wide and squarish. Posterior valve obtusely, biangular behind, the edge of the insertion-plate, between the slits, minutely and distinctly crenulated. Girdle rather narrow (in the dried state), greenish, covered with very short spicules, and having a marginal fringe of longer spicules, and 18 tufts of light blue spicules. Length 28, breadth 12 mill. Length 25, breadth 10 mill. Pass of France (Q. & G.) ; Auckland to Dunedin (Hutton), New Zealand, on stones below low water-mark. Chiton zelandicus Q. & G., Zool. Voy. de 1'AstroL, iii, p. 400, t. 73, f. 5-8 (1834).— REEVE, Conch. Icon., f. 58.—Acanthochites zealandicus HUTTON, Man. N. Z. Moll., p. 117 (IS&ty.—Acantho- choetes hookeri GRAY, in Dieffenback's Travels in New Zealand, ii p. 262 (1843.) This species has been reported from Japan (Schrenck, Amurl. Moll., p. 273) but incorrectly, the Japanese species being distinct. The coloring is variable. Hutton write% : Mantle brown ; spines pale green ; valves generally greyish-black, more or less varied with ACANTHOCHITES. 17 yellowish ; often yellowish or reddish on the dorsal line ; occasion- ally greenish. The spines on the raantle vary from green to brown. Green is the more common color in the north, while brown appears to be universal in Otago. It is by no means certain that but one species of Acanthochites exists in New Zealand. Especial attention should be given to the form and denticulation of the tail valve of specimens from different New Zealand localities, in order to settle this question. Specimens before me seem to indicate a second species, but they are not per- fectly preserved. A. CARINATUS Adams & Angas. Shell elongated ; valves moderate, strongly carinated, beaked behind ; whitish maculated with reddish-brown ; very closely pustu- lose, in the middle smooth and black-brown ; lateral areas indistinct. Girdle beset with minute white spicules, and bunches of pale spicules. Length 30, breadth 16 mill. (A. & A.} Port Jackson, New South Wales (Angas.) Acanthochites carinatus AD. & ANG., P. Z. S. 1864, p. 194. — ANGAS, P. Z. S. 1867, p. 224. A single specimen was collected by Angas. Mr. E. A. Smith has expressed the opinion that it is the same as the European species A. discrepans (Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1891, p. 392), but this view needs confirmation, being founded probably on a study of the external characters only. A. ASBESTOIDES Carpenter. PL 2, fig. 55. Shell small, greyish-brown, with a pale line on each side of the middle of the central valves, slightly converging behind, leaving a dark-wedge shaped space between them. Surface covered with a coarseish granulation, the granules being somewhat flattened and those at the vertex of the central valves rather smaller than the rest. ( The lateral areas are not defined in these valves ; the posterior curved margins are produced in the middle, at times almost forming a right angle; their insertion plates are large, thin, produced ante- riorly with a very slight notch quite close to the hinder margin on each side ; the sinus between them in front is deep and arcuate. The first valve has a straighter posterior margin than the succeeding ones, and a semicircular outline in front ; the lamina of insertion is rather deep, thin, feebly striated exteriorly, and interrupted by five very small subequidistant notches. The last valve is conspicuously 2 1 8 ACANTHOCHITE3. small, transversely subovate, depressed- conical, with a nearly central mucro ; insertion-plate very large, laterally produced, with only two notches behind. Interior of the valves bluish. Mantle very minutely spinulose, bearing very conspicuous compact tufts of silky spicules along the sides, not at all unlike in their fibrous texture that of asbestos. Length 15 millim., width of the broadest central valve 5i. (Smith.) Flinder's Island, Bass' Straits (Jos. Milligan) ; Port Molle, Queens- land (Coppinger), Australia. Chiton (Acanthochiton) asbestoides Cpr. MS., SMITH, Zool. Coll. H. M. S. 'Alert,' p. 83, t. 6, f. G (1884.) Numerous specimens are before me from the collection of the Canada Geological Survey. The species is characterized by the density of the narrow white asbestos-like tufts, well shown in the figure. (3) Species of Japan, China, and the Sandwich Is. A. RUBROLINEATUS Lischke. PL 2, fig. 50. Shell oblong-ovate, convex, very minutely granose, dull flesh- colored, here and there brown, having a wedge-shaped olive spot in the middle of the valves, and painted with obliquely longitudinal red lines. Sides of valves in large part covered by the girdle, the free portion about as long as wide. Anterior valve regularly convex ; posterior valve small, obtusely beaked ; the rest having a narrow smooth median area, slightly excavated on each side. Girdle clothed with minute, irregular spines, and 18 pores bearing dark bristles. Length 34, breadth 20 mill. (Lischke.) Nagasaki, Japan. Chiton rubro-lineaius LISCHKE, Malak. Blatt. xxi, p. 24 (June, 1873) ; Japonische Meeres-Conchylien, iii, p. 73, t. 5, f. 12 (1874.) Described from a single specimen. Compare A. achates. A. ACHATES Gould. Shell narrow, elliptical ; sooty, with a yellow streak on each side Valves scale-shaped, beaked and carinated, at the apices smooth and ebony colored, elsewhere scaly-granulated. Anterior valve semi- oval ; posterior valve small, triangular, the mucro subterminal; interior glaucous. Ligament wide, provided with short, unequal spines and bunches of spicules. ACANTHOCHITES. 19 Length 30, breadth 20 mill. (Old.) Kikaia and Hakodadi Bay, Japan (Stimpson.) C. (Acanthochcetes) achates GOULD, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist, vii, p. 165; Otia Conch., p. 118. One of the orginal specimens of this species is before me, but it is so eroded that the characters are quite obscured. A. DEFILIPPII Tapparone Canefri. PL 2, figs. 45-48. Shell ovate, the valves small ; girdle closely hairy, very wide. Valves heart-shaped, narrowed in front, dilated, and somewhat beaked in the middle behind; last valve small, subrotund. Umbones obscurely transversely striated, areas minutely and closely granulated. Girdle much dilated, thick, densely covered with short hairs, and having two series of setigerous pores. Color of the valves black-brown, sometimes variegated with white; girdle olive-brown, the pore tufts black. ( T.- C.) Yokohama, Japan. Amycula de-filippii T.-C. Zool. del Viaggio intorno al globo della R. Fregata ' Magenta/ Malacologia, p. 78, t. 1, f. 15, 15a-2c. (1874). — Stect oplax porrecta CPR., MS. and in Dall, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1881, p. 288 (no description.) Canefri's figure of this species shows but seven valves, probably a mistake of the artist. The species described by Carpenter seems to be identical. Car- penter's name was applied some years before the appearance of the Zoology of the 'Magenta,' but unfortunately was never published. The Carpenterian species is evidently what Tapparone-Canefri alludes to as a species of " Stretochiton " in the collection "del sig. E. Adams." Carpenter's description is as follows : A. porrectus Carpenter. (PL 2, figs. 36-44). Valves two-thirds immersed, brown-olive ; exposed part of the posterior valve rounded, the mucro a little behind the middle ; anterior valve semicircular ; median valves trilobed, projecting far forward at the ridge. Dorsal area smooth, in the young shell longitudinally striate and granulose. Side areas conspicuously granose. Interior : posterior valve mopaloid, slightly sinuated behind, hav- ing one slit at each side. Anterior valve having 5 slits ; median valve 1 slit (or sometimes abnormally 2 on one side); posterior teeth long, the rest very long ; eaves minute. Jugal sinus very deep, wide, smooth, sutural laminae separated. 20 ACANTHOCHITES. Girdle produced in front, covered with countless minute whitish glassy spines, and having tufts of hairs at the margins of the valves. Length 44, breadth 27? mill. ; divergence 120°. Japan (Curning Coll., no. 97.) This curious shell may be described as a Katharina with the nor- mal tail-plate of Acanthochites, and a pore-bearing girdle. The hairs in the pores are horny, but over the surface white and nearly translucent. ( Cpr.~) This species was made the type of Carpenter's subgenus Stectoplax, on account of the valves being two-thirds covered ; but some species of Acanthochites have them even more immersed (such as A. exqui- situs Pi Is.), and others form a perfect transition to the less covered forms. A portion of girdle and valves is shown of the natural size in fig. 44. Figures 41-44 were drawn by Mr. E. A. Smith from the type in the British Museum. Figs. 36-40 were drawn by Emerton from Carpenter's specimens, collected by Arthur Adams. A. CIRCELLATUS Adams & Reeve. PL 2, figs. 53, 54. Shell oblong ovate, valves somewhat produced posteriorly, smooth, peculiarly sculptured with circular grooves. Jet black. Ligament densely beset with short bristles spreading over the sides of the valves, and furnished with small tufts of spicules. (five.) This is the largest of the tufted species, and quite peculiar in its style of sculpture ; the valves in all others are minutely granulated, but in this they are smooth and characterized by a number of fine grooves radiating in concentric order from the umbones. (Eve.} Island of Quelpart, Corean Archipelago (A. Adams.) Chiton circellatus Adams & Reeve, REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 27, f. 180 (Oct., 1847.; A. SCUTIGER Adams & Reeve. PL 2, figs. 51, 52. Shell elongated, narrow ; valves smoothly keeled in the middle, slightly beaked, minutely and very closely granulated ; peculiarly burnt- red color. Ligament densely bristled, spread over the sides of the valves, and furnished with small tufts of spicula. (Reeve.) Island of Quelpart, Corean Archipelago (A. Adams.) Chiton scutiger Ads. & Rve., REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 27, f. 178 (Oct., 1847). Probably not Acanthochites scutiger ANGAS, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 188, and 1867, p. 224.— Cf. Cooke, Ann. Mag. N. H. 1885, p. 276, and Smith, P. Z. S. 1891, p. 392. ACANTHOCHITES. 21 The figures of Reeve indicate that this is a form in which the girdle encroaches much at the sutures, and the valves are coarsely granulated, somewhat as in A.rhodeus. Mr. E. A. Smith's inability to separate it from the minutely granulated A. discrepans is there- fore not easy to understand. A. ARMATUS Pease. Shell ovate, slightly oblong, elevated-convex. Greenish irre- gularly maculated with black, pale in the middle, with two longitu- dinal black lines. Lateral areas granulose, central longitudinally striated, not beaked. Girdle leathery, narrow, with shining white spicules, and having tufts of silvery- white, glassy spicules. Length 10, breadth 6 mill. (Pse.') Oahu, Sandwich Is. (7) Acanthochites armatus PSE., Amer. Journ. of Conch, vii, p. 195 (1871.) — Aconthochites bcdicus CPE. MS. A single specimen of this species before n& is too much eroded for illustration. The species is quite similar to Gould's A. aehates in general aspect. A. VIRIDIS Pease. Shell oblong ovate, but slightly elevated, green with a pale or whitish line down the middle. The valves are semi-lunar in shape, the posterior side being straightly transverse or nearly so. They are without a ridge or umbonal elevation in the centre, where they are smooth ; the sides minutely granulose. The valves of insertion are entire plates on which the dorsal valves are set or imbedded. They extend from the sides of the dorsal valves, and produced anteriorly, the edges being smooth and rounded at their termination. On the posterior terminal valve, they are produced laterally, and are trun- cate at their termination. On the anterior terminal valve, they are produced at an equal distance around the front and sides. They are smooth and of a light bluish color. The ligamental border is covered with close-set short spiculse. The spiculsB of the tufts are dense, vitreous and dark green. (Pse.) Length 40, breadth 14 mill, Kauai, Sandwich Is. (Pse.) (?) Acanthochites viridis PSE., Amer. Journ. Conch, vii, p. 194 (1871.) 22 ACANTHOCHITES. (4) Species of the West Indies and West America. A. SPICULOSUS Reeve. PI. 13, figs. 60, 61, 62. Shell somewhat elongately ovate, valves semilunar, rough through- out; blackish-brown; ligament horny, furnished with thick tufts of bright olive glassy spiculse. (Reeve.) West Indies. Chiton spiculosa REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 9, f. 47 (Feb., 1847). — Acanthochiton spiculosus CPR. MS. This form is probably merely a dark specimen of the species after- ward described by Reeve as C. astriger. Mr. E. A. Smith has expressed his belief that this is the case, in Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond. xx, p. 497. Var. ASTRIGER Reeve. PI. 13, figs. 55, 56, 57. Shell oblong, rather depressed, not carinated. Valves variously colored, green or olive-green, usually tinged with brown on the sides, often marked with rather wide white stripes at the sides. The valves are generally more or less encrusted. Dorsal areas narrow, slightly raised at the edges, convex and shining, marked by delicate longitudinal striae and transverse growth-lines. Latero- pleural areas very minutely and evenly granulated, the granules rounded. Posterior valve small, its tegmentum slightly longer than broad, the mucro near the posterior margin. Interior blue-green; sinus wide, deep and subangular; sutural- laminse large, blue-green. Insertion-plate of the posterior valve visible behind, as well as at the sides of the tegmentum when viewed from above; posterior outline bilobed, having a median sinus, and slits outside of the lobes. Girdle minutely velvety, olive-green, having 18 very large con- spicuous tufts of greenish-white spicules ; the periphery bearing a fringe of spicules. Length 20-22, breadth 9 mill. Florida Keys to Barbados, West Indies. Chiton astriger REEVE, Couch. Icon., t. 18, f. 109 (April, 1847). — Phakellopleura (Acanthochites) astrigera SHUTT., Bern. Mittheil. 1853, p. 79. — Acanthochiton astriger DALL, Bull. 37, U. S. Nat. Mus. p. 174. — Chiton (Acanthochiton) astriger SMITH, Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond. xx, p. 496 (1890.) Additional localities are : Guadeloupe (Swiff) ; St. Thomas (Blauner)} Tortugas (Dall), and Fernando Noronho (Ridley and Ramage.) ACANTHOCHITES. 23 In astriger the pustules are very minute, crowded, and rounded, each with a small central pit, as shown in fig. 56. The dorsal areas are wide, triangular and closely striated longitudinally. A. PYGM.EUS Pilsbry, P. sp. PI. 13, figs. 58, 59. Small, oblong, elevated, carinated, the side-slopes flat. Uniform cream-white or olive-green, or variegated. Intermediate valves broad, somewhat beaked. Dorsal areas wide, triangular, sculptured with longitudinal striae. Latero-pleural areas evenly covered with rather large flattened pustules, which are rounded or but slightly ovate, and average one-tenth of a mill, in greatest diameter. Posterior valve having the tegmentum oval, wider than long ; mucro prominent, subcentral. Interior blue or flesh -white. Posterior valve nearly semicircular in outline behind, having a slit on each side, and a very slight upward wave behind. The insertion-plate is short behind. Girdle narrow, having 9 small tufts of silver-white spicules on each side, and an irregular fringe at the edge. Length 8, breadth 4 mill. ; divergence 100°. Cedar Keys and Key West, Florida (Hemphill.) This is the smallest species of the genus known to me. It diflers from A. spieulosus in the smaller size, and high, roof-like form, in the smaller tufts, comparatively much longer tegmenta, and in the shape of the pustules, which are as coarse as in spiculosus, although the shell is so much smaller. The posterior valve differs widely from that of spiculosus. A. EXQUISITUS Pilsbry, n. sp. PI. 12, figs. 44, 45, 46, 47. Oblong, the visible portion of the valves very narrow, generally less than one-fourth the entire width of the dried animal ; depressed. Valves dark olive color; girdle of dried specimens light green, the tufts very large and either green, pink or bronze colored. In well- preserved alcoholic specimens the girdle is very fleshy and wide, light yellow with green pubescence. The median valves are but slightly beaked, the tegmentum being extremely narrow, its area far less than that of one of the sutural- lamince. Dorsal area a rather narrow, longitudinally striated band, wider in front. Side areas narrow, sculptured with separated, flat- topped granules, round posteriorly, ovate or drop-shaped and con- cave toward the anterior of each valve (fig. 47). Exposed portion of anterior valve much shorter than the front slope of the insertion- 24 ACANTHOCHITES. plate. Posterior valve having the tegmentum very small, ovate, narrower in front, longer than wide, mucro situated at the p6sterior third. Interior blue, darker along the cavity ; sinus narrow, deep, sub- angular. Sutural laminse very large. Posterior valve biangular behind, strongly contracted on the latero-posterior sides. Girdle very wide, covering all but a narrow shield of each valve ; covered with a close, short velvety pile which has a longer fringe around each valve ; bearing 18 unusually large, dense tujts of exces- sively fine spicules, vsually 5-7 mill. long. Length 25-30, breadth 15-18 mill. La Paz, Lower California (W. N. Lockington.) This is one of the largest as well as the most beautiful species of the genus. The valves are more covered than in any other known form, and the bunches of shining bristles are larger. A large number of individuals preserved in alcohol and dry were presented to the Academy by Mr. W. N. Lockington, (no. 60107.) One specimen before me has the girdle pubescence of a pale buff tint, and the tufts are silvery, a trifle bronzed. Var. AMPULLACEUS Pilsbry. PL 4, fig. 85. Similar to the preceding, but exposed portion (tegmentum) of intermediate valves much broader behind, flask-shaped; the lateral borders sigmoid. Tegmentum of anterior valve also larger. A. AVICUL.A Carpenter. Shell very similar to A. arragonites in form, size, girdle and general habit; but the sculpture and terminal laminae are different. Dorsal ridge having about 6 longitudinal grooves, the intervals appearing flatly scaled; umbones wide; diagonal areas hardly defined ; sides ornamented with oval, flattened scales, large for the size of the shell, and in indistinct diverging series. Mucro small, situated in front. Color livid and olivaceous-brown variously stained. Plates of insertion at sides as in A. arragonites; anterior plate with 5 slits. Length 4, breadth 2* mill. (Cjpr.) Catalina Island, 10-20 fms. ; rare (Cal. State Coll., no. 1072. Cooper.) Acanthochites avicula CPU., Proc. Cal. Acad. Nat. Sci. iii, p. 211 (Feb., 1866.) Like A. arragonites, but valves sculptured in large snake-skin pattern. ( Cpr.) ACANTHOCHITES. 25 Var. DIEGOENSIS Pilsbry, n. var. PL 12, figs. 52, 53, 54. Shell oblong, rather elevated, carinated, the side-slopes straight. Color buff or light gray, mottled on the sides with olive or olive- black ; girdle light green with whiter sutural tufts. The intermediate valves are rather minutely and acutely beaked when not eroded ; are wide posteriorly, tapering anteriorly, but the girdle does not encroach much at the sutures. Dorsal areas nar- rowly triangular, having about a dozen flattened longitudinal striae separated by narrower grooves. Latero-pleural areas covered with a rather coarse but regular scale-like granulation, the granules flat, oblong. Posterior valve having the tegmentum covering the greater part of the articulamentum, somewhat diamond shaped, wider than long, with the prominent mucro at the posterior third. Interior blue-green ; sinus rather wide, angular; sutural laminae moderate sized, rounded. Posterior valve obscurely bilobed behind, gently curved upward in the middle of the posterior insertion plate. Girdle (Jig. 53) densely clothed with rather long, light green spicules, and having 18 or 20 tufts of longer whiter spicules, the tufts usually not very conspicuous, and sometimes a few of them are lacking. Length 19, breadth 9 mill.; divergence 110°. Length 18 £, breadth 8 mill.: divergence 110°. Length 11, breadth 6 mill. ; divergence 110°. San Diego, California (Hemphill.) This may prove to be the adult form of Carpenter's A. avicula; but on account of the obvious discrepancy between my specimens and his description, it seems best to retain it under a separate name pending the re-examination of Carpenter's type. The covering of the whole girdle is more developed than in most species, resembling velvet with a deep pile ; and the tufts are less conspicuous than usual. The pustules are all drop-shaped and flat- topped. Black ones are scattered among the others, which are light colored, often almost whitish. The ridge has ten or a dozen excep- tionally deep longitudinal striae (fig. 54.) A. ARRAGONITES Carpenter. Shell elongated, elevated (at an angle of 110°), pale brown, variedly painted with rose and olivaceous. Intermediate valves strongly beaked, the interstices strongly diverging from the beaks ; dorsal area wide, pale, very delicately longitudinally granulate-striate, transversely most minutely corru- gated ; lateral areas indistinct ; surface all strongly granulated, 26 ACANTHOCH1TES. furnished with an elegant pattern of sphseroidal tubercles and chains of granules in lines diverging from the ridge. Posterior valve hav- ing the mucro subcentral and subconspicuous. Interior roseate or white; the acute and lobed margins of the valves not separated, large, with a single slit 011 each side, the lobes angulate ; sinus large, flat ; very delicately wrinkled in the cavity of the ridge, laminated under the beaks. Posterior valve hexagonal, with two posterior slits. Girdle copiously adorned with translticid, erect spicules, and at the front and hind ends and sutures having tufts of spicules or needles. ( Cjpr.) Length 4, breadth li, alt. * mill. Mazatlan, on Spondylus calcifer (Liverpool Coll.) Acanthochites arragonites CPU., Catal. of Mazatlan Shells, p. 198 (1857.) Whether the varied coloring of this shell, its elegant sculpture, the bird-like form of the medial or h exagonal shape of the bifissured terminal valves, or the adornment of the mantle with the transparent needle-like hairs, rising now in tufts, now in irregular crystals, be examined under the microscope, it would be difficult to find any shell of such surpassing beauty. Only one perfect specimen was found, but fresh valves belonging to several other individuals were detected among the Spondylus washings. The valves in the same shell greatly differ in color as in L. albolineatus. The posterior valve is peculiarly exquisite in its form, color and sculpture. There is considerable variation in the size of the tubercles and in the stria- tion of the j ugum. ( Cpr.) A. RHODEUS Pilsbry, n. sp. PI. 12, figs. 48, 49, 50, 51. Oblong, the exposed portion of the valves about one-third the entire width of the animal. Valves depressed, obtusely carinated, brown, the eroded apices roseate. The intermediate valves appear almost separated by the encroach- ment of the girdle at the sutures; a heart-shaped or subtriangular area remaining exposed. Dorsal band sharply defined and strongly differentiated from the side areas, very narroiv, shining, having slight growth-lines but no longitudinal strice. Latero-pleural or side areas sculptured with rounded-oval concave-topped elevations arranged in rows subparallel to the ridge, becoming radial and then irregular at ACANTHOCHITES. 27 the sides. Posterior valve having the tecjmentum drop-shaped, nar- rower in front, longer than wide; mucro at the posterior fourth. Interior deep rose red, paler at the edges of each valve. Slits rather deep and narrow, arranged as usual. Insertion plates of all valves very distinctly rugose outside. Posterior valve normally slit; not noticeably bilobed behind. Girdle wide and fleshy in alcoholic specimens, having 18 con- spicuous tufts. Gills extending forward two-thirds the length of the foot. Length 28, breadth 15 mill, (alcoholic specimen.) Panama (McNeill Expedition.) Described from an alcoholic specimen which has lost the cuticle and hairs from its girdle leaving a smooth whitish surface pitted at the sutures. The salient specific characters are (1) that the girdle encroaches much at the sutures ; (2) that the substance of the valves is rose-red ; and (3) that the sculpture is altogether peculiar. The insertion-plates are uncommonly rugose outside. It differs from A. hemphilli in the normal 2-slit posterior insertion-plate. The pustules (pi. 12, fig. 49 x 60) are mainly rounded or short drop-shaped, and are arranged in regular rows. They become some- what more spaced and less regularly arranged at the sides, and the valve illustrated has suffered erosion toward the beak. The individ- ual pustules (fig. 49) are seen to be decidedly concave. The dorsal area is narrow, elevated and smooth except for growth stride. The insertion and sutural plates are distinctly and sharply striated. A. HIRUDINIFORMIS Sowerby. PI. 2, figs. 56, 49. Shell oblong, flattened, blackish-green. Valves rounded, granu- lose ; central areas elongated, acuminate behind, smoothish. Girdle very densely pilose, velvety, with 9 concolored bunches of hairs. Length 25, breadth 14 mill. (Sowb.*) Ancon, Lobos Island and Payta, Peru ; Chatham Island, Galap- agos, under stones at low water. Chiton hirudiniformis SOWB., P. Z. S. 1832, p. 59 ; Conch. Illustr. f. 23, 142.— REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 10, f. 54. A. STYGMA Rochebrune. PL 8, figs. 31, 32. Shell ovate-elliptical, the shell quite wide, pale brown, each valve regularly encircled with a wide concentric black band. Anterior valve rounded ; posterior small, somewhat swollen ; intermediate valves having the central and lateral areas most minutely punctic- 28 ACANTHOCHITES. ulate, surrounded by a wide smooth band. Girdle tawny, ornamented with gleaming white, glassy tufts. Length 35, breadth 20 mill. (Eochebr.') Strait of Magellan. Acanthochiton stygma ROCHEBR., Miss. Sci. du Cap Horn, vi, Zool., p. 134, t. 9, f. 2a, 2b (1889). Not C. stigma Costa. It is evident that but little dependence can be placed on the figures of this species. A. BISULCATUS Pilsbry, n. sp. PI. 4, figs. 86, 87. Oblong, elevated, carinated, the side-slopes flat and straight. Buff, maculated with olive-green and dark green, or greenish with dark green and blackish mottling. Anterior valve having the evenly granulated tegmentum extend- ing two-thirds of the distance to the edge of the teeth. Intermediate valves (fig. 87) having a very broadly heart-shaped tegmentum ; the dorsal area triangular, convexly raised, longitudinally striated. Latero-pleural areas distinctly concave or hollowed out on each side of the dorsal area; covered with rather thickly distributed, drop- shaped flat or concave pustules (fig. 86) averaging about one-sixth of a mill. long. Posterior valve having the tegmentum symmetrically oval, the long axis of the oval transverse to that of the animal ; mucro prominent, subcentral. Interior bluish. Insertion-plates and teeth normal. Tract behind the sinus spongy. Posterior valve having one slit on each side, but hardly a perceptible sinus behind. Girdle rather wide, densely clothed with whitish spinelets, and having 9 tufts on each side. Length about 22, breadth about 9 mill.; divergence 100°-110°. Habitat unknown. Although the habitat of this species is unknown to me, I antici- pate no difficulty in its recognition. The shallow but distinct sulcus on each side of the dorsal area is a diagnostic feature, but unfortu- nately is not shown in the figure. (5) Undetermined, and unrecognizable S2)ecies of Acanthochite*. ACANTHOCHITES TRISTIS Rochebr. Shell broad, ovate, sooty, carinated, subumbonate. The anterior valve rounded, posterior swollen ; intermediate valves having the central areas transversely roughened ; lateral areas with sparse, wide tubercles. Girdle wide, ACANTHOCHITES. 29 sooty, with 9 whitish tufts. Length 25, width 14 mill. (Rochebr., in Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, 1881-'82, p. 194.) New Holland (Dussumier; Paris Mus.) ACANTHOCHITES TURGIDUS Rochebr. Shell small, ovate-oblong, pale buff. Anterior valve elongated, posterior rounded, nearly con- cealed ; intermediate valves rounded, covered throughout with swollen tubercles. Girdle gray, with 9 blue tufts. Length 10, breadth 6 mill. (Rochebr. in Bull. Soc. Philom. 1881-'82, p. 194). New Holland (Peron & Lesueur ; Paris Mus.) ACANTHOCHITES JUCUNDUS Rochebr. Shell ovate-elongate, buff, with emerald-green lines and spots. Central areas of intermediate valves smooth ; lateral areas sculptured with radiating beaded lines. Girdle wide, roseate, with 9 green tufts. Length 24, breadth 13 mill. (Rochebr. in Bull. Soc. Philom. 1881-'82, p. 194.) New Holland (Belligny) ; Cook's Straits (Filhol). Not common ; Paris Mus. ACANTHOCHITES STERCORARIUS Rochebrune. Shell elliptical rather flat, dull olivaceous; anterior valve rounded; posterior small, swollen ; intermediate valves with the central area rugose, lateral areas covered with wide, concentric imbricating sulci. Girdle wide, thick, shistaceous, with 9 greenish bunches. Length 22, breadth 13 mill. (Rochebrune, in Bull. Soc. Philomath, de Paris, 1883-'84, p. 32, 1884.) Cape Roxo, west coast of Africa (Paris Mus.) ACANTHOCHITES BELLIGNYI Rochebrune. Shell elongated ; ashen, marbled with white and tawny. Anterior valve rounded elliptical, posterior very minute; intermediate valves having the central areas smooth, lateral areas concentrically scaly, scales spatuliform. Marginal ligament rather wide, brown, with 9 blue bunches. Length 15, breadth 8 mill. (Rochebr., in Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, 1883-'84, p. 37, 1884.) New Caledonia (Paris Mus.) ACANTHOCHITES DAKARIENSIS Rochebr. Shell elongated, buff, with a conspicuous black spot ; anterior valve broad, rounded ; pos- terior valve nearly covered, semi-lunate; intermediate valves rounded, scale-shaped, beaked behind, granulose, the granules sub- imbricated ; anterior area of the valves wide, longitudinally sulcate, the sulci chain-like. Marginal ligament wide, pilose, blackish, beset 30 ACANTHOCHITES. very densely with whitish hairs; bunches 9, glassy, intense green. Length 35, breadth 12 mill. (Rochebr. in Bull. Sue. Philomath. 1880-'81, p. 116 ; Journ. de Conchyl. 1881, p. 44.) Rocks of Dakar, west Africa (Paris Mus.) ACANTHOCHITES JOALLESI Eochebr. Shell elongated, thick, almost always covered with a calcareous incrustation ; anterior valve semilunar ; posterior valve rounded, small ; intermediate valves rounded in front, semi-lunate behind ; lightly scaly at the base only. Marginal ligament very broad, olivaceous, having sparse, whitish long hairs ; 9 wide greenish bunches. Length 24, breadth 14 mill. (Eochebr. in Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, 1880-'81, p. 117 ; Journ. de Conchyl. 1881, p. 45.) Coast of Joalles ; rocks of Eufisque, West Africa (Mus. Paris.) CHITON ECHINOTUS Blainv. (Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 552). A species said to be from the Ocean coast (of France), figured in the Encyclop. Meth., pi. 163, f. 14, 15, copied from Chemnitz, vol. x, pi. 173, f. 1688. It is practically unidentifiable, but the figures were in all probability drawn from Acanthochites discrepans. CHITON POLYCHETUS Blainville. Body very small, oval ; girdle provided with 9 closely placed pairs of large tufts, the spicules equal, silvery. Shell very small ; the disc of the intermediate valves quite large and having 5 nearly equal sides; plates of insertion moderate, unifissate far backward; that of the posterior valve with 3 nearly equal lobes. Color greenish-brown. (Blainv., Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 553.) Seas of New Holland. CHITON ROSEUS Blaiuville. Body oval, a little elongated, sub- vermiform ; girdle much extended, covered with a very great quantity of crowded hairs, concealing the very small tufts of bristles. Bodies of the intermediate valves subtriangular, the anterior summits truncated ; covered with flat tubercles at the sides. Color of the shell rose; the rest of a gray black. (Blainv., Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 553.) New Holland. Probably a species of Notoplax. CHITON SUEURII Blainv. Body small, oval, Oniscus-Yike. Girdle with 9 pairs of tufts of quite small bristles. Intermediate valves having the body trapezoidal, with a brush-like group of stride in the ACANTHOCHITES-NOTOPLAX. 31 middle, the plates of insertion of medium size. General color gray- ish. (Blainv., Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 553.) Port of King George. CHITON SCABER Blainv. Body oval, elongated, a little vermiform having the girdle very thick and very wide, covered with quite fine hairs and small tufts. Shell small, occupying only a third of the back, formed of 8 thin, fragile valves, the intermediate ones larger than the terminal, exposed portion triangular and very small in comparison with the plates of insertion, which are wing shaped. Insertion-plate of the anterior valve especially large, 6-lobed ; that of the posterior valve patelliform, with 4 lobes. General color of the shell whitish gray. (Blainv., Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 553.) Seas of New Holland. Section Notoplax H. Adams. Notoplax AD., P. Z. S. 1861, p. 385 (type N. speciosa H. Ad.).— Macandrellus CPR. MS. in DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1381, pp. 284, 288 (type M. plumeus Cpr.) Acanthochites in which the posterior valve has the insertion-plate grooved outside and denticulate at the edge, between the usual two latero-posterior slits. Tegmentum reduced in size by the encroach- ment of the girdle at the sutures, the valves nearly or wholly separated there. Anterior valve not distinctly ribbed radially, or lobed around the edge. A rather weakly characterized section, probably artificial, but decidedly convenient at present as a means of splitting the large mass of Acanthochites. It is intermediate between typical Acantho- chites and Oryptoconchus in characters. The girdle has the tufts rather smaller than in the more typical Acanthochites, and the spicular covering of the whole surface varies from nearly obsolete to a dense clothing. The true nature of the girdle in Notoplax was not known to Dr. Dall when he wrote the notes upon the group in Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. xviii, p. 417. In the typical species, N. speciosa, it exhibits all the characters of the girdle of Acanthochites. There seems to be no character of more than specific value separating Notoplax and Macandrellus. As to Stectoplax, which Dall (I. c.) thinks may prove to equal Notoplax, it is absolutely nothing but a genuine Acantho- chites. 32 ACANTHOCHITES-NOTOPLAX. The type of Macandrellus is not M. costatus Ad. & Ang., as stated by Dall in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1878, p. 299, but if. plumeus Cpr., teste Dall, 1. c. 1881, p. 288. The first use of the name, being unaccompanied by a diagnosis, will fall. At the time Carpenter established the group for M. plumeus, he had never seen the species contains. A. SPECIOSUS H. Adams. PI. 1, figs. 23, 24, 25, 26. Shell elongated ; valves acutely heart-shaped, olivaceous maculated with brown ; each valve with a wide, smooth dorsal ridge, the side areas coarsely granulose, the lateral area indicated by a raised line. Girdle brown, spinulose ; pores moderate sized, encircled by con- spicuous spicula. Length 72, breadth 24 mill. (H. Ad.) Tasmania (Mus. Cuming) ; flinders Island (Jos. Milligan.) Cryptoplax (Notoplax) speciosa H. AD., P. Z. S. 1861, p. 385. This species resembles A. exquisitus Pils. in the narrowness of the exposed portion of the valves, but in typical specimens of that form the tegrnentum is decidedly narrower. In A. hemphilli Pils. from Florida, which is a Notoplax in its apparently separated valves and denticulate tail-plate, the speciosus differs in' the longer, narrower tegmenturn, etc. The figures of my plate were drawn by Mr. E. A. Smith from the types. Carpenter gives the following useful notes on the specimens in the British Museum : The lateral areas are distinctly marked off by larger granules along a raised diagonal line. The mucro of the posterior valve is raised, at an angle of about 160°, and situated at the posterior third of the tegmentum. The jugular areas are both smooth and raised ; the scales of the sides are also smooth flat and raised. The girdle is entirely covered by a dense mass looking spongy, but consisting of spicules of moderate length and extremely crowded. There are conspicuous pores but the hairs in them are not longer than the rest, and therefore it is difficult to distinguish them. The sinus is very narrow and deep. Slits all very short. The anterior valve has grooves with raised edges extending from eaves to the slits. Posterior valve having side slits, situated as in Acanthochites, but the posterior plate is pretty regularly grooved radially, so as to crenate the margin, almost amounting to little nicks from slit to slit. ACANTHOCHITES-NOTOPLAX. 33 A. FORMOSUS Keeve. PL 1, figs. 12, 13 (enlarged.) Shell oblong, rather narrow; valves very finely longitudinally striated at the summit, granulated at the sides. Bright scarlet. Ligament horny, thickly beset with shining white spicula at the side of each valve. Length ?, breadth T\ inch. (Reeve.) Cape Rivers, N.- W. Celebes ; one specimen. Chiton formosus REEVE, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 25 ; Conch. Icon., t. 26, £173. — ADAMS & REEVE, Zool. 'Samarang,' t. 15, f. 8. Carpenter believed his MS. species Macandrellus plumeus to be the same as this, although he had not, I believe, compared the types. His description is as follows : A. plumeus Carpenter. Shell subelongate, subelevated, the dorsal ridge acute, mucro submedian, hardly raised, the slope behind it concave. Roseate at the sides, olivaceous in the middle. Exposed part of the valves small. Posterior valve subrotund ; anterior valve pectinated and 5-angled around the margin ; central valves strongly angular, beaked ; sutures deeply encroaching on the side-areas. Dorsal areas delicately and closely sublongitudinally lirulate ; lateral areas distinctly defined, sunken ; central and lateral areas scaly in radiating, somewhat plumose pattern. Interior : posterior valve hardly sinuated behind, having a slit at each side, the plate between them deeply grooved outside and sub- dentate, shallowly slit at the edge. Anterior valve having 5 slits, the teeth angular at the slits. Girdle leathery, smooth, sometimes somewhat spongy, having minute hairlets, and small tufts of hairs at the sutures. Length 21, breadth 11 mill. ; divergence 120°. Habitat unknown (Mus. Cuming, no. 108.) Macandrellus plumeus CPU. MS. ; and in Dall, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1881, p. 288 (no description.) The irregular, rugose lobes of the tail plate, behind, almost amount to teeth. The head valve is hexagonal. The sculpture resembles the feathers of a bird. The lateral areas are distinct, but sunken instead of raised. ( Cpr.) A. ACUTIROSTRATUS Reeve. PI. 8, figs. 27, 28. Shell elongated, elevated in the middle, somewhat compressed at the sides ; valves obtusely keeled at the summit, smooth ; very closely flatly grained on each side; umbones produced, sharply beaked; lateral areas of the valves small, rather indistinct, concave. Whit- 3 34 ACANTHOCHITES-NOTOPLAX. ish, stained here and there along the summit with black. Ligament horny, furnished at the side of each valve with a small crest of spicula. (Rve.*) Cape Rivers (Belcher.) Chiton acutirostratus REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 26, f. 137. July, 1847. Voy. Samarang, Moll., t. 15, f. 10. An elongated species of somewhat compressed growth, remarkably distinguished by the sharply beaked structure of the umbones ; the flat-grained sculpture of the valves approaches that of C. hirudini- formis, to which it offers a singular contrast of color. (Reeve.) A. HEMPHILLI Pilsbry, n. sp. PL 13, figs. 65, 66, 67. Elongated, the valves somewhat exceeding one-third the total width in dried specimens. Valves rather elevated, carinated ; red, more or less maculated with white. Girdle rust-brown. The intermediate valves are not beaked, being somewhat produced backward on each side of the apex ; tegmentum reduced to a heart- shaped area by the encroachment of the girdle at the sutures, leaving the valves in contact by only a small point at the ridge. The dorsal band is very narrow, parallel sided, slightly elevated, and having a few longitudinal strise. The latero-pleural or side areas are sculpt- ured with fine flattened pustules, those on the posterior portion of each valve being concave. Posterior valve elevated, the tegmentum small, somewhat pear-shaped, narrow in front, longer than wide, mucro at about the posterior third. Interior light green at the sides, deep rose-red in the middle and at the posterior margin of each valve. Sutural-plates light greenish, the slits minute. Posterior valve not bilobed behind, having the usual two slits, and between them a number (6-8) of smaller, irregular and unequal slits or nicks ; posterior sinus obsolete. Girdle wide, rusty-brown, sparsely clothed with short microscopic hyaline spicules, having a fringe of longer spicules at the periphery, and 18 rather small tufts of whitish bristles. Length 24, breadth 11 mill. ; divergence about 115°. Key West, Florida (Henry Hemphill.) This species is allied to A. rhodeus in the peculiarly narrow dorsal band, the great encroachment of the girdle at the sutures, etc. ; but it differs in the less developed side slits, the higher and narrower tail valve and its peculiar multiple-slitting, and in other features. It was collected by Mr. Hemphill at Key West. There ACANTHOCHITES-CRtPTOCONCHUS. 35 are other specimens in the collection of the Geological Survey of Canada, without locality. The pustules are rounded, flat-concave topped, crowded, and arranged in distinct series. The dorsal area projects anteriorly beyond the latero-pleural areas ; it is narrow, elevated and longitu- dinally striated, the striae mostly rather indistinct and subgranulated. The white and crimson pattern gives an appearance of great elegance to the valves. A. CARPENTERI Pilsbry, n. sp. PI. 1, figs. 14-22. A series of drawings left by Dr. Carpenter, represent an unnamed new species of Maeandrellus, of which he had prepared no descrip- tion. It is so strongly marked, however, that the recognition of the form will be easy. Its prominent features are : (1) the broad, ante- riorly produced, slightly asperulate girdle with minute pore-tufts ; (2) the slightly scalloped border of the anterior valve (tegmentum) ; (3) the coarse scale-like granulation of the side areas ; and (4) the distinct slitting of the posterior insertion-plate into even, vertical teeth. Length 41, breadth 23 mill. Port Elizabeth, S. Africa. The figures of detached valves are double natural size. Compare Spongiochiton. A. INVOLUTUS Carpenter, n. sp. PL 1, figs. 27-35. An unpublished species, of which excellent figures by Emerton were prepared for Carpenter. These are reproduced upon my plate, and are sufficient for the recognition of the species, although the sculpture is represented upon the head valve only. All the figures are magnified two diameters. Carpenter gives only the following notes : There are only six stumpy [branchial] leaflets on each side of the tail ; vent inconspicuous ; foot slight and very thin. Head very small, with copious " veil " and neck lappets, outside of which there is a sort of hood around the head, extending backward to the gills (fig. 33), without epidermis, like the foot ; outside of all is the large girdle covered inside with granular epidermis." Zanzibar (Mus. Comp. Zool.) The figures were drawn from alcoholic specimens. Section Cryptoconchus Blainville & Guilding, 1829. Cryptoconchus (BLAINVILLE MS. in Brit. Mus. ; BURROW, Elem. Conch., p. 190), GUILDING, Zool. Journ. v,p.2S (1829).— GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 66, 69, 169. Type C.porosus. 36 ACANTHOCHI^ES-CRYPTOCONCHUS. Valves entirely covered by the girdle except a linear area at the ridge of each. Posterior valve having the insertion-plate with several (5-7) slits, anterior valve 5-slit. Girdle leathery, naked, bearing a series (18) of sutural tufts on tubercles, or pores, sometimes sub- obsolete, along the sides of the valves. Gills extending along the posterior half of the foot. This subgenus cannot in fairness be dated from the time of its pullication in Burrow's Elements, for in that work it is in no way defined and is disowned as a valid genus. Burrows simply says that Blainville has affixed the names Cryptoconchns porosus and C. larvce- formis to two specimens in the British Museum. The latter belongs of course to Chitonellus. In 1829, Guilding adopts Cryptoconchus as a genus, and gives a generic diagnosis. Blainville himself ignores the name in his publication on Chitons in 1825, believing it a synonym of Chitonellus. This group is much more closely allied to Acanthochites than to Amiada ; its valves being exactly the form which would be pro- duced by a little further covering of the side areas in a species like A. (Notoplax) hemphilli. The backward prolongation of the sides into posterior lobes is just as great in that species ; the main differ- ence being that in Notoplax these posterior lobes are not covered by the girdle. The structure of the tail valve is practically the same in Notoplax, Loboplax and Cryptoconchus. A. POROSUS Burrow. PI. 3, figs. 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62. Shell elongated, all but a linear dorsal area of each valve covered by the integument continued upward from the girdle, but in the dried state showing through it the posterior outlines of the valves. Color when dry dark reddish or blackish-brown. The outer layer of each intermediate valve is reduced to a narrow dorsal area, shaped like an exclamation point without the dot (') ; upon each side of the apex, the posterior margin of each valve is pro- duced backward in a rounded lobe, showing plainly through the con- tracted outer skin. A more or less developed groove extends to the lateral slits. Head and tail valves with minute circular exposed dots. Interior light blue-green. Anterior valve having 5, median valves 1, posterior 5-7 slits. Girdle reddish- or blackish-brown in the dried condition, naked, smooth, leathery ; bearing a series of prominent tubercles each with a ACANTHOCHITES-CRYPTOCONCHUS. 37 bunches of short bristles, situated Dear the sutures upon the sides of the valves, and four around the head valve. Length 34, breadth 14 mill, (dried specimen.) Length 38, breadth 20 mill. (§. & £.) Dunedin to Auckland, New Zealand. Chiton porosus BURROW, Elements of Conchology, p. 189, t. 28, f. 1 (1815). — Cryptoconchus porosus H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll, iii, t. 55, f. 4.— CHENU, Manuel, i, f. 2884.— HUTTON, Man. N. Z. Moll., p. 118 (1880). — Chiton monticularis QUOY & GAIMARD, Voy. de 1'Astrol., p. 406, t. 73, f. 30-35, (1834).— Sows., Conch. Illustr., f. 129.— REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 10, f. 57.— Chiton leachi BLAINVILLE, Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 554 (1825). — ? Cryptoplax depressus BLAINV., I. c., vol. xii, p. 124 (1818). — ? Cryptoconchus stewartlanus ROCHEBR., Bull. Soc. Philomath. Paris, 1881-1882, p. 194. The girdle varies from bright orange to light brown in the living animal (figs. 57, 58). The gills are posterior. A. FLORIDANUS Dall. PI. 3, figs. 63, 64. Elongated and narrow ; black, purple-black or light brown, with a linear white space along the summit of each valve. Valves entirely covered except a round dot at the apex of the first, and a narrow band along the ridge of the other seven, the band slightly dilated at the apex of each valve. These exposed portions are whit- ish or purplish, smooth or showing faint transverse growth strise. The posterior edges of each valve, seen through the dried skin, are produced backward in wide but not deep rounded lobes on each side of the apex. Posterior valve with subcentral mucro. The disconnected valves are white or pink and purple ; the inter- mediate valves being rectangular in general shape, with a sinus before and behind, the posterior sutural lobes rather narrower than the anterior ; and there is one slit on each side. The posterior valve has a gentle wide upward wave posteriorly, with a single Mopaloid slit on each side, and several (4) unequal slits between them. Ante- rior valve having 5 slits. Girdle rather wide, leathery, naked ; when fresh having the color and "texture of a moist prune" ; bearing at each suture a minute bristle-pore, and four such pores around the head valve ; each pore bearing some short bristles, scarcely projecting above the surface ; pores and bristles always inconspicuous, frequently invisible (aborted?). 38 ACANTHOCHITES-LOBOPLAX. The gills extend forward half-way to the head. Length 21, breadth 7* mill, (dry specimen.) Length 24, breadth 13 mill, (large alcoholic specimen.) Key West and Key Largo, Florida, on the reefs near low tide (Hemphill); Dry Tortugas (Dr. E. Palmer); Cape Florida (Wurdeman.) Notoplax floridanus DALL, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. xviii, Report on the ' Blake ' Mollusca, p. 416, (1889.) This species attracts the attention at once by its dark, glistening girdle, and the long line of white strokes along the median line, like exclamation points without the dots (!). It resembles no known ' species but A. porosus Burrow, of New Zealand ; but the latter differs in having the dorsal stripes slightly more reduced, and in having a row of projecting pore-hillocks along each side. In floridanus the pores are extremely indistinct even in alcoholic specimens, and in dried examples they can only be detected by looking through the specimen at a strong light. One of the specimens before me, collected by Hemphill lacks black pigment in the girdle, being of a light brown tint. It is prob- ably an albino. Dall says that the portion of the tail plate between the (two) notches is not serrate, but in my specimens it is very dis- tinctly slit. The number of pores around the front margin of the head valve is not 5, but 4, as is the rule in Acanthochites and its sub- genera ; this of course does not include the two at the suture. Section Loboplax Pilsbry, 1893. Phacellopleura CPU. MS., not Phakellopleura Guilding. Valves partly covered, the anterior valve having 5 radiating ribs, and the same number of lobes along the margin ; the posterior valve having the insertion-plate grooved outside, notched and slit along the edge, between the usual postero-lateral slits. Girdle leathery, having minute sutural tufts. Gills (of A. violaeeus) extending along the posterior two-thirds of the foot. In the nakedness of the girdle and the form of the individual valves, as well as the strong denticulation of the posterior valve, this group recalls Katharina; but in that genus there are no sutural girdle-pores or tufts whatever, and the tail valve is quite distinctly sinused behind. Loboplax differs from Notoplax in the lobed and ribbed head valve, the more distinct posterior slits, and more naked girdle. ACANTHOCHITES-LOBOPLAX. . 39 Carpenter considered " Phacellopleura " (porphyretica, violacea~) a genus of Ischnoid Acanthopleuroids, but he describes A. costatus in Acanthochites. I cannot give the group generic rank because Notoplax connects it with Acanthochites. A. VIOLACEUS Quoy & Gaimard. PI. 3, figs. 67-73. Elongated, rather depressed; the valves all of the same width except the last which is narrower. Color typically a rich, dark purple-brown, the girdle darker, varying to violet with a buff tri- angle at the ridge of each valve enclosing a purple stripe or series of spots ; or sometimes ashy whitish, faintly tinged with purple along the middle. Intermediate valves (fig. 68) having the tegmentum trilobate, much narrowed in front by the encroachment of the girdle at the sutures ; beaks small. Dorsal areas triangular, wide in front, convex, polished, sculptured with elongated punctures along the sides. Latero-pleural areas sculptured with pebble-like loiv granules, coarser and often con- fluent along a diagonal line from the beak to the outer -anterior angle. Anterior valve (fig. 67) having 5 prominently projecting lobes, corre- sponding to radiating rounded ribs ; the scale-granules of the sur- face coalescing more or less on these ribs. Posterior valve (figs. 69, 70) having the tegmentum slightly broader than long, the mucro low, slightly post-median. Interior light blue-green, fading on the sutural-laminse. Sinus deep, angular. Anterior valve with 5, median valves 1 slit. Poste- rior valve having a deep Mopaloid slit on each side, and about 4 shallower slits between, the teeth vertical, deeply grooved outside and lobed at the edge. Girdle wide, leathery, smooth except for a minute pore at each suture and 4 around the head valve ; each pore bearing a small tuft of white spicules, usually broken short. Length 50, breadth 23 mill.; divergence of tegmentum 140°. Length 35, breadth 18 mill. ; divergence of tegmentum 130°. Length — breadth — (specimen rolled) ; divergence of tegmen- tum 150°. Neiv Zealand at Tasman Say (Q. & G.) ; Auckland (Hutton, Wright) ; Dunedin ; Cook Strait (Hutton.) Chiton violaceus Q. & G., Voy. de FAstrol. iii, p. 403, t. 73, f. 15- 20.— GOULD., U. S. Expl. Exped Moll., p. 331, f. 420. Not Chiton violaceus REEVE, Conch. Icon., f. 41. — Chiton porphyreticus REEVE, 40 ACANTHOCHITES-LOBOPLAX. Conch. Icon., t. 10, f. 56 (April, lS47).—Phacellopleura porphyre- tica CPU. MS. This species has a wide range of variation in coloring, in the angle of divergence of the valves, and to a less extent in the contours of the valves. A. COSTATUS Adams & Angas. PI. 3, fig. 74. Shell elongated ; valves carinated, angularly heart-shaped, gran- ulated, pale brown. Lateral areas separated from the dorsal areas by a prominent rib ; dorsal areas smooth and whitish in the middle. Girdle beset with short, white, evanescent spicules, and having bunches of long white spicules. Length 18, breadth 7 mill. (A. & A.) Port Jackson, New South Wales, Australia. Aeanthochites costatus A. & A., P. Z. S. 1864, p. 194. — ANGAS, I. c. 1867, p. 224. — Macandrellus costatus DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. i, p. 81, f. 40 (dentition). — Chiton (Macandrellus} costatus E. A. SMITH, Zool. Coll. ' Alert,' p. 83, t. 6, f. F. Smith gives the following notes on the specimen collected by Coppinger: " The single specimen before me, preserved inspirit, shows the girdle to be of a pale buff color, thick, fleshy, the outer margin being delicately ciliated with a minute fringe, of white spicules. The tufts of spicules are seven in number along each side, and four surrounding the front valve. The middle of the central valves is occupied by a raised, transversely substriated flattened ridge, on each side of which the surface is granulated or rather squamose, the scales being flat, imbricating, rather large, and dis- posed in rather regular series. The lateral areas are well defined by a raised keel. The front valve has five radiating costse, and apparently the same number of slits in the thin lamina of insertion of which the three central are quite distinct and the two outer ones only feebly indicated. The single notch on each side the inter- mediate valves is also very slight. The posterior valve has a raised, somewhat excentric and pointed mucro, from which six more or less distinct radiating ridges descend to the margin, beneath which the lamina of insertion is scalloped by a similar number of notches." A. TRIDACNA Rochebrune. Shell ovate-elongate, white, shining. Anterior valve rounded, strongly 7-lirate radially, the lirse thick, rounded, scaly, elevated in front. Intermediate valves broadly triangular, the central areas KATHARINA. 41 longitudinally striated at the apices, scaly at the sides ; lateral areas bi-lirate, the lirce scaly. Posterior valve very small, nearly con- cealed, subquadrate, bi-lirate. Girdle wide, gray, pilose, clothed with whitish down ; tufts 9, white, glassy. Length 27, breadth 16 mill. (Rochebr.} New Caledonia (Presented to the Paris Mus. by the Colonial Museum.) Acanthochites tridacna KOCHEBR., in Bull. Soc. Philomathique de Paris, 1880-'81,p. 121. This is evidently a form allied to A. violaeeus and A. costatus. The seven anterior ribs mentioned evidently include the sutural margins, the number five being constant in this group. Genus KATHAKINA Gray, 1847. Katharina GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 65. Type C. tunicatus Wood. — CPR. in DALL, Proc. U. S. Mus. 1878, p. 312. Valves two-thirds covered by the expanded girdle, the exposed portion divided into dorsal and side areas, instead of central and lateral. Insertion plates sharp, extremely long, thrown forward ; that of the head valve with 7-8 slits ; sinus deep, spongy. Tail valve with a wide caudal eraargination or sinus, and several slits, often partly obsolete, on each side. Girdle broad, smooth, poreless, leathery. Gills extending the whole length of the foot. The poreless girdle, the long (ambient) gills, and the abnormally large number and irregularly placed slits of the head valve, all separate this well-founded genus from related groups. The irre- gularly placed anterior slits it shares with Amicula and Cryptocliiton. The long gills are also a character of the last-named genus ; but in the multifissate posterior insertion -plate and the naked girdle it resembles Crypto conchus and Loboplax. There is but one species known. K. TUNICATA Wood. PI. 1, figS. 1-11. Shell oblong, elevated, the valves mainly covered by the black, leathery girdle, a small cordate or flask-shaped area of a dark brown color, remaining exposed. The exposed portion is about one-third the entire width of the valve; it is broad behind, and often hollowed out by erosion ; nar- rowing in front like the neck of a flask. The surface when not eroded shows a distinct, smooth and shining dorsal band, the sides 42 AMICULA. (which are not divided into pleura and lateral areas) being micro- scopically densely punctate. Anterior valve (figs. 3, 4) densely punctate and having a few feeble radii. Posterior valve (figs. 8-11) small. Interior white. Sutural plates enormously produced ; the sinus very deep, squared and notched at the sides, exposing a projecting lobe of the extremely porous outer layer. Anterior valve having 7 or 8, central 1 slit, the insertion-plates extremely long, grooved out- side from the short slits to the eaves. Posterior border of the black tegmentum broadly reflexed inward. Posterior valve (figs. 8-11) elevated, vertical behind, with a broad median notch or sinus and a variable number (1-4) of small slits on each side. Girdle leathery, smooth, black. Length 60-75, breadth 32-40 mill. Length 50, breadth 20 mill. Kamchatka; Aleutian Is.; on the north side of the peninsula of Alaska to Port Moller, on the south side east to Cook's Inlet and south to Catalina Island, California ; low water (chiefly) to 20 fms. Chiton tunicatus WOOD, Gen. Conch., p. 11, t. 2, f. 1 (1815) ; Ind. Test., Chiton, t. 1, f. 10 (1828).— SOWERBY, in Beechey's Voy., Zool. p. 15, t. 61, f. 15.— REEVE, Conch. Icon., f. 61.— Chiton (Phceno- chiton, Hamachiton, Platysemus) tunicatus MIDD., Mai. Ross, i, p. 98, t. 10, f. 1, 2.—Katharina tunicata GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 69 ; Guide Syst. Dist., p. 185. — H. & A. AD., Genera Rec. Moll, i, p. 479; iii, t. 54, f. 8.— CPR., Suppl. Rep. Brit. Asso. 1863, p. 648. — DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1878, p. 313. — Katharina dougla- sice GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 69. "This unmistakeable shell, characterized when fresh by its broad, shining black girdle and almost covered valves, is eaten raw by the natives of the northwest coast, and is said to act as an aphrodisiac" (Dall). The K. douglasice of Gray is founded upon a specimen dried with the girdle flatter and wider. It has no specific or varietal characters. The contour of the exposed portion of the valves, and the number of slits in the tail-valve, vary considerably. The soft parts are of a salmon color in the Northern specimens. Genus AMICULA Gray, 1847. Amicula GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, pp. 66, 69, 169 ; Guide, p. 187 (and earlier in Syn. contents Brit. Mus. 42d. edit., 1840, pp. 127, 153, AMICULA. 43 without diagnosis ; no species mentioned). Type C. vestitus Sowb. — Symmetrogephyrus MIDD., part, 1847. Valves almost covered by the extention of the girdle over them, leaving only a small rounded or heart-shaped portion exposed at the apex of each ; posterior borders of valves produced backward in rounded lobes at each side, the lobes completely separated by a posterior sinus having the tegmentum at its apex. Posterior valve having a posterior sinus and one slit on each side. Girdle more or less pilose, often having pore rows. The essential features of Amicula are its small exposed portion or tegmentum, situated at the posterior edge, and not extending for- ward to the sinus, its Mopaloid posterior valve, short contour and short gills. Dall has divided the genus into two subgenera thus : Amicula Gray s. s. Gills median, type A. vestita. Chlamydoconcha Dall. Gills ambient, type A. amiculata. On account of the doubt attaching to the identity of Ch. amicula- tus Pallas, we may well suspend judgment pending the receipt of fuller data. The presence or absence of tuft-bearing pores is a very mutable feature and of no specific or varietal valve in Amiula. As the same has been shown to be true of Mopalia (q. v.) Plaxiphora, etc., it need occasion no surprise in this case. A. VESTITA Sowerby. PL 8, figs. 23-26. Oval, rather elevated, the valves nearly covered by a brown (or when young, yellow) skin continued upward from the girdle, but their outlines are plainly visible through this integument. The small exposed portion of each median valve is broadly heart- shaped, and situated at the posterior margin of the valve ; it is sculptured with strong concentric grooves and a more or less distinct granulation. There is no differentiation into areas. The exposed portion of the posterior valve is heart-shaped, with the mucro incon- spicuous, near but slightly behind the middle. Interior pure white. Anterior valve having 6-8 irregularly spaced and unequal slits; posterior valve having a deep sinus behind, and a single small mopaloid slit on each side. Jugal sinus rather small ; sutural laminse rather less projecting forward than the posterior rounded lobes on each side. 44 AMICULA. Girdle thin, smooth ; adults generally having more or less devel- oped, but always sparsely scattered, small bunches of hairs. Length 50, breadth 35 mill. Arctic Ocean, extending southward in the Pacific region to Hag- meister and St. Paul Islands, Bering Sea; in the Atlantic to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, in 5-30 fins., mud and stones. Chiton vestitus BROD. & SOWB., Zool. Journ. iv, p. 368 (1829) ;. Conch. Illustr., f. 128, 128a; Zool. Beechey's Voy., p. 150, t. 41, f. l4.—Amicula vestita GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, pp. 65, 69, 169.— H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll, i, p. 480 ; iii, t. 55, f. 2.— STIMP., Sh. of N. Engl., p. 29.— CPR., Bull. Essex Inst. 1873, p. 155.— DALL, Proc. U.S.Nat. Mus/1878, p. 307; p. 299, f. 43 (dentition).— Chiton emersonii COUTHOUY, Bost. Journ, Nat. Hist, ii, p. 83, t. 3, f. 10 (1838). — Amicula emersonii GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 69.— BINNEY'S edit, of GOULD, Invertebrata of Mass., p. 264, f. 527. — Chiton emer- sonianus GOULD, Inv. Mass., p. 151, f. 19.— REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 11, f. 62. — Stimpsoniella emersonii CPR., Bull. Essex Inst. 1873, p. 155; Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), xiii, p. 122 (1874).— Chiton amiculatus REEVE, Conch. Icon., t. 11, f. 59, not C. amiculatus Pallas. The relations existing between vestitus, emersonii and pallasii have been clearly stated by Dall, who writes as follows : " Much has been said about the presence or absence of pores, and hair-tufts. I find from examination of a series that the young emersonii is usually smooth, the large ones always setiferous. These setse are, as described by Dr. Gould, in two rows on each side, or rather six in all if we count the pretty constant tufts behind the exposed apices of the shell. These rows are (1) two behind the shell points as above; (2) two, one on each side at the posterior angle of the submerged expansion of the valve; (3) a series, more or less irregular, along the margin of the girdle. Beside this, in old ones, there are irre- gular tufts all over the girdle, and some of the regular tufts may be missing." " This species is very close to A. pallasii, but is distinguishable by the larger and laterally much more expanded exposed portions of the valves, by its flatter form, and proportionally sparser and longer setee. When dry, the whole form of the valves is visible in vestita from above, like the bones of a Peruvian mummy ; in pallasii, how- ever, the integument is so much more coriaceous and thick, that in dry specimens hardly anything of these outlines is visible." AMICULA. 45 The locality given by Sowerby for Ch. vestitus is " Arctic Ocean " ; but from our knowledge of Beechey's voyage it must have been collected on the American shore, north or north-east of Bering Strait. Var. ALTIOR Carpenter. Shell similar to emersonii, but much longer, narrower, higher ; the exposed part larger in proportion to the size of the valves, and wider, trilobate on the central valves and conspicuously rugose-granulate, hardly lirate around the margins. Inside normal ; posterior valve unknown ; central valves with 1, anterior 8 short slits, with delicate grooves extending to the eaves. Length of a central valve 7i, breadth 3f mill.; divergence 90°. Pleistocene Drift, Lower Canada (Mus. Dawson.) Only one anterior and two central valves have been found of this. On a careful comparison with the corresponding valves of the living species, it appears that the shape more resembles Cryptoconchus ; that the exposed part was nearly as large (in the head-valve decidedly larger) as in a specimen' of emersonii nearly double its breadth, and that the ribbed frame-work of the shield was wanting. (Gpn) A. PALLASII Middendorff. PI. 5, figs. 1-11. Shell nearly concealed by the girdle, a somewhat heart-shaped tegmenturn only being visible at the apex of each valve; elevated at an angle of 98°-110° in the young, 120° in large adults; oval, elongated. Valves white, smooth, fragile, the tegmentum cordiform, posterior. Slits in anterior valve 6-8, posterior valve 2. Girdle roundly covering the entire back of the animal, except for 8 small rounded holes along the median line ; color dingy buff ; dorsal surface bearing all over unequal bunches of reddish hairs, appearing to be sparser in the young. Branchias extending forward two-thirds the length of the foot. Length 67, breadth 48, alt. 21 mill. Okhotosk Sea (Midd.) ; Pribiloff, Aleutian and Shumagin Is. (Ball), in 3-10fms. Chiton pallasii MIDD., Bull, de la Classe physico-mathem. de TAcad. de St. Petersb., vi, p. 117 (1847).— Chiton (Phwnochiton, Dichachiton, Symmetrogephyrus} pallasii MIDD., in MiddendorfFs Reise in den aussersten norden und osten Siberiens, ii, Zool. pt. 1, p. 46 AMICULA. 163, t. 13, f. 1-9 ; t. 14, f. 1-6 ; Mai. Rossica i, p. QS.—Amicula pallasii H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll, i, p. 481. — CHENU, Manuel, i, p. 383. — BALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1878, p. 309.— Stimpsoniella pallasii CPR., Bull. Essex Inst. 1873, p. 155. Although closely allied to A. vestita, this species differs in the more hairy, thicker girdle, the less exposed tips of the valves, which are smaller and less transverse. The figures do not represent dried specimens. The description is from Middendorff. A. AMICULATA Pallas. PL 5, figs. 15, 16. This species was described by Pallas from a dried specimen measuring 4 inches in length. Figures 15, 16, are copied from his plate. The following note contains all that is useful in his descrip tion : Valves covered with cartilage, scabrous and subverrucose out- side, the part surrounding the valves being thick, harsh, cartilaginous. The 8 valves are white and very fragile, the first being nearly horse- hoof shaped, crenulated on the front margin; the intermediate valves are shaped as if made of two circular disks, and have a trans- verse obsolete swelling above. The first 7 valves have a pentagonal sharply margined piece (tegmentum), truncated behind, at the angle of the posterior sinus. The 8th valve is angular, as if formed of two pentagons, excavated behind. Pallas' figures of the upper surface (26, 27) do not differ from that of A. emersonii except that the exposed portions of the valves are smaller and of a different shape. His figure of the ventral surface (28) shows the gills to extend from the top of the head completely along both sides and uninterruptedly around the tail ! There can be no reasonable question that this is a mistake in the drawingjust as the omission of lateral slits in the intermediate valves is. The gills are probably short, as in vestita and pallasii. Kuril Is. (Pallas.) Chiton amiculatus PALLAS, Nova Acta Acad. Sci. Imp. Petropo- litanse, ii, p. 235, t. 7, f. 26-30 (1786).— GMEL., Syst. Nat. xiii, p. 8206.— WOOD, Gen. Conch, p. 13.— MIDD., Mai. Ross, i, p. 96. Not C. amiculatus SOWB., Conch. Illustr., f. 80, nor of Gray, P. Z. S. 1847, pp. 65, 69, 169=P. stelleri Midd. Not C. amiculatus WOOD, Index, Test., f. 12, nor of Reeve, Conch. Icon., f. 59=A. vestita Sow. ? Chamydochiton amiculatus BALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1878, pp. 1, 310. AMICULA. 47 ? Chiton pallasii MIDD., see below. It would be a distinct advantage to science if the attempt to identify Chiton amieulatus could be given up. The figures of Pallas indicate a species externally very similar to A. vestita in the dry condition, except that the exposed portion of the valves, and as far as known their entire structure, accords completely with that of A. pallasii Midd. There is not much doubt in my mind that the A. pallasii really is the same as the original amieulatus, notwith- standing its apparently thicker and more hairy integument. Carpenter identified as amieulatus a form collected by Dr. New- comb on the Farallones Is., off San Francisco Bay. He describes it as follows : " Amicula amiculata (? Pallas). PI. 5, figs. 12, (13, 14 ?). Shell externally resembling a young C. stelleri, but the apices of the valves are present and rounded ; inside the insertion plate of the posterior valve is Mopaloid, having one slit on each side, like the intermediate valves; the caudal sinus is wide and deep. The ante- rior valve has . . . . ? slits. The anterior sutural-laminse of each valve are moderately connected across the broad sinus ; the posterior sutural-laminae are larger, regularly arcuate, hardly sinuated out- wardly, having a broad deep sinus behind, flat behind the apex and hardly laminated. Slits grooved up to the apices. Girdle coriaceous, smoothish, with two series of larger pores at sutures and margin, and series of smaller pores placed between the valves and irregularly, sparsely scattered over the girdle; setae of the pores few, long, hardly spicular." "The shell here described must have been about 3 inches long when living, and rather more than half the breadth. It accords sufficiently nearly with the very brief description of Ch. vestitus Brod. & Sby. in the Zoological Journal, but not with the figure of the specimen there described in (Jonchological Illustrations. Moreover the gills of Ch. vestitus are median, of this (as far as I can judge from the dried remains) ambient, which is the character of Ch. amieulatus, teste Midd. It was sent by Dr. Newcomb to Dr. Gould as the young of Ch. amiculata Sby. (=stelleri} ; from which it differs (1) in the round mucro, which represents in fact the jugular, central and side areas squeezed up into a knob which alone projects at the posterior part of each of the 7 anterior, and the middle of the hind valve ; (2) in the posterior sutural laminae being a curved continuation behind of the side laminae not separated by waves at the sides, but separated 48 CRYPTOCHITON. by a deep posterior sinus reaching the external knob ; (3) in the long hairs of the bunches which are disposed in regular pores along the margin and across the sutures, as well as irregularly over the surface." Middendorff had never seen specimens of amieulatus, his informa- tion being derived wholly from Pallas' description and figures. Dall has given Carpenter's description in his paper on the Chitons of the north-west coast (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1878, p. 310), and proposes the name Chlamydochiton for the species, on account of its ambient gills. See also under Cryptochiton stelleri. Subfamily CRYPTOCHITONIN^E. Genus CRYPTOCHITON Middendorff & Gray, 1847. Cryptochiton MIDD., Bulletin de la Classe Phys.-math.de 1'Acad. des Sci. de St. Petersb. vii, no. 8, p. 116 (separate copies distributed in Spring of 1847) ; Beitrage zur einer Malacozoologia Rossica, i, p. 33. — Cryptochiton GRAY, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist, xx, pp. 70, 134 (July and August, 1847) ; P. Z. S. Lond. 1847, pp. 65, 69, 169. Valves entirely concealed in the leathery girdle, and lacking tegrnentum ; their posterior margins produced backward in a deep lobe on each side, the lobes united across the median line, causing the apices of all valves to be removed inward from the posterior edge. Slits subobsolete or lacking in the intermediate valves. Girdle covered with minute tufts of short bristles. Gills extending the entire length of the foot. This genus differs from Amicula, and from all other known Chitons, in the union of the posterior lobes of the valves across the median line, causing the apices of the median and anterior valves to be placed subcentrally or at the posterior third, instead of at the posterior margin. C. STELLERI Middendorff. PI. 7, figs. 7-13 ; pi. 6, fig. 6. Oblong, rather depressed, the bilobed posterior outlines of the valves (in dry specimens) showing through the leathery integument, which completely covers the valves. Color a dull ferruginous or brick-red, very well preserved specimens being rendered much brighter by the closely placed fascicles of brilliant vermilion spines. CRYPTOCHITON. 49 The valves are wholly concealed, white or flesh-colored, entirely lacking the outer colored layer (tegmentum) of other Chitons ; their edsres are more or less thinned and crenulated by radial stride. O * Anterior valve (figs. 8, 9) having the apex at the posterior third, and with 4 to 7 slits. Intermediate valves (figs. 12, 13) having the apex near the posterior third ; formed of two large anterior lobes expanded at the sides, and two smaller, narrow posterior lobes. Posterior valve (figs. 10, 11) having the mucro posterior or near the posterior third ; deeply sinused in the rear, and usually having a slit on each side of the sinus. Girdle leathery, thick, red, densely covered with countless minute fascicles of vermilion spinelets (pi. 6, fig. 6.) Length 15 to over 20 cm. Endermo Harbor, south of Jesso, Japan ; Sakalin Island ; Kuril Is.; southern extremity of Kamchatka; Aleutian Is. ; Alaska and the whole American coast southward to Monterey and the Santa Barbara Is.; just below tide mark. Chiton stelleri MIDD., Bull. Acad. Sci. St. Petersb. vi, p. 116 (1846). — Chiton ( Cryptochitori) stelleri MIDD., Mai. Ross, i, p. 93, t. 1-9 ; Mem. de 1'Acad. Imp. Sci. St. Petersb., 6me Ser., vi, p. 101, 157, 1849 (full account of anatomy). — SCHRENCK, Amurl. Moll., p. 27}.— Cryptochiton stelleri GRAY, Guide Syst. Dist. Moll. B. M., p. 185 (1857).— H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll, i, p. 479 ; iii, t. 55, f. 1.— CPR., Suppl. Rep., etc., Brit. Asso. 1863, p. 648.— GABB., Palseontol. Cal. ii, p. 87. — DKR., Ind. Moll. Mar. Jap., p. 159.— SMITH, Ann. Mag. N. H. 1875, xvi, p. 115.— DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1878, p. 311; p. 299, t. v, f. 44 (dentition).— Cryptochiton stelleri var. violacea NORDMANN, Bull. Soc. Imp. des Naturalistes de Moscou, xxxv, 1862, p. 329, t. iv. — Chiton amiculatusSowR., Conch. Illustr., f. 80, 80bis., and GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, pp. 65, 69, 169. NOT of Pallas. — Chiton sitkensis REEVE, Conch. Icon., Chiton, t. 10, f. 55; t. 11, f. 55b (1847); not C. sitkensis Midd. — Chiton chlamys REEVE, I. c., t. 11, f. 60. — Chiton californicus PRESCOTT, Arner. Journ. Sci. and Arts (2), xxxviii, p. 185, fig. in text. (Sept., 1864). — ? ? Chiton giganteus Kamtschaticus TILESIUS, Mem. de 1 'Acad. St. Petersb. ix, 1824, p. 473, t. 16, f. 1, 2 ; t. 17, f. 3-8 (in part).— Cryptochiton asmus in the Dorpat Collection, teste Midd., Mai. Ross i, p. 40. The foot and softer parts of this species are eaten raw by the Aleuts and Indians. 4 50 CRYPTOCHITON. Occasional individuals are variegated with gray-white or pinkish patches, the specimen figured being one so marked, received from Mr. Newcomb, of the Provincial Museum, Victoria, British Col- umbia. The valves of this specimen are of a beautiful pink color inside. The largest specimen I have seen is in the collection of Mr. John Ford ; if straightened out it would measure over 8? inches in length. Some other specimens before me are yellow on the back, but a minute examination shows that they have lost the red bunches of minute bristles. The number of slits, and even their presence varies greatly. Valves ii and vii are usually provided with slits, but the other inter- mediate valves lack them. The posterior valve generally has slits, even in individuals quite adult ; but sometimes they are obsolete, being filled in by an excessive thickening of the posterior edge of the valve. The mucro of each valve is in most cases quite inconspicuous, but on some valves of occasional specimens it is raised in a minute point, or marked by a puncture ; in either case being still covered by the general integument. It is by no means certain whether any true varieties or geographic races exist; but the following may be accepted provisionally. Var. VIOLACEUS Nordmanu. PI. 6, figs. 1-5. (Living spec- imen.) Beautiful violet colored when living, fading in alcohol to a dark brick-red, with large rounded light gray spots. A dried individual is dirty gray-reddish above. Largest specimen measures along the convex back 152 mill. ; the smaller individual figured measures 90 by 63 mill. Sachalin I. The colors of the living animal are thus described by Arthur Nordmann : Cryptochiton stelleri varies much in its coloration ; in some examples the ground-color of the convex back is clear brownish- red ; in others yellowish-red ; in still others, but rarer, beautiful dark violet with lighter streaks undulatingly passing outward from the median line, and indicating the number of valves. * The under side is dirty yellowish, the foot sometimes butter-yellow, the long, narrow girdle of gills (consisting of 140-150 leaflets) being reddish. Var. APICALIS Pilsbry. All characters as in C. stelleri except that the apices of the valves are distinctly projecting as small circular elevations; substance of CRYPTOPLACID^E. 51 valves pinkish. Length of valves, measured around back of a curled specimen 117, breadth of widest valve 31* mill. Japan (no. 61399 U. S. Nat. Mus.) Family CRYPTOPLACID^E Dall. Elongated or vermiform Chitons, having proportionally small valves; tegmentum of each valve (except the first) divided into two latero-pleural areas and a dorsal area. Insertion and sutural plates strongly drawn forward, sharp, smooth, the anterior valve with 3-5 slits, the other valves with one slit on each side or none. Posterior valve having the mucro far posterior, insertion plate continuous behind, not sinused nor slit there. Girdle very thick and wide, spiculose, generally with small sutural tufts and four around the head valve. Gills occupying the posterior third of the parapodial grooves. This family is evidently a comparatively modern branch from the Acanthochitoid stock, differing in the degeneration of the valves in size, consequent upon the adoption of a life in burrows and holes. The number of slits is greatly reduced; and the insertion-plate of the tail-valve has no sinus or upward wave behind. The short gill- row is an inheritance from the Acanthochitidce, which in turn inherited this feature from the low Ischnoid or high Lepidopleuroid stock from which they sprung ; short, posterior gills being char- acteristic of the lowest Chiton stocks, as well as of the Aplacophora. The zoological rank of the Cryptoplacidce has been ably discussed by Haddon (Challenger Polyplacophora p. 46, 47), who concludes that "the genus Cryptoplax is a highly specialized branch of a low group of Chitons." To this it should be added that the specializa- tion has been in the direction of degeneration ; the gills are shorter than in the parent stock Acanthochitidce ; the foot and valves are notably reduced in size and functional capacity, and the nervous system shows unmistakeable traces of reversion. Two genera, not very diverse in characters, are distinguishable : CRYPTOPLAX Blainv., in which the body is vermiform, the anterior valve having 3 slits, the others none ; valves disjointed or merely touching. CHONEPLAX Cpr., more like an ordinary Chiton, but much elongated, the valves all strongly overlapping or imbricating. 52 CRYPTOPLAX. Genus CRYPTOPLAX Blainville, 1818. Cryptoplax BLAINV., Diet, des Sci. Nat. xii, p. 124, for C. larvi- formis and depressus. — Chitonellus LAMARCK, An. sans Vert, vi, p. 317, for C. Icevis and striatus (1819.) — Ametrogephyrus MIDD., Mai. Ross, i, p. 33, (1847). Much elongated, distinctly vermiform, the valves not nearly cover- ing the entire dorsal surface, the posterior ones either separated from one another or in contact merely at their tips. Insertion and sutural plates very strongly drawn forward, the anterior valve having three slits, the other valves none. Girdle minutely setose, generally hav- ing minute sutural pore-tufts. Gills occupying the posterior third of the branchial groove. Distribution, Philippines to Tasmania and Polynesia. In this genus the sutural-larninse of each valve are entirely separated from the valve next forward, although they are deeply inserted in the muscular integument of the back. The number of slits is more reduced than in any other forms having insertion-plates, approaching in this respect the Lepidopleuridce. Only four species of this genus are recognized by Haddou, in his revision of the genus in the Report on the Polyplacophora collected by the Challenger Expedition. They may be recognized by these marks : C. striatus Lam. Large or medium sized, convex above, flat below, the valves all in contact or nearly so, conspicuously wrinkle-sulcate at the sides, with a smooth dorsal band. Pores present or absent, the girdle densely spiculose, without a ventral bounding fringe. C. burrowi Sm. Small ; valves iv, v, vi and vii very small and very widely separated from one another ; grooved at the sides, with smooth central bands. Pores minute. 0. oculatus Q. & G. Smaller, having the latter four valves separated, longitudinally grooved at the sides, having triangular smooth dorsal areas. Pores wanting. Several front valves sur- rounded with fringes of black and of white bristles. 0. larvceformis Blv. Large, cyclindrical, having the latter four valves widely separated, sculptured with grooves con verging forward to a dorsal sulcus, sometimes ill-defined. Minute pore-bunches generally present; having a fringe of spicules bounding the ventral Surface. Anterior several valves eroded, not surrounded with black and white fringes of spicules. CRYPTOPLAX. 53 C. STRIATUS Lamarck. PL 9, figs. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15; pi. 11, figs. 37-39. Elongated, vermiform, very convex above, flat below ; hoary gray maculated with rust-brown ; when dry, dull reddish-brown. The valves are in contact with one another, or the posterior four may be separated by short intervals, always much shorter than the valves. Anterior valve having the tegmentum longer than wide, more than twice as long as the anterior teeth ; its surface cut into a coarse, irregular granulation by peculiar zigzag impressions [very badly rendered in pi. 9, fig. 11]. Median valves (fig. 13) sagittate, widest at about the posterior third, tapering forward ; sculptured with several deep, finely and irregularly zigzag grooves at the sides (sometimes transformed into a pattern of v-shaped granules) ; the dorsal area narrow, raised, smooth except for slight growth lines. Posterior valve (fig. 14) like the median valves externally, but having a short vertical granulose slope below the mucro. Interior light olive-green, generally becoming pink on the sutural- laminse and teeth. Anterior valve having 3 slits, other valves none; posterior valve having the insertion-plate continuous, but somewhat emarginate behind. Girdle wide, fleshy, densely covered with minute calcareous spine- lets, and in most good specimens showing minute pores at some or all of the sutures, and four around the head-valve. Length 55, breadth 12 mill, (average dry specimen.) Length 61, breadth 22 mill, (alcoholic specimen.) Chitonellus striatus LAM., An. s. Vert, vi, p. 317, 1819. — DESH. in Lam. vii, p. 481, 1836.— Sows., Genera of Shells 1. 139, f. 4; Conch. Illustr., f. 62.— BLAINV., Diet. Sc. Nat. xxxvi, p. 551, 1825.— REEVE, Conch. Syst. ii, t. 135, f. 1 ; Conch. Icon., f. 4. — Chitonellus gunnii RVE., Conch. Icon., f. 5, 1847. — Ch. rostratus RVE., I. c., f. 6. Ch. oculatus RVE., 1. c., f. 7a, b (not of Q. & G.). — Cryptoplax striata -\-gunni+rostrata H. & A. ADAMS, Gen. Rec. Moll, i, p. 484. — ANGAS, P. Z. S. 1867, p. 224, 225.— Chiton (Chitonellus^ striatus SMITH, Zool. Coll. 'Alert,' p. 84. — Cryptoplax striatus HADDON, Chall. Rep. xv, p. 39, t. 1, f. 9 ; t. 3, f. 9a-9w. Raines Island, Torres Straits (Reeve, for C. rostratus and C. striatus), Port Lincoln (J. B. Harvey), Newcastle (Dr. Dieffenbach), Port Jackson (Coppinger, Richardson, Jukes, King), Flinders Island (J. Mtlligan) ; Tasmania (Reeve, C. gunnii) ; Tasmania (Macgillivray and Gunn). 54 CRYPTOPLAX. In one (alcoholic) specimen before me, figured on pi. 11, figs. 37, 38, 39, pores are completely absent. Figure 37 represents a portion drawn from the edge of the ventral surface, which, though minutely roughened is not spiculose. The figure is magnified 25 diameters. Var. GUNNII Eve. PL 8. fig. 14. " The variety gunnii, from South Australia and Tasmania, may be recognized by the valves being narrower, with the exception of the first two. This form also appears to attain a larger size than spec- imens from New South Wales and other localities further north. A specimen in spirit, from the mouth of the river Tamar, Tasmania, presented to the British Museum by J. Macgillivray, exceeds four inches in length. The mantle of the southern form also appears to be rather less densely covered with the minute conical spines. The number of gills on each side varies with age, and even in individual specimens I have found 30 or 31 on each side in specimens of equal size from both regions — that is, north and south ; and in the largest specimen before referred to there are 27 on the right side and 34 on the left, and there is no appearance of any having been removed. " (Smith:) C. BURROWI Smith. PL 9, figs. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. This curious species is known by the small size of the valves, the remoteness from one another of the fourth, fifth and sixth, and the excessively short and densely packed spines on the mantle. The single specimen in spirit, from Port Molle, is of a buff color, copiously mottled with green : this accords with a specimen (also in spirit) mentioned by Reeve, collected by Capt Belcher in the Straits of Macassar. The dried specimens are greyish, more or less rose- tinted. The sculpture of the valves is very like that of C. striatus, consisting of a central smoothish ridge, with two or three finer and more or less wrinkled ones on each side, the front valve of course being wrinkled throughout and lacking the central smooth ridge. They are yellowish at the mucro or posteriorly, and pinkish red in front. The plates of insertion are like those of C. striatus, and of a pale greenish color. (Smith.) Chitonellus burrowi has pores, and is therefore a Cryptoplax. There is no trace of them externally, and they are only discernible by removing the outer scaly coat ; they are then seen (but not dis- tinctly as in the other species) upon the white skin beneath in just CRYPTOPLAX. 55 the same position and to the same numbers as in Cryptoplax larvce- formis and Cryptoplax striatus. (Haddon.) Port Adelaide (Eve.) and Port Nolle (Coppinger) ; Straits of Macassar (Belcher.) Chitonellus larvceformis REEVE, (not of Burrow or Blainv.), Conch. Icon., f. 3, 1847. — Chiton (Chitonellus') burrowi SMITH, Zool. Coll. H. M. S. ' Alert,' p. 85, 1884. — Cryptoplax burrowi HADDON, ' Challenger' Polyplac., p. 42, t. 3, f. lla-llm. The gill-rows are very short, occupying less than a third the total length, and there are 22 branchiae on each side. C. OCULATUS Quoy & Gaimard. PI. 9, figs. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. A chiton with the body small, equally hairy, roseate, and encircled with two black bands ; valves glaucous, longitudinally furrowed, the front three ovate, encircled by black and white hairs. A small species which is separated from C. fasciatus, as well as from the two indicated by Lamarck, by its less cyclindrical form, less obtuse extremities and greater flatness ; by having the body covered with longer bristles and more crowded than in the above- mentioned species; finally it differs in having the anterior three valves oval, sea-green, surrounded by a circle of black bristles and another , outside of that, of white ones ; giving the appearance of eyes to these valves. The other valves are narrower, separated, claw- shaped, and red-brown colored. All except the first are parallel- grooved longitudinally, with a smooth triangle in the middle. It is probable that the plates of insertion are the same as in Ch. fasciatus, but we have not examined them in the single individual in our possession. The color is reddish, with two black transverse bands, confluent on the back. The ventral surface is yellowish. The mouth is encircled by a oval, fringed veil. The branchiae occupy a little less than the posterior third of the body ; there are 20 lamellae on each side. Length 2 inches, 6 lines; circumference 1 inch, 5 lines. (Q. & G.) f New Guinea or Vanikoro (Q. & G.) ; Samboangan, Philippines in 10 fms. (Challenger) ; Friendly Is. (Brit. Mus. Coll.) Chiton oculatus Q. & G., Voy. Astrol., Zool. iii, p. 410, t. 73, f. 37, 38, (1834).— Chitonellus oculatus DH. in Lam. An. s. Vert., vii, p. 482 (1836). — Cryptoplax oculatus HADDON, Challenger Polyplac. p. 41, t. 1, f. 10; t. 3, f, 10a-10m.— Chitonellus fasciatus REEVE, 56 CRYPTOPLAX. Conch. Syst. ii, t. 135, f. 5 (only).—? Chitonellus lewis LAM. Not Chitonellus oculatus REEVE, Conch. Icon., f. 7a, 7b.— C. striatus. This species is peculiar in the circles of black and white bristles surrounding the anterior valves. The well-defined dorsal smooth areas, and the apparent lack of pores. These characters readily separate it from C. larvceformis, a species otherwise rather similar. It should be noted however, that some individuals of larvceformis lack pores. C. LARV^EFORMIS (Blainv.) Burrow. PI. 11, figs. 31-36, 40-43. Cylindrical and vermiform, wider posteriorly. Color pale buff, clouded and maculated with reddish, and having two or several transverse bands and a median dorsal line of the same ; the ventral surface of a uniform pale tint, separated from the lateral and dorsal integument by a distinct line of longer white spicules. The first four valves are in contact and eroded, the hinder four are widely separated, the greatest space being between valves vi and vii. Anterior valve having the tegmentum about twice as long as the anterior teeth, much eroded, the worn portion generally pink and dull white (the pink sometimes replaced by olive) ; the unworn outer rim smooth except for growth-lines, and usually reddish. Tegmentum of second valve somewhat pentagonal, broadest in front of the middle, eroded. The other median valves are sagittate, the posterior 3 or 4 being generally but little eroded, and showing a sculpture of coarse, uneven longitudinal furrows, converging forward toward a dorsal sulcus. Posterior valve (figs. 42, 43) having the mucro produced far backward; cavity shallow. Interior of valves white, generally marked with pink in each valve, but sometimes suifused with pale green. Anterior valve with three slits, other valves having none. Girdle clothed with minute calcareous spicules, mostly red in color, but white on the light patches; the spicules very short on the ante- rior part of the body, with some longer ones intermingled, longer on the posterior part (pi. 11, fig. 33). On the ventral surface the spicules are extremely short and blunt; and at the junction of base and sides there is a crowded row of ivhite spinelets (fig. 32). At each suture there is a minute bunch of white spinelets (fig. 34), and around the head-valve four such pore-bunches are found. In some specimens some of the posterior pores are absent, and others lack all pores. CRYPTOPLAX. 57 Length 105, breadth 24, thickness 19 mill, (alcoholic specimen.) Viti Inlands (A. Garrett !) ; Tonga Tabu, Friendly Is. (Q. & G.) ; Kandavu, Fiji, (Challenger Exped.) , Dalaguete, Zebu, Philippines (Cuming.) Cryptoconchus larvceformis BLV. in Burrow, Elem. of Conch, p. 190, 1815 (no description). — Chiton larvceformis BURROW, 1. c., p. 191, t. 28, f. 2, 3, 4.— BLAINV., Manuel de Mai., p. 603, t. 87, f. 6, 1825. — Cryptoplax larvceformis HADDON, Challenger Polyplac., p. 37, t. 3, f. 12. — Cryptoplax larvceformis BLV., Diet. Sci. Nat. xii, p. 124, 1818.— ADS., Gen. Rec. Moll, i, p. 484. — Chiton chitonellus BLAINV., Diet. Sci. Nat. xxxvi, p. 550. — Chiton vermiformis BLAINV., 1. c., p. 553. — Chiton fasciatus QUOY & GAIMARD, Voy. de PAstrol., Zool. iii, p. 408, t. 73, figs. 21-29. — Chitonellus fasciatus DESH. in Lam., An. s. Vert, vii, p. 482.— REEVE, Conch. Syst., t. 135, f. 3,4; Conch. Icon., f. 2.— GOULD, U. S. Expl. Exped., p. 333, atlas, t. 28, f. 429. — Cryptoplax fasciata ADS., Genera, t. 55, f. 6, 6a. — Chitonellus Icevis REEVE, Conch. Syst. ii, 1. 135, f. 2. — Chiton erueiformis SOWB. Gen. Shells, t. 139, f. 5 (1820-1825.) Readily distinguished from C. burroivi by the form of the poste- rior valve and the absence of a raised smooth dorsal band on the valves. This latter feature seems to separate it also from C. oculatus, in which, besides, the longitudinal grooves on the sides of the valves do not converge forward. There is also a difference in the profile of the tail-valve, in the spicules surrounding the anterior valves, and in the size. On plate 11, fig. 31, 40-43, represent the largest specimen before me. It was collected by Garrett at the Viti Is. Figures 32-34 were also drawn from this specimen, fig. 34' representing a single pore- bunch ; fig. 33 a square mill, from near the posterior valve, and fig. 32 a portion of the marginal row of spinelets showing the minute spicules of the base below, the dark-colored spicules of the side of the animal above. This example shows the 18 minute bunches of white spinelets characteristic of the species, although the posterior ones are very minute. Another specimen (fig. 35) is somewhat differently marked, and lacks all pores or pore-bunches. As this example is excellently preserved in spirit, and not wrinkled, the absolute absence of pores can be affirmed with confidence. I can see no differences in the valves between this example and the Viti Island specimens. Part of the dried specimens before me seem to lack pore-bunches, but this cannot be determined with certainty. 58 CRYPTOPLAX. Haddon found the posterior pair of tufts wanting in one of the spec- imens collected by the Challenger. He further remarks : " The only conclusion at which we can arrive in this species is that nor- mally nine pairs of tufts are present, but that in some specimens more or fewer of the posterior pairs may be absent. This further leads us to the supposition that they may be entirely absent, although we have at the present time no direct evidence in support of the last alternative." False and insufficiently defined Cryptop laces. The following descriptions are of course worthless for purposes of identification. They are introduced here simply to save students the trouble of looking them up in the original publication. No information other than that here given has been published. Cryptoplax montanoi Rochebrune. Corpus oyoideum, crassum, antice rotundatum, intense villosum, aurantiaco fulvum, fasciis nigris luteo marginatis, cinctum ; valvis medianibus minutis, rostratis lateraliter striatulatis ; area centralis subsquamosa, squamis rectis, acutis ; valvis anticis rotundatis, rugosissimis. Ligamento marginis, pilis brevissimus obsito. Long. 0,045 ; lat. 0,016. (Rochebrune, Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, 1881-'82, p. 190.) Borneo; Lucon (Drs. Montano and Rey). Rare. Paris Mus. This is probably a synonym of C. striatus. Cryptoplax peroni Rochebrune. Corpus angustum, antice rotundatum, rugosum, violaceum, fasciis albidis passim cinctum ; valva antica subtriangularis ; valvis centralibus ovatis, elevatis, radiatim sulcatis, postica lata. Long. 0,022 ; lat. 0,007. (Rochebr.> Bull. Soc. Philom. 1881-'82, p. 193.) New Holland (Peron and Lesueur). Rare. Paris Mus. Cryptoplax torresianus Rochebrune. Corpus elongatuin, antice posticseque rotundatum, pilosissimum, luteo rufum, valva antica rotundata, subfodiata, valvse centrales elongatse. intense umbonatse, antice macula nigra pictee ; areis lateralibus longitudinaliter gran- ulose striatis, granulis squamiformibus ; valva postica umbonata, umbone prealto, conico, obtusissimo. Long. 0,060 ; lat. 0,004. (Rochebr., Bull. Soc. Philom. Paris, 1881-'82, p. 195.) Torres Straits. Rare. Paris Mus. Cryptoplax caledonicus Rochebrune. Corpus elongatum, insuper spinossimum, antice acuminatum, postice rotundatum, luteolum, CHONEPLAX. 59 maculis cseruleis marmoratum; valva antica elliptica rugosa; valvarum intermediarum area centralis angusta, rotundata, squamis imbricatis sculpta ; areis lateralibus, sulcis divaricatis, rugosis, orn- atis. Ligamento marginis fimbriato. Long. 0,040 ; lat. 0,008. (Eochebr., Bull. Soc. Philom. 1881-82, p. 196.) Kom, New Caledonia (MM. Beaudoin and Heurtel). Not common. Paris Mus. Cryptoplax heurteli Rochebrune. Corpus ovatum, villosum, antice posticeque rotundatum ; luteo roseum fasciis 2 latis, rubris cinctum ; valva antica rotundata, Isevis; valvis centralibus viridescentibus, minutissimis, areis medianis Isevibus, lateralibus longitudinaliter striatis, striis denticulatis. Ligamento marginis, setis longis vestito. Long. 0,028; lat. 0,009. (Eochebr., Bull. Soc. Philom. 1881-'82, p. 196.) New Caledonia (M. Heurtel) ; Rare ; Mus. Paris. Cryptoplax unciniferus Rochebrune. Corpus elongatum, antice attenuatum, postice latum, glaberrimum, luteofuscum ; valvis coeruleis, antice subquadrata, postice intense umbonate, umbone acuto ; ceteris angustis, unciniferis ; area centrales minute punctata ; lateralibus circulariter sulcatis sulcis imbricatis, nodosis. Long. 0,068; lat. 0,010. (Rochebr.'). Bull. Soc. Philom. 1881-'82, p. 197. New Caledonia (Museum of the Colonies ; M. Heurtel). Common. Paris Mus. Genus CHONEPLAX Carpenter, 1882. Clioneplax CPR. in Ball, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1881, no. 49, p. 285, 288 (Jan. 20, 1882). Type C. strigatus Sowb.— Chitoniscus CPR. (part) 1. c., no. 49a, p. 285, 288. Types " Chitonellus striatus and strigatus Sowerby, Conch. 111., figs. 62 and 63." Much elongated, somewhat vermiform. Valves subequal in size and all strongly overlapping, the mucro of the tail valve projecting far backward. Insertion and sutural plates all strongly drawn for- ward, the anterior valve with 3-5 shallow slits, the other valves hav- ing one slit on each side or none. Girdle minutely setose, and hav- ing sutural tufts, sometimes obsolete. Gills posterior. Distribution, West Indies. This genus, whilst closely allied to Cryptoplax, differs in the strong imbrication of all the valves, and their much greater comparative 60 CHONEPLAX. size. The slits of the insertion-plates are less obsolete than in Cryptoplax. C. LATUS Guilding. PI. 8, fig. 15. Elongated, narrow, vermiform ; the valves strongly imbricating, eroded, generally dirty white with a dull brown median band or area, the unworn side margins brown. Interior of valves bluish or gray, generally black in the cavity. The intermediate valves are squarish, very blunt behind, and when unworn are minutely granulated at the sides, with an indis- tinctly defined dorsal smooth band. Posterior valve smaller, with posterior mucro. Interior dark colored, the median valves having the sinus very narrow, deep and square. Anterior valve having 3 slits, other valves none. Posterior valve having a long sharp insertion plate, directed forward ; much hollowed out. Girdle wide, brownish, covered with minute spicules, having a fringe of longer white spinelets around the border of the ventral sur- face, and provided with 9 small tufts of brown spinelets on each side. Length about 25 mill. St. Thomas and Ouadaloupe (R. Swift ! in Coll. Phila. Acad.) ; St. Vincent (Guilding !) ; Portorico (Blauner !). Chitonellus latus GUILDING, Zool. Journ. v, p. 28 (1829). — Chiton strigatus Sown., Charlesworth's Mag. of Nat. Hist. 1840, p. 289 ; Conch. Illustr., f. 63. — Chitonellus strigatus REEVE, Conch. Syst. ii, t. 135, f. 6. — Phalcellopleura (Acantkochites) strigata SHUTTLW., Bern. Mittheil. 1853, p. 80. — Chitonellus Icevis REEVE, Conch. Icon, f. 1. Not of Lamarck. — Choneplax serpens CPR. MS., olim. — Chone- plax strigatus CPR. MS. The name latus is not preoccupied in the Cryptoplacidce and being the earliest published it must be accepted. The valves of this species are greatly eroded in all the specimens I have seen. C. HASTATUS Sowerby. PL 8, figs. 16-22. Shell small, granulated ; valves reclining, acute, the first five very narrow, the latter three wider ; the last having a pointed terminal apex ; margin thick, rude, having minute red tufts at the valves. Length 9, breadth 3 mill. (Sowb.) Habitat unknown. Chiton hastatus Sows., Charlesworth's Mag. of Nat. Hist. 1840, p. 290, Suppl. pi. 16, f. 4; Conch. Illustr. f. 127.— REEVE, Conch. Icon., f. 166. — Choneplax hastatus CPR., MS. CHONEPLAX. 61 This may prove to be the young of C. latus, the pointed shape of the valves being due to their non-eroded condition ; but the slits seem to be more strongly developed. Figs. 16, 17, 18, 19 are from Sowerby's illustrations; figs. 22 are from sketches made by Car- penter from the type. Carpenter writes of the type specimen : I cannot see the very long hairs figured by Sowerby, but here and there are a few very fine dark hairs, looking like pores, and occasionally but not always sutural ; round the margin there are a great many extremely minute, rather distinct hairs. Jugular areas long and narrow, in some valves sculptured and colored like the rest, only finer and with long lyrulse ; in others they are worn and dark colored ; in two last valves dark bordered with white, with fine granules over it. Central and side areas not divided, having about 10-12 rows of granules branching out. Inside : anterior valve having 4 slight slits at the end of very long teeth ; central valves with one little slit, near the sculptured part ; posterior valve with one very decided slit on each side. 62 LEPIDOPLEURUS-TRACHYDERMON. APPENDIX I. The following pages contain the descriptions of certain species omitted in the body of this monograph, and additional descriptive and bibliographic matter relating to other forms. Family LEPIDOPLEURID^E (Vol. XIV, p. 1.) Genus LEPIDOPLEURUS Risso. L. ALGESIRENSIS Capellini. PI. 14, figs. 20, 21. Shell oval, not carinated ; whitish-tawny ; end valves and lateral areas ornamented with concentric folds ; central areas smooth to the naked eye, but longitudinally striated when viewed under a lens. Girdle with moderate scales. Length 16, breadth 10 mill. (Capellini) Algesiras, Andalusia (Tarnier) ; Coast of Provence (Martin) ; Marseilles (Marion) ; Civitavecchia (Donati) ; Sicily (Calcara, Ara- das, Monterosato) ; Palermo (Moftterosato). Chiton algesirensis CAPELLINI, Journ. de Conch., June, 1859, p. 327, t. 12, f. 3, a'", &'", c'".— CARUS, Prodromus Faunae Mediterra- ne?e, ii, p. 180. — Leptochiton granoliratus CPR., MS. There can be no doubt of the identity of Capellini's species with the L. granoliratus of Carpenter, described from Mogador, which I have described and figured (vol. xiv, p. 14), from examples collected by Me An drew. Family ISCHNOCHITONID^ (Vol. XIV, p. 253.) Genus TRACHYDERMON, Carpenter. Trachydermon Cpr., PILS., Manual XIV, p. 67. Craspedochiton SARS, type C. marginatus Penn.=cinereus L. Boreochiton SARS, part (C. ruber and marmoreus}. Lophyrus Sars, (C. albus L. and exaratus Sars). — THIELE, Das Gebiss ii, p. 379. (L. albus L). Adriella THIELE, Das Gebiss der Schnecken, ii, p. 391, 1893. Type A. variegata, Phil. Icoplax THIELE, I. c., p. 392. Type I.punicea Couth. Shell oval, carinated. Valves delicate, the lateral areas indis- tinct ; surface minutely granulated, the granulation rather even and TRACK YD ERMON. 63 generally in quincuncial pattern. Insertion plates short and sharp, having slits. Eaves solid or slightly porous. Girdle densely clothed with very minute rounded or elongate papillae. Type T. flectens Cpr. This group was formerly considered a subgenus of Ischnochiton by me ; but a critical review of the species, with the use of power adequate to thoroughly reveal the structure of the girdle, causes me to reinstate it as a genus. It differs from Ischnochiton, — even the smallest species and specimens — in the nature of the girdle cover- ing; and the same is true of its relations with Clmtopleura, Callo- vhiton and Tonicia. The first of these three is also distinguished by its peculiar sculpture ; the second by its continuous sutural laminae. Tonicia is the genus most allied to Trachydermon ; and it was no doubt derived from Trachydermon at no remote time. The types selected by previous authors for this group are in no case tenable. Carpenter's original list of Trachydermons comprised reteporosus, inter 'stinctus, trifidus, dentiens, gothicus, hartwegii, nut- tailii and flectens. Of these the first three are Ischnochitons ; hartwegii and nuttallii belong to Cyanoplax ; leaving only dentiens, gothicus and flectens available for the choice of a type. The last has been selected. Within Trachydermon three sections may be distinguished, but their differential characters are of little value. I. Trachydermon s. sir. (type flectens Cpr). Valves thin ; gills extending forward f to f the length of the foot. II. Boreochiton Sars (type ruber L.). Valves variegated ; gills median. Species, T. ruber, T.punicea, T. steinenii. III. Cyanoplax Pils. (type hartwegii Cpr.). Valves solid, thick ; eaves wide, pitted ; gills as long as the foot. Species, T. hartwegii, T. bipunctata. Besides these, a subgenus (Spongioradsia) has been created for two divergent forms. The genus is one of great antiquity, being the least differentiated of the IschnochitonidcB. The girdle is unspecialized, being clothed with minute bodies which cannot be called either scales or spines, for they are of an intermediate character. See pi. 15, figs. 26 (dentiens) ; 25 (ruber) ; and 37 (flectens). Thiele has proposed the " genus " Adriella for one of the typical forms, founding it 011 a very slight difference in dentition, the value 64 TRACK YDERMON. of which he is himself undecided on. Another " genus," Icoplax, he proposes for the Cape Horn species punicea ; this group also has slight peculiarities of dentition, and if such minute subdivision is desirable, it might be retained as a section. T. ALBUS Linne. (Vol. XIV, p. 70). Var. infuscatus Schneider. Sculpture, girdle and radulaas in the type, but color yellow-brown or brown-black. West coast of Prince Charles' Promontory ; Spitzbergen, Quaenan- genfjord, Norway. See SCHNEIDER, Tromso Museums Aarshefter, vol. 4, 1881, p. 57, and KRAUSE Zool. Jahrb., 1892, p. 348. T. FLECTENS Cpr. PI. 15, figs. 34, 35, 36, 37. For original description see Vol. XIV, p. 75. Shell small, ovate-oblong, moderately elevated. Roseate or deep blood red, more or less maculated with blue, especially along the sutural margin ; the blue sometimes predominating on some valves. Median valves squared and slightly beaked ; minutely granulated all over, more closely on the lateral areas, which are otherwise scarcely defined (fig. 36). Mucro somewhat anterior, rather projecting (fig. 34). Interior of a beautiful deep rose color. Anterior valve having 8, median valves 1-1, posterior valve 7 slits. Eaves narrow, short and solid. v Sinus slightly laminate. Girdle rather densely covered with minute, elongated but scarcely imbricating scales (fig. 37), and fringed with hyaline spinelets. Gills extending forward two-thirds or three-fourths the length of the foot. Length 12, breadth 7 mill.; divergence 110° Puget Sound (Cpr.) ; off Victoria, British Columbia (Newcombe, 1892) ; S. Pedro (Cooper). This is a beautiful little species, the examples before me from Victoria, B. C., being especially remarkable for their deep colors. The sculpture and the spotting of the sutural margins reminds one of T. dentiens, which is evidently its nearest of kin. POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 1 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 2 53 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 3 73 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 4 86. 87. POLYPLACOPHORA. Wi ••- "•':«! "?.v;-M." ' * s ID \5 ID POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATK 6 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 7 • 13 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 8 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 9 POLYPLACOPHORA. PLATE 1O TRACHYDERMON. T. QOTHICUS Cpr. PI. 15, figs. 28, 29. The original description will be found on p. 74, vol. xiv. The type of this little shell was collected at Catalina Island by Cooper. It is an exceptionally elevated species, the dorsal ridge being acute, and the angle of divergence about 80°. The type (Mus. Smiths. Inst. 16271) having been glued to a glass tablet formerly, is not in very good condition, but Carpenter's excellent description and the figures here given (representing the half of a median valve and a profile of the tail valve), will readily identify it. T. RUBER L. PI. 15, fig. 25 (girdle-scales, x 125). T. DENTIENS Old. PI. 15, fig. 26 (girdle scales, x 250.) Subgenus SPONGIORADSIA Pilsbry, 1894 (n. s.-g.) Trachyradsia CPR. in part, exclusive of its type Ch. fulgetrum. Valves smoothish, having two or several side slits, and extremely spongy eaves and sinus, the latter squared. Girdle sparsely beset with minute elongated scales. Type Tr. aleutica. It is somewhat doubtful whether this group should rank under Callochiton or Trachydermon ; but as the girdle, sinus and gills more resemble the latter, I have placed it here. The spongy eaves and radsioid valves resemble Trachyradsia (plus Stereochiton), but the sinus in that group, as in typical Callochiton, is bridged by a lamina extending across from one sutural lamina to the other. But two species are known to belong here : aleutica Dall and multi- dentata Cpr. T. ALEUTICA Dall. PL 15, figs. 30, 31, 32, 33. The original description is given on p. 84, vol. xiv. This is a small, dull purplish-red species, much elevated but rounded at the ridge, valves broadly v-shaped, the anterior border of each being concave, the lateral areas a trifle raised but indistinct, whole surface obsoletely punctulated by the comparatively large megal aesthetes, and showing some lines of growth. The most prominent characters are presented by the interior of the valves, which are flesh-colored, rather thick, and have the pos- terior border of the tegmentum broadly reflexed. The wide eaves are coarsely and densely spongy, the teeth being reduced to very slight prominences or wholly obsolete on some valves ; but the num- ber of punctate slit-rays shows that the side-slits if developed would 5 66 TONICELLA. be several in number. The sinus is very wide and very spongy (fig. 33) ; the sutural laminse are high and narrow. The girdle is somewhat sparsely clothed with blunt white processes, between spines and scales in form, and some of them show under the lens an excessively fine longitudinal striation (fig. 30.) Gills extending forward two-thirds the length of the foot. The length is about 6 mill. ; divergence 90°-100°. Aleutian Is. Views of outside and interior of a median valve, and interior of the head valve are here given. The pores of the eaves and sinus are obviously more than sufficient to aiford egress to the minute trunks innervating the megalsesthetes and micrsesthetes ; and they probably serve in large part for the attachment of the valves to the girdle, being occupied by connective tissue. This accessory means of attachment is perhaps the cause of the great degeneration of the insertion- plates, which are deprived of their main function. Trachyradsia multidentata Cpr., from the Bonin Is., is evidently closely allied, but it is described as having more strongly developed teeth. Genus TONICELLA Carpenter. Vide vol. xiv, p. 40. Toniciella THIELE, Das Gebiss der Sclmecken ii, p. 389. Key to species of Tonicella. . KIRKI Hutton. Unfigured. Whorls 6, finely and rather distantly spirally grooved, those on the center of the whorls rather farther apart; columella with one double fold ; white. Length 20, breadth 1\ mill. (Hutton). Omaha, New Zealand. Bucdnulus Jcirki HUTTON, Catal. Mar. Moll. N. Z., p. 51, 1873 ; Journ. de Conchyl. 1878, p. 40 ; Man. N. Z. Moll., p. 119, 1880. S. ALBA Hutton. PI. 18, fig. 94. Whorls 7, rather deeply transversely grooved and lightly longitu- dinally striated, the strise showing distinctly in the grooves. Col- umella with a broad double anterior fold, and a smaller posterior one. Length 15, breadth 7 mill. (Hutton.} Auckland; also in pliocene at Wanganui, New Zealand. Buccinulus albus HUTTON, Catal. Mar. Moll. N. Z. p. 51 ; Journ. de Conchyl. 1878, p. 40; Man. N. Z. Moll., p. 119.— Tornatella alba HUTTON, The Pliocene Mollusca of New Zealand, p. 37, pi. 6, f. 2. (Macleay Memorial Volume.) S. GRACILIS Kirk. Unfigured. Whorls 8, finely and closely spirally grooved. Body whorl rather constricted in the middle ; the spiral grooves are much finer at the anterior end of the whorl, and as they approach the lip, which is SOLIDULA-ACT^EON. 147 very thin and sharp, white. Length '85 inch. Breadth *37 inch. (Kirk). Wellington, New Zealand. Collected by Mr. C. Hollsworth. Bucdnulus gracilis KIRK, Trans. N. Z. Institute xiv, p. 268, 1881. This shell is easily distinguished from Bucdnulus Mrki Hutton, {the type of which is in the Colonial Museum), by the greater num- ber of whorls, its more elongate and less robust appearance, and by the greater number and closer proximity of the spiral grooves. {Kirk). S. HUTTONI Kirk. Unfigured. Whorls 6, with numerous fine spiral grooves. Columella with double fold, but more prominent than in the preceding species. Spire very short, giving a decidedly robust appearance to the shell. Ground color, white with longitudinal brown wavy lines. (Kirk). Waikanae, New Zealand. Bucdnulus huttoni KIRK, Tr. N. Z. Inst. xiv, p. 26S. Genus ACTJEON Montfort, 1810. Acteon MONTF., Conch. Syst. ii, p. 314. — Action A. ADAMS, P. Z. S. 1854, p. 58. Not Adceon Oken, l8l5,=Elysia Risso.— Torna- tella LAMARCK, Extr. du Cours de Zool. du Mus. d'Hist. Nat., etc., p. 117, 1812 ; Anim. s. Vert, vi, p. 219, 1822.— KEEVE, Conch, [con. xv, and of other authors. — Speo Risso, Hist. Nat. Eur. Merid. iv, p. 235, 1826.— Con/. PHILIPPI, Archiv. fiir. Naturg. 1841, p. 55, pi. 5, f. 10 (animal).— SARS, Moll. Reg. Arct. Norv., p. 280, pi. xi, f. 1, {dentition), and pi. xviii, f. 57 (operculum). Shell oval, spirally striate, with conical spire and impressed or channelled suture. ' Aperture long, half the shell's length or more, narrow above, broadly rounded below, the outer lip simple and acute ; columella twisted into a strong, simple spiral fold. Parietal wall with- out folds or teeth. Operculum corneous, shaped like the aperture, few-whorled with nucleus near the basal margin. . Type A. torna- tilis L. Animal having the cephalic shield squared in front, produced behind in two triangular appendages, in front of the bases of which the eyes are situated. Radula wide, with many longitudinal rows 148 ACTION. of teeth, all of the same form, consisting of a narrow basal-plate and a crescentic reflexion (pi. 49, fig. 1, 2, 3, A. tornatilis). Distribution world wide. The genus as here restricted contains Actseonidse with one undivided spiral columellar fold, and no teeth upon the inner lip above that fold, the aperture being narrow above and more than half the total length of the shell. Two subgenera, or better, sections, may be recognized among the recent species ; for the fossil groups see Structural and Systematic Conchology, ii. p. 356. Section ACTION. Shell with a single columellar plait, which passes continuously into the anterior margin of the peristome. Section KICTAXIS Dall. Shell like Actceon, but with a slight prominence or oblique trun- cation at the base of the columella. Section ACTVEON Montf., 1810. A. MARI^: A. Adams. PI. 19, fig. 13. Shell ovate-cyclindrical, spire obtuse ; longitudinally substriate, transversely lirate, the lirse with an impressed median groove, inter- stices closely latticed ; dull white, ornamented with two transverse ashy bands. Aperture oblong, columella uniplicate. (Ad.). China Seas (Mus. Cuming). A. marice AD., P. Z. S. 1854, p. QO.—Tornatella marice RVE., Conch. Icon., xv, f. 22. In this species the whorls are ornamented with two spiral, trans- verse ash-colored bands and the lirse are double, each being divided in the middle by a fine transverse groove. (Ad.). A. SIEBALDII Keeve. PL 19, figs. 18, 19. Shell ovately conical, transversely densely striated throughout; livid ruddy color, banded with white at the sutures. Columella one- plaited. (Eve.). Japan (Siebald). Tornatella siebaldii REEVE, P. Z. S. 1842, p. 61 ; Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 3, f. 11. ACTION. 149 No additional specimens have been obtained and Reeve suspects it to be a variety of A. tornatilis. A. SECALE Gould. Shell small, elongate-ovate, thin, straw-colored, polished above, with a sub&utural engraved line, below encircled with punctate striae, whorls 4, tabulated, the last three-fourths the length of the shell. Apex obtuse. Aperture slightly exceeding half the shell's length, ear-shaped, acute behind, well rounded in front ; col- umella conspicuously twisted. Alt. 4, diam. 2 mill. (Gld.~). China Seas (Stimpson). Actceon secale GLD., Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H. vii, p. 141 ; Otia Conch., p. 113. A. MINUTUS Petterd. Shell minute, ovate, white, shining, pellucid. Spire small. Whorls 4, flattened. Apex mamillate. Transversely striate with fine waved striae, and faintly longitudinally striate. Aperture long, narrow, expanded at base ; columellar fold conspicuous ; outer lip a little thickened. Alt. 2, diam. 1 mill. (Pet.}. Forneaux Group, Bass Straits (R. M. Johnson). Tornatella minuta PETTERD, Journ. of Conch., Leeds, ii, p. 105, 1879. A. AUSTRINUS Watson. PL 20, figs. 24, 25, 26. Shell small, thin, ovate, strongly striated, with a high conical spire, blunt tip, and tumid body-whorl. Sculpture : Longitudinals — the lines of growth are very faint and somewhat markedly oblique. Spirals — the whole surface is scored with strong equal furrows which are about half the breadth of the interstices ; these furrow are not stippled, but are delicately and regularly cut across on the lines of growth by fine threads ; there are about 20 of these furrows on the body and about 9 on the penultimate whorl. Colour porcellanous, with a glossy surface. Spire rather high, conical, subscalar. Apex rather large, blunt and flattened, with a very slight inversion of the extreme tip. Whorls nearly 5, very little convex; the last is rather large and somewhat tumid. Suture rather oblique, slight, scarcely impressed. Mouth oval, pointed above, a^ little oblique in its direction. Outer lip sharp and thin, with its edge crenulated by the sculptural spirals ; in direction it is straight above, well curved on the base, where it is very slightly emarginate. Inner lip : very 11 150 ACTION. slightly convex on the body, it passes gradually into the short con- cave pillar, at the base of which there is only the faintest trace of a tooth ; its edge is sharp and patulous, with a minute chink behind it. Alt. 0'18 in.; diam. 0*1. Penultimate whorl, height 0'06. Mouth, height (Ml, breadth 0'07 inch. ( Wats.). Off Moncceur Island, Bass' Strait, 38-40 fms. A. austrinus WATS. J. L. S. Lond. xv, p. 286; Chall. Gastr. p. 628, pi. 47, f. 3. This species slightly resembles Actceon pusillus (Forbes), from the Mediterranean and North Atlantic ; but the spirals in that species are stronger, and are pit marked ; the suture is much stronger and more channelled, and the body whorl is more barrel-shaped. ( Wats.}. A. FABREANUS Crosse. PI. 18, figs. 86, 87. Shell slightly ri mate-perforate, ovate-globose rather thin but some- what solid, a little shining ; transversely sculptured with numerous, regular flat sulci, the interstices longitudinally very delicately lirate. Whitish, longitudinally marbled with violet-brown. Spire moder- ately elevated, the apex subacute ; suture deeply impressed, sub- canaliculate. Whorls 7, the two embryonal smooth, whitish, the following a trifle convex ; last whorl exceeding the spire in the pro- portion of 8 : 2|, attenuated toward the base. Aperture oblong pear-shaped, whitish within; peristome simple; columellar margin thickened, with one fold, livid white, outwardly rounded, acute. Alt. 10£, diam. 6 mill. Aperture scarcely 8 mill, long, 3 wide. CO.). Yo, New Caledonia (Balansa). Tornatella fabreana CROSSE, Journ. de Conch. 1873, p. 66, 130, pi. 5, f. 4. Allied to A. pudicus, but more globose, the spire shorter, and dis- tinguished by its color and the lirate intervals between the riblets. (Or.). A. PUDICUS A. Adams. PI. 19, figs. 20, 21. Shell oval, subcylindrical, subumbilicate, solid ; dull whitish, a little flesh tinted. Spire a little elevated. Whorls convex, trans- versely grooved, the grooves equal, punctate. Aperture oblong ; columella strongly uniplicate. (Ad.). Cagayan, Mindanao, Philippines (Cuming). ACTION. 151 A. pudicus AD., P. Z. S. 1854, p. 60. — Tornatella pudica REEVE, •Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 3, f. 13. Described from one dead specimen. A. VIRGATUS Reeve. PI. 20A, figs. 63, 64. Shell stoutly ovate ; transversely finely linearly grooved through- out ; ivory-white, conspicuously obliquely streaked with black ; spire short, rather obtuse, apex sharp ; columella one-plaited. (Eve.). Masbate, Philippines, in 7 fms. (Curning). Tornatella virgata RVE., P. Z. S. 1842, p. 60 ; .Conch. Syst. ii, pi. 206, f. 8, 9 ; Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 2, f. 8. A. FLAMMEUS Gmelin. PI. 20A, figs. 58, 59. Shell stoutly ovate, closely and densely punctured-grooved throughout ; white, streaked with reddish flames or crescent-shaped spots. Spire rather short. Columella strongly one-plaited. (Eve.). Java ; Islands of Ticao and Correjidor, Philippines, in 7 fms. (Cuming) ; off Nukalofa, Tongatabu, 18 fms. ; Levuka, Fiji, 12 fms. ; Off southwest point of Papua, 28 fms. (Challenger) ; Torres Strai. (Brazier) ; East Africa, Querimber Is. and Mauritius (Martens). Voluta flammea GMEL., Syst. Nat. xiii, p. 3435 (excl. var.).—Bul- imus variegatus BRUG., Encycl. Meth. vers, i, p. 336, pi. 452, f. 1 (Tornatella flammed). — Tornatella flammea LAM., An. s. Vert, vi, p. 219. — SOWB., Genera, ii, f. 1. — KIENER, Coq. Viv. Torn., p. 1, pi. 1, f. 1. — REEVE, Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 1, f. 2. — MARTENS, Moll. Mauritius, in Mobius' Reise, p. 303 ; Monatsber. Berl. Akad. 1879, p. 739.—Actceonflammeus A. AD., P. Z. S. 1854, p. 59.— BRAZIER, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. Wales, ii, 1878, p. 75.™ WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 626. The young shell has an umbilical chink. A. ORYZA Reeve. PI. 18, fig. 82. Shell ovate, rather solid, transversely linearly grooved through- out ; ivory white ; columella rather prominently one-plaited. (Eve.). Catbalonga, Luzon, Philippines (Cuming) ; Mauritius (Lienard) ; Reunion (Desh.). Tornatella oryza RVE., P. Z. S. 1842, p. 62 ; Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 4, f. 18. — DESH., Catal. Moll. Reunion, p. 57. — MARTENS, in Mobius' Reise n. Mauritius, p. 302. 152 ACTION. A. ALBUS Sowerby. PI. 18, fig. 81. Shell oblong-ovate, subpellucid, white, transversely punctate sul- cate throughout. Suture impressed. Aperture elongate-ovate ; col- umella with one fold. (Sowb.~). Port Elizabeth, S. Africa. Tornatella alba SOWB., P. Z. S. 1873, p. 720, pi. 59, f. 6 ; Journ. of Couch. 1886, v, p. 15. — Action albus SOWB., Marine Sh. S. Af., p. 51. A pure white semitransparent species, regularly grooved and beautifully punctured throughout. (Sowb.). A. SEMISCULPTUS Smith. PI. 18, fig. 97. Shell ovate, turrited, small, shining, snow-white; very narrowly rimate ; smooth above, rather distantly puncto-striate transversely below the middle,4and on the base more closely striated ; sculptured longitudinally with a few indistinct, distant sulci. Whorls 4, lightly convex, separated by a narrow channelled suture. Apex involute. Aperture inversely ear-shaped, a little more than half the shell's length ; columella narrowly reflexed, bearing a small fold at the rimation. Alt. 4, diam. 2'25 mill. (SWi.). St. Helena. A. semisculptus E. A. SMITH, P. Z. S. 1890, p. 298, pi. 24, f. 8. The spiral transverse punctured striae do not extend above the middle of the body-whorl. The longitudinal narrow and shallow indistinct sulci apparently indicate lines of growth. (/S.). A. SENEGALENSIS Petit. PL 18, figs. 90, 91. Shell elongated, cylindrical, thin, subpellucid, white. Spire tur- rited, acute. Whorls 7, regularly transversely striated. Columella obliquely uniplicate. Length 17, diam. 6 mill. (Petit."). Mouth of the Gambia River, W. Africa. Tornatella senegalensis PETIT, Journ. de Conchyl. ii, p. 262, pi. 8, f. 3. — REEVE, Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 3, f. 14. The elongated form, thinness of the shell, and the obliquity of the columellar fold are the distinguishing features of this form. A. TORNATILIS Linne. PI. 19, figs. 7-11, 15. Shell long-ovate, with conical acute spire and impressed sutures the whorls but little convex. Color pinkish with a light girdle ACTION. 153 •edged with dark at the shoulder and another at the lower third of the body-whorl ; the latter or both girdles often absent. Whorls about 8, sculptured with close, fine, engraved spiral lines, punctate at their bottoms, the base having coarser lirse with delicately latticed interstices. Last whorl about three-fourths the shell's length. Aperture narrow, two-thirds the shell's length ; columella concave below, having one stout oblique fold above. Alt. 19, diara. 10 mill. Entire Mediterranean and Adriatic Seas; Atlantic from Norway to Morocco, in laminarian and coralline zones. Voluta tornatilis LINNE, Syst. Nat. xii, p. 1187, (1766). — HANLEY, Ipsa L. Conch., p. 212. — Turbo ovalis DACOSTA, Brit. Conch., p. 101. pi. 8, f. 2 (1778). — Bulimus tornatilis BRUG., Diet. Encyc., p. 338 (1789).— Voluta bifasciata GMEL., Syst. Nat. xiii, p. 3436.— Tornatella fasciata LAM., An. s. Vert, vi, p. 220 (1822).— KIENER, Coq. Viv., p. 5, pi. 1, f. 3.— FORBES & HA NL., Btit. Moll, iii, p. 523, pi. 114, f. 3, pi. vv, f. 7.— Speo tornatilis Risso, Hist. Nat. Eur. Merid. iv, p. 236. — Speo bifasciatus Risso, 1. c. — Tornatella torna- tilis PHIL., Enum. Moll. Sicil. ii, p. 143. — REEVE, Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 1, f. 7. — Actceon tornatilis MONTFORT, Conch. Syst. ii, p. 315 (1810).— H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll, ii, p. 4, pi. 56, f. I.— JEF- FREYS, Brit. Conch, iv, p. 433 ; v, p. 224, pi. 95, f. 2. — HIDALGO, Mol. Mar. Esp., pi. 19, f. 3, 4; pi. 20c, f. 1.— SARS, Moll. Reg. Arct. Norv., p. 280, pi. 17, f. 11.— BUQ., DAUTZ. & DOLLF., Moll. Rouss. i, p, 510, pi. 66, f. 15-19. This species is the type of the genera Acteon, Tornatella and Speo. It is a common and widely dispersed European form. The follow- ing varieties and named color-mutations are recognized by the .authors of " Les Mollusques marins du Roussillon." Var. minor Monts. Var. subulata Searles Wood. PI. 19, fig. 14. Elongated, narrow, with elevated spire. Originally described as a fossil (Crag Moll- usca i, p. 170, pi. 19, f. 7), it has been found living off the English coast. Var. tenella Loven. Small, with thin, subpellucid shell, more shining than in the type (Index Moll. Scand., p. 11). Var. bullceformis Jeffr. Small, regularly oval, with very short -spire (Brit. Conch, iv, p. 435). Var. al bo bifasciata Monts. Two upper bands only present. 154 ACTION. Var. fascia-unica-alba Scac. Shoulder band only present. Var. unicolor Scac. (efasciata Monts.). Uniform grayish roseate,, without bands (pi. 19, f. 10). A. AMABILIS Watson. PL 20, figs. 27, 28. Shell small, ovate, white, with flattened whorls, a subscalar spire,. a very blunt apex, a pear-shaped smallish mouth, and a very slight tooth on the pillar. Sculpture : Longitudinals — there are very faint hair-like lines of growth. Spirals — there are on the last whorl about 20, on the penultimate whorl about 8 rather strong and equal furrows stippled with roundish oval pits ; they become more crowded and weaker toward the middle of the base ; just below the suture the first furrow is minutely and slightly beaded, and it with the next one or two is strong and these are crowded ; the flat surface which parts them is somewhat broader than the furrows. Color translu- cent and subglossy white. Spire conical, high, scarcely scalar. Apex blunt and truncated ; the extreme tip is a very little inverted. Whorls 5, very slightly shouldered just below the suture; round the top there is a very feeble constriction ; below this the whorl is conical, and in profile flat on the sides ; the last whorl is a very little tumid with a produced base. Suture very little oblique, strongish and well marked, but not channelled. Mouth pear-shaped, pointed above, a little oblique in direction, patulous or very slightly guttered in front of the pillar point. Outer lip straight and parallel to the axis, and a little contracted above, arched and patulous in front. Inner lip slightly convex on the body, on which there is a thin but distinct glaze with a defined edge; there is a slight angulation at the junction of the body and the pillar, near the top of which is a very faint tooth amounting to no more than a slight swelling; the pillar itself is very slightly oblique, and is straight, narrow with a sharp edge behind which is a very slight and shallow furrow. Alt. 0*16 in.; diam. 0*1. Penultimate whorl height 0'04. Mouth height 0-08, breadth 0-05. ( Wats.). West of Azores, 1000 fms. ; off Palma, Canaries, 1125 fins. A. amabilis WATS., J. L. S. Lond. xvii, p. 287 ; Chall. Gastr., p. 629, pi. 47, f. 4. This species is a little like Action austrinus Watson ; but com- pared to that the form is slimmer, the whorls are more laterally compressed and less convex, the shell is smaller, and the apex is more truncated. It a good deal resembles Action levidensis S. ACTION. 155 Wood, but has a shorter body-whorl and mouth ; the rise of the whorls in the spire is more scalar, and the apex is stumpier, with a coarser tip. ( Wats.}. \ A. MONTEROSATOI Dautzenberg. PI. 19, figs. 1, 2, 3. Shell 5J mill, high, 3 mill, broad, ovate-elongated. Spire conoid. Whorls 5, convex, transversely sculptured throughout with punc- tate strise. Last whorl obese. Aperture pear-shaped ; columeila straight, hardly folded; outer lip arcuate. Color dull white. (Dautz.). Pico, Azores, in 1287 meters, one example. A. monterosatoi DAUTZ., Res. Camp. Sci. Albert 1st., i, p. 20, pi. 1, f. 2a-2d., 1889. This species is allied to A. pusillus Fbs., but in that form the col- umeila is twisted and the spire less tapering. A. LUTEOFASCIATUS Miihlfeldt. PI. 49, fig. 4. Shell ovate, ventricose, smooth;" white with three buff bands; the columeila with one fold. Base weakly, obliquely striated ; whorls 4. Alt. 2 to 3 mill. Rimini, Adriatic Sea, in shell-sand. Voluta luteo-fasciata MEG. v. MUHLF., Verhandl. der Gesellsch. Naturforschender Freunde zu Berlin, i, pt. 4, p. 205, pi. 7, f. 2, 1829. I have no knowledge of this species except from the original de- scription. It seems to have been overlooked by writers on Mediter- rean shells. A. GLOBULINUS Forbes. Shell white, globose ; spire short; whorls 4, spirally striated, the strise numerous and simple ; aperture pyriform, columeila thickened. Length 2£ mill. (Fbs.). Aegean Sea, 0-95 fins. (Fbs.~) ; Mediterranean 92 fins. (Monts.) ; Off San Miguel, Azores, 1000 fms. (Chall.). Tornatella globulina FORBES, Rep. Aeg. Inv., p. 191. — Actceon glo- bulinus JEFFR., Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), vi, p. 85. — MONTS., Enum., p. 50. — SEGUENZA, Form. Terz. Calab., p. 251. — WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 627. 156 ACTION. A. PUSILLUS (Forbes) Jeffreys. Shell ovate-globose, whitish ; whorls 4, regularly and deeply punctate -striate ; aperture oblong. Length 4, breadth 2 mill. Lycia; Naxia (Forbes); Palermo and San Vito, 90-210 fms. (Moiits.) ; Of Havana, 450 fms. (Sigsbee) ; of Sand Key, 111 fms. (Blake); off Sombrero I., 450 fms. (Chall.) ; Madeira 20-50 fms. (Watson). Tornatella pusilla FORBES, Rep. Aeg. Invert., Rep. Brit. Asso. Adv. Sci. 1843, p. 191. — Adceon pusilla JEFFR., Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), vi, p. 84 ; I. c. (5), x, p. 34. — MONTEROSATO Enumerazione, etc.? p. 50; Journ. de Conchy!. 1878, p. 160 (A. " pupillus").—SEGV- ENZA, Form. Terz. Calab. p. 251. — WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 627.— DALL., Blake Gastr., p. 39. This species has not, I believe, been figured. A. EXILIS Jeffreys. PI. 19, figs. 4, 5, 6. Shell oblong or somewhat spindle-shaped, semitransparent, and glossy : sculpture, numerous spiral strise or impressed lines, which are quite smooth or plain, instead of being punctate as in other species of this genus; color clear white; spire elongated, with a blunt apex : whorls three moderately convex ; the last occupies three-fourths of the spire : the first is mammiform ; suture distinct, margined ; mouth rather narrow, irregularly pear-shaped, expanded at the base; length three-fifths of the shell; outer lip gently curved, and folding inwards ; inner lip folded back on the lower part ; pillar flexuous ; fold strong and conspicuous. (Jeffr.*). Alt. 4'7 mill. Mediterranean Sea, 92-1465 fms. ; Say of Biscay, 227-924 fms. ; N. Atlantic, 227-1456 fms. (Jeffr.) ; off Fay al, 450-500 fms. (Chal- lenger) ; Off e. coast Florida, 150-200 fms. and Campeche Bank, Gulf of Mexico, 200 fms. (Rush); Off Martha's Vineyard, 312-487 fms. (Verrill). Action exilis JEFFR., Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), vi, p. 85, 1870. — WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr. p. 625, 1886.— DALL, Blake Rep. Gastr. p. 38, 1889. — DAUTZENBERG, Resultats Campagnes Sci. le Prince Albert I, i, p. 20, pi. 1, f. 1. — Auriculina insculpta VERRILL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. iii, p. 381, 1880.— Action nitidus VERRILL, Tr. Conn. Acad. v, p. 540, pi. 58, f. 21, 1882.— ? A. nitidusSvG., Form. Terz. Calab., p. 251. ACTION. 157 A more slender form than others of this region. The synonymous A. nitidus is represented by fig. 4, of pi. 19. Figs. 5, 6 represent a specimen dredged by the Hirondelle, off Azores. A. PUNCTOSTRIATUS Adams. PL 19, figs. 22, 23; pi. 18, figs. 98, 99. They vary from pure white to trifasciate with rose or livid brown, usually faint and nebulous. The height of the spire, elevation of the nucleus, and extent of shell covered by the punctate lines, vary in the different specimens. Usually the spire is rather elevated, nucleus somewhat depressed, and the punctate grooves cover about half of the last whorl. There may be one or several subsutural lines, the middle of the whorl is generally smooth and free from lines, and the anterior part crowded. The northern ones are variegated like those from the Antilles, but the latter are more frequently bright colored. The very young, like those figured by Adams and Orbigny, are usually white or translucent. The colors, when banded, are nearly always rather nebulous, and the number of bands never exceeds three, the anterior one most often absent. The shell is is always thin, and often nearly translucent. (Dall). Alt. 3-6 mill. Buzzard's Bay, Mass., to Florida, Cuba and San Domingo, 2-63 fms. Tornatella punctostriata C. B. AD., Bost. Journ. N. H. iii, p. 323, pi. 3, f. 9, 1840.— OLD., Inv. Mass. p. 245, f. 188, 1841 ; edit. BIN- NEY, p. 224, f. 515, 1870.— RVE., C. Icon, xv, pi. 4, f. 17.— Actceon punctostriatus STIMP., Shells of N. Engl., p. 51, 1851.— VERRILL, Inv. Anim. Vineyard Sd., p. 664, pi. 25, f. 165, 1874 ; Trans. Conn. Acad. vi, p. 467, pi. 45, f. 17 (var.).— DALL, Rep. Blake Gastr., p. 40. — Actceon cubensis GABB, Top. Geol. San Domingo, p. 245, 1873. — MORCH, Mai. Bl. xxii, p. 170, 1875. — Tornatella punctata ORB., Moll. Cuba i, p. 230, pi. 17, f. 10-12, 1842 (not of Lea nor Piette). The synonymous T. punctata Orb. is represented on pi. 18, fig. 98, 99. A. TURRITUS Watson. PL 20, figs. 29, 30. Shell strongish, oblong, pale yellow, translucent, somewhat glossy, with a high conical coarsely tipped spire and rounded striated whorls. Sculpture: Longitudinals — there are many feeble lines of growth. Spirals — the surface of the shell is scored with narrow shallow, irregular, unequal, distant furrows formed by hardly con- 158 ACTION. tinuous stipplings, which are round on the upper and oblong on the last whorl ; between these furrows there often occurs a weaker one formed in the same way; on the base they are small and crowded ; toward the upper suture they are strong; on the first in particular they are so. Colour : the shell itself is translucent white, but is covered with very thin yellow membranaceous epidermis. Spire high, conical, and scalar. Apex very coarse and blunt,, slightly immersed, but not inverted. Whorls 6, rounded above, cylindrical below ; the last is short and slightly tumid. Suture very little oblique, strong and somewhat channelled. Mouth oval to pear-shaped. Outer lip leaves the body at a right angle ; it is reg- ularly arched throughout, patulous in front. Inner lip : a thin de- fined glaze crosses the body and runs direct down the pillar with a straight sharp edge, behind which is a minute chink; the tooth,, which is close up to the body, is very slight and blunt. Alt. 0'31 in. ; diam. 018. Penultimate whorl, height O08. Mouth, height 0-17, breadth 0-1. (Wats.). Of Culebra Island, West Indies, 390 fms. (Challenger'}. A. turritus WATS., Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond. xvii, p. 285 ; Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 628, pi. 47, f. 2.— Ow/. BALL, Blake Rep. Gastr., p. 40. This species is represented by only one specimen, of which the outer lip is somewhat broken. The spire is extremely high and scalar. In this respect, and in the rounded form of the whorls it somewhat resembles Actceon (Solidula) suturalis A. Adams ; but the apex is much blunter, and the sculpture much finer than in that species. ( Wats.). A. MELAMPOIDES Dall. PI. 20, fig. 33. Shell short, stout with a depressed spire and shouldered last whorl; white, with five whorls, sculptured with punctate spiral lines ; nucleus small, eroded ; other whorls with two, three, or (on the last) twenty to twenty-five spiral lines, which are distinctly punc- tate, with about ten punctations in the length of a millimeter; the spirals are crowded just in advance of the suture and near the pillar, and especially distant on the shoulder of the last whorl; suture distinct, with the anterior margin finely crenulate in the last whorl : other sculpture of fine lines of growth and microscopic revolving striae as in the last species ; outer lip hardly oblique, join- ing the body at a wider angle than usual, owing to the shouldering ACTION. 159> of the last whorl, thin, simple, passing imperceptibly into the shortr twisted pillar which bears a single distinct fold ; body whorl with only a glaze, pillar hardly or not at all thickened ; aperture approx- imately lunate. Lon. of shell, 6'0 ; of last whorl, 5'25 ; of aperture, 4-25. Max. lat. of shell, 4'0 ; of aperture, 1'62 mill. (Dall}. Off Bahia Honda, Cuba, 310 fms. (Blake); Off e. coast of the United States 2574 fms. (Verrill). Actcvon melampoides DALL, Bull. M. C. Z., ix, p. 95, 1881 ; Blake Rep., Gastr., p. 41, pi. 17, f. 2. — A. hebes VERRILL, Trans. Conn. Acad. vi, p. 428, pi. 44, f. 15, J885. The A. hebes, which Dall believes to be identical, is shown in fig. 12 of pi. 19. A. PERFORATUS Ball. PL 20, fig. 36. Shell small, pointed, waxen white, with a narrow opaque yellow- ish band in advance of the suture, composed of about six whorls, and with a distinct umbilical perforation ; nucleus eroded, small ; spire with about six, or (on the last whorl) eighteen strong and very regularly and distinctly punctate grooves, the punctuations at the rate (near the aperture) of about six to a millimeter, the grooves a little more crowded anteriorly and distant posteriorly, the inter- spaces everywhere wider than the grooves and with no intercalary grooves or striae whatever ; transverse sculpture of faint lines of growth ; aperture rounded in front, pointed behind; outer lip thin, simple, arched, and continuous with the reflected thin pillar lip, upon which a fold can hardly be made out ; body with a slight glaze ; umbilical perforation straight, with smooth walls, appar- ently very deep, and about 0'25 mm. in diameter. Lon. of shell, 7-75 ; of last whorl, 6'0 ; of aperture, 40. Max. lat. of shell, 4'62 ; of aperture, 2'0 mill. (J9a//). Gulf of Mexico, 805 fms. (Blake). One specimen. A.perforatm DALL, Bull. M. C. Z., ix, p. 96 ; Blake Rep. Gastr. p. 42, pi. 18, f. 3. It differs from A. exiguus Dkr. of the same region in its very much shorter spire and globular proportions, in its obsolete columellar fold and the strength and uniformity of its punctate sulci. The anterior part of the last whorl being a little larger than any part posterior to it, this shell has a somewhat pyriform appearance. (Dall). 160 ACTION. A. DANAIDA Dall. PL 20, fig. 32. Shell elongated, moderately pointed, polished, white, and having about six whorls ; spiral sculpture of (on the spire) six, or (on the last whorl) over twenty-five punctate grooves, more crowded an- teriorly, but with two or three coarser than the rest, just in advance of the suture; between these original grooves in the latter half of the last whorl intercalary single or double grooves appear, which are seldom quite as deep as the originals, and at first are not punctate, but at last, and especially near the anterior extreme of the shell, be- come nearly as welljuarked as the original series ; transverse sculpt- ure consisting only of lines of growth, by a peculiar thickening of certain of which when they cross the grooves the punctate appear- ance is produced ; nucleus eroded, minute ; , suture appressed, distinct, but the thin appressed anterior margin seems peculiarly liable to erosion, which in some cases takes place, so as to produce the appearance of a channelled suture ; whorls slightly rounded ; outer lip thin, simple, somewhat produced in the middle, passing imper- ceptibly into the thin twisted pillar, which is slightly reflected, and bears one inconspicuous, very oblique fold ;. body with a thin layer of callus ; aperture rounded in front, rather narrow, pointed behind : no umbilical chink in this or any of the preceding species. Lon. of shell, 11-0; of last whorl, 7'75 ; of aperture, 6'25. Max. lat. of shell, 5-25 ; of aperture, 3'0 mill. (Dall). Off Tortugas, 339 fms. (Blake). A. danaida DALL, Bull. M. C. Z. ix, p. 42, 1881; Blake Rep. Gastr., p. 42, pi. 17, f. 12. One specimen and a fragment obtained. It is an elegant and excessively punctate species, which looks as if it might have been pelted by a shower of little coins. A. INCISUS Dall. PL 20, figs. 31, 34. Shell short, thin, inflated, waxen white, polished, with five or six whorls and a rather acute spire ; nucleus minute, more or less im- mersed, eroded to some extent in every specimen ; apical 'whorls smooth, polished, rounded ; suture very distinct, in the majority of cases not channelled ; the apical whorls with two or three distant narrow grooves across which in some cases, pass elevated lines of growth which appear nowhere else, or, if at all, only in the suture near the apex ; last whorl forming the largest part of the shell, in- flated, provided with ten or eleven spiral grooves, which are nearer ACTION. 161 together anteriorly ; these grooves are somewhat zigzag by exigencies of growth, but are not punctate, as in so many species ; other spiral sculpture consisting of microscopically fine slightly zigzag striae, about seventy in the width of a millimeter ; transverse sculpture only of most delicate flexuous lines of growth most evident neurthe sutures ; aperture rounded in front, pointed behind ; outer lip thin, simple, arcuated toward the periphery, passing imperceptibly into the pillar ; body with a slight callus joining the rather slender pillar which carries one inconspicuous fold. Lon. of shell, 9'0; of last whorl, 7'0 ; of aperture, 5'75. Max. lat. of shell, 5'75 ; of aperture, 3'0 mill. (Dall). Yucatan St., off Cape San Antonio, 640 fms. A. indsus DALL, Bull. M. C. Z. ix, p. 95 ; Blake Rep. Gastr., p. 42, pi. 17, f. 1, Ib. In this, as in the preceding deep-water species, the fold or ridge on the columella is faint, though not entirely absent, and is best seen from the side; in fact, it is almost invisible in all, except A. melampoides, from in front as the figures are viewed. The columella in these figures, however, is drawn as straighter and broader than it really appears ; but in these particulars it is very difficult to get a draughtsman who knows nothing of shells to catch the characteristic curves in every instance. (Dall). A. EXIGUUS (Dunker) Morch. Un < figured. Shell covered-perforate, flesh colored, ovate ; spire elevated, nearly half the length of the shell; last whorl with its lower half; sulcate, the bottoms of the grooves punctate ; spire and upper half of the body- whorl smooth ; suture subcontabulate, margined by an im- pressed line ; columellar fold strong. Length 6?, diam. 3 mill. (Morch). Antilles (Ruse). Actceon exiguus DKR. mss. MORCH, Malak. Blatter, xxii, p. 169, 1875. Var. ovalis Morch. Spire shorter, suture margined with two deep grooves. Alt. 6, diam. 3'1 mill. A. SPLENDIDULUS Morch. Unfigured. Shell elongate-ovate, very solid, whitish, bright and shining. Whorls about 5, the last with impressed spiral lines, punctate along their bottoms, very distant in the middle of the last whorl, but to- ward the base becoming closer and in pairs. Sutural region smooth. 162 ACTION. Spire elevated, with two punctate lines. Columellar fold oblique, but little projecting; lip thick. Alt. 4*75, diam. 2'25 mill. ; aper- ture 2-75 mill. high. (MorcK). St. Thomas (Ruse), one specimen. A. splendidula MORCH Malak. Blatter xxii, p. 170, 1875. A. CUMINGII A. Adams. PI. 19, figs. 16, 17. Shell oval, subcylindrical, flesh colored ; spire exserted ; whorls •convex, transversely sulcate, the sulci beautifully cancellated, lon- gitudinally striated. Columella with a single fold below. Aperture white inside, the lip acute, subsinuous above. (Ad.*). Rio Janeiro (Martin) ; Porto Rico (Krebs) ; 5 miles off Cape Florida, in 8 fins. (Rush). A. cumingii A. AD., P. Z. S. 1854, p. 59. — MORCH, Mai. Bl. xxii, p. 169. — DALL, Blake Rep. Moll., p. 40. — Tornatella cumingii RVE., •Conch. Icon, xv, f. 12. — Tornatella textilis GUPPY, Geol. Mag. 1874, p. 407, pi. 16, f. 4. This differs from A. delieatus by its stumpier form, coarser and ruder subcancellate striation, more prominent fold on the columella, and particularly by its nucleus which, though small, is swollen and set on the peek of a very' acute spire like a swollen terminal bud on a twig. In delieatus the nucleus, instead of appearing larger, is con- siderably smaller than the whorl in front of it, in which it is also partially immersed. (DalT). A. DELICATUS Dall. PL 20, fig. 35. Shell ovate, white, or suffused with rose pink, not in bands but generally, or in longitudinal flammules, with usually a white mar- gin in front of the suture ; there are six or seven whorls, the last more than half the length of the shell, regularly rounded and grooved by, on the last whorl, 20-30 strong, rather deep, coarsely punctate grooves between rounded interspaces; lines of growth quite preceptible, suture somewhat appressed, npt channelled ; aper- ture more than half as long as the shell ; outer lip thin, inner lip hardly callous, columella straight, without any chink behind it, and bearing a single moderate fold. Nucleus small, mostly im- mersed in the succeeding whorl, apex not acute, surface usually not polished, but a little less coarsely sculptured than that of A. cum- ingii Adams. Lon. of the largest specimen, lO'O ; max. lat. 5*6 ; Ion. of aperture, 6'0 mill. (Dall). ACTION. 1 63 Station 19,310 fms. (Sigsbee) ; Station 50 (Lat. 26° 31' and Lon. •85° 530, in 119 fms-; Station 290, off Barbados, in 73 fms., coral, bottom temperature 70° 75°,F; and Station 100, off Morro Light Havana, in 250-400 fms. ; Off Point Gallegos, eastern Patagonia, in 50 2 fms. A.fasdatus? DALL, Bull. M. C. Z. ix, p. 94, 1881, not of Lam- arck.— A. delieatus DALL, Blake Gastr., p. 41, pi. 17, f. 5, 1889; Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. xii, p. 296, 1889. The difference between the nucleus of this species and. that of A. Cumingii is noted under the latter species. It is just possible that that it is to the present species that is to be referred the single spec- imen obtained by Gabb, arid which he referred to A. tornatilis. The latter is not known from this region. A. CURTULUS Dall. Unfigured. Shell small, short, subglobular, white, not polished; surface covered with sharp, deep, close set, spiral grooves minutely punctate at bottom ; whorls three, beside the prominent, polished, smooth, globular, sinistral nucleus; suture distinct, not channelled; outer lip thin, simple ; body with a thin wash of callus; pillar short, thin, very much twisted, so that its outer edge presents a plait-like appear- ance, while the shell seems almost canaliculate, though the pillar is continuous with the basal margin ; above the twisted edge and separated from it by a deep channel is a second less prominent plait ; altitude of shell, 3 ; diameter, 2 mill. (Dall). West coast of Patagonia, 122 fms. (Albatross). A. curtulus DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. xii, p. 296, 1889. This little shell is mostly comprised in the last whorl and appears mature. It recalls Stilifer, or a small snow-white Pedipes, as much as anything, and is different from any recent species of the group I have seen. (Dall). A. BULLATUS Gould. PI. 49, figs. 10, 11. Shell small, thin, smooth, whitish, covered with a most delicate straw colored epidermis. The whole surface is marked with regularly arranged, deep, linear, revolving grooves, of which there are about five on the upper whorls, and about sixteen on the principal whorl. In some parts the furrows seem to be crossed by delicate bars. The interspaces are flat. There are five whorls, which have a distinct, square shoulder; the large whorl is tumid, the upper one plane. 164 ACTION. The aperture is lunate, about three-fifths the length of the shell. The columella, about one-third the length of the aperture, is flat, and divided by a single groove. (Gld.~). Alt. 6-25 diara. 4'16 mill. Of Patagonia (U. S. Ex. Exped.). Tornatella bullata GLD., Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H. ii, p. 251 (Dec., 1847) ; U. S. Expl. Exped., Moll., p. 218, f. 263a-6. The following species is very closely allied to this. A. VAGABUNDA Mabille & Kochebrune. PI. 18, figs. 95, 96. Shell ovate-conic, rather thin, solid, shining, dull reddish, spirally sulcate; sulci on first whorls slightly elevated, about 5; on last whorl 20 or 22, flattened, regularly spaced. Spire elevated, conic- subpyramidal, the apex large, white, lirate, mammillate. Whorls 5£, convex separated by an impressed suture, especially the earlier ones. Last whorl large, two-thirds the entire length, slightly swollen, narrowed toward the base, and descending slowly to its termination. Aperture nearly vertical, semi-ovate ; peristome nearly straight, slightly thickened, the terminations joined by a very thin white callus, outer margin well curved, simple ; basal margin slightly thickened and effuse, columellar margin appressed. Columella white, thickened, twisted, divided by a superficial groove, prolonged to the base of the aperture. Alt. 9, diam. 5 mill. (M. & ^.). South of Cape Horn. Tornatella vagabunda MAB. & ROCH., Bull. Soc. Mai. Fr. ii, p. 208, 1885. Miss. Sci. Cap Horn, Moll., p. 12, pi. 6, fig. 2. Separated from Tornatella bullata Old. by the more elongated form, last whorl less swollen, greater number of whorls, same num- ber of spirals on the earlier, but greater number on the last whorl ; narrower aperture, with less arcuate and narrower outer lip, and stronger columella. A. VENUSTUS d'Orbigny. PI. 18, figs. 100, 101. Shell elongated-cylindrical, thin, roseate, transversely striated ; spire elongated, the apex obtuse ; whorls 5, the last large. Aperture narrow and long; columella with one projecting fold. Length 10, diam. 3£ mill. (Orb.'). Payta, Peru. (Fontaine). Tornatella venusta ORB., Voy. dans 1'Amer. Me>. p. 399, pi. 56, f. 4-6. — Actceon venusta ORB., t. c., p. 700. ACTION. 165 A. PERCONICUS Dall. PL 18, fig. 83. Shell pear-shaped or conic, with rather acute spire, polished ivory white, with four whorls beside the nucleus ; transverse sculpture of incremental lines ; spiral sculpture of three to five close-set, sharp, punctate grooves in front of the suture, more distant anteriorly, and a similar but more numerous and uniformly spaced series just behind the pillar, behind which again are four or five widely separated similar grooves the posterior near the periphery ; between them and near the periphery, as well as behind it, are no grooves or but faint spiral obsolete stria?; suture distinct but not channelled ; last whorl much the largest; outer lip straight, simple, slightly thickened; body with a moderate deposit of callus ; pillar as in A. curtulus, but less strongly twisted and with the plait and recurved margin sub- equal ; although the margin is continuous, there is a rather deep sulcus behind the anterior end of the pillar, corresponding to a groove, which bounds the columella callus; longitude of shell, 5; latitude, 3 ; longitude of aperture, 3 mill. (Dall). Near Galapagos Is., in 812 fms. (Albatross). A.perconicus DALL, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. xii, p. 296, pi. 12, f. 7, 1889. This shell and the last species seem to stand in an intermediate position between Actceon of the typical kind and Cinulia. If the outer lip should eventually become much thickened, of which, how- ever, there is no satisfactory evidence, these shells might be referred to Cinulia. If the A. curtulus recalls Pedipes mirabilis Muhlfeldt in its form and sculpture, A. perconicus recalls P. elongatus Dall. (Dall). A. OVULUM Pfeiffer. Shell small, ovate, shining, white ; spire conic. Whorls 6, nearly flat, the last three times the length of the spire. Columella biplicate at base. Aperture entire, oblong, narrow ; lip simple, widened in the middle. Length 1-66, diain. -75 mill. (Pfr.). Cuba. Tornatella ovulum PFR., Arch. f. Naturg. vi, 1840, p. 256. — Actceon (Actceonideaty ovulum MORCH, Mai. Bl. xxii, p. 170. Da!l (Blake Rep. Gastr., p. 41) remarks that this may be an im- mature Marginella. ACTION AUSTRALIS Quoy & Gaim. (Astrol. ii, p. 317)>=Elysia, in Nudibranchiata. 12 166 ACT^EON-LEUCOTINA. Section RICTAXIS Dall, 1871. Ridaxis DALL, Amer. Journ. Conch, vii, p. 136, type Tornatella punctoccelata Cpr. — Actceonidea GABB., Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila- delphia, 1872, p. 273, type A. oryza Gabb. Shell like Actceon, but with the columella obliquely truncated at base or having a small projection there. A. PUNCTOCJELATUS Carpenter. PI. 49, figs. 24. Shell oblong with conoidal spire ; white with two broad ashy or or brown zones. Whorls 5, convex, separated by impressed and narrowly channelled sutures. Surface sculptured throughout with spiral equidistant conspicuously punctate grooves, the raised inter- vals smooth except for a fine engraved line along the middle of each. Grooves on body-whorl about 26. Aperture two-fifths to two-thirds the length of the shell. Columella having a spiral fold above, obliquely truncated at base. Alt. 13-5, diam. 7 mill. Alt. 10, diam. 4'5 mill. Catalina Island and San Diego, California (Cooper, Gabb. et a/.) ; Monterey (Dall). Tornatella punctoccelata CPR., Suppl. Rep. Brit. Asso. 1863, p. 646 ; Journ. de Conchyl. 1865, p. 139. — Actceon (Ridaxis) pundoccelata DALL, Amer. Journ. Couch, vii, p. 136. This species is well distinguished by the obliquely truncated base of its columella. It occurs in the Pliocene of San Diego Bay. Genus LEUCOTINA A. Adams, 1860. Leucotina A. AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. 1860, (3) v, p. 406, type L. niphonensis.—E. A. SMITH, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond. 1890, p. 298.— Myonia A. AD., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), v, p. 406, type M.japon- ica. Not Myonia Dana, Amer. Journ. Sci., iv, p. 158, 1847. — Monoptygma A. AD., (in part) P. Z. S. 1851, p. 222, and in Sowb., Thes. Conch, ii, p. 816. Not Monoptygma Lea. Shell ovate or elongated, usually rimate, thin, whitish, with con- vex whorls; sculptured with spiral punctured or subpunctate grooves. Aperture rather small, oblong, produced and rounded be- low, the outer lip simple or crenulated within, columella with one small oblique fold. Type L. niphonensis A. Ad. LEUCOTINA. 167 Soft parts unknown. With the genus Leucotina, Mr. E. A. Smith unites Adams' Myonia, proposed for shells of somewhat more elon- gated contour. There seems to be no difference between the two groups of more than specific importance. Leucotina contains shells more elongated than the true Actseons, but with a similar, though weaker, columellarfold,andthesamepunct- ure-grooved sculpture. The genus has therefore been generally held to belong to Actceonidce rather than to the Pyramidellidce, some members of which have a somewhat similar aspect. Fischer has constituted a group Actceopyramis for certain species formerly refer- red by Adams to Monoptygma, such as A. striata Gray, fulva A. Ad. and eximia Lischke. These seem to be quite distinct from Leucotina ; but the other species of Adams' Monoptygma may, with the exception of some longitudinally ribbed forms, be referred with- out violence to Leucotina. Tryon, in the eighth volume of the MANUAL, has enlarged Fischer's group more than is justifiable, by including these Leucotinas. L. DIAN^ A. Adams. PI. 18, figs. 68, 69, 88, 89. Shell ovate-conic, umbilicate, with elevated spire, the whorls con- vex, the last one ventricose ; white ; transversely strongly lirate, the interstices closely latticed. Aperture oval ; colurnella uniplicate, the inner lip subreflexed below, outer lip crenulated. (Ad.\ Bay of Jedo, Japan. Action diance AD., P. Z. S. 1854, p. 59. — Tornatella diance REEVE, Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 4, f. 19. — LISCHKE, Jap. Meeres-Conchyl. ii, p. 171 ; iii, p. 76. L. GIGANTEA Bunker. PI. 18, figs. 92, 93. Shell ovate-turritted, white, sometimes yellowish, subsolid, trans- versely regularly costate [see' detail fig.]. Whorls 8, convex, separated by impressed sutures, the last whorl half the length of the shell. Aperture ovate ; lip somewhat thickened, sulcate within ; columella sinuous, having a strong fold, the margin a little reflexed in the place of the umbilical chink, half covering it ; apex somewhat obtuse. Alt. 31, diam. 14 mill. Japan. Odontostomia gigantea DKR., Malak. Bl. xxvi, p. 71. — Actceon giganteus DKR., Index Moll. Mar. Jap., p. 160, pi. 2, f. 8, 9. 168 LEUCOTINA. The rather solid shell is encircled by regular ribs flat above and obsoletely striated, on the last whorl 22-26 in number. The inter- vening sulci are seen under a lens to be striated and cancellated. L. LYRATA (Cpr.) Reeve. PL 18, figs. 70, 71. Shell pyramidally turbinated, transversely prominently ridged and grooved throughout ; white ; spire sharply acuminated ; col- umella but little plaited; aperture small. (Rve.). Hong Kong, China. Parthenia lyruta CPR. MS. in Mus. Cuming. — Tornatella lyrata REEVE, Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 4, f. 21, 1865. Closely resembling L. modesta in form, but the surface instead of being finely linearly grooved, is closely strongly grooved and ridged (Rve\ L. SULCATA A. Adams. Shell white, solid, ovate-conic, umbilicated. Whorls 3J, a little flattened, transversely deeply sulcate, the sulci obsoletely punctate. Aperture oblong ; inner lip a little straightened, furnished with a vanishing fold. (Ad.). Corea Strait, 46 fms. (Ad.). Leucotina sulcata AD., Ann. Mag. N. H.(3),viii, p. 241, Sept., 1861. L. niphonensis A. Ad. is the nearest to this species, from which, however, it differs in being more conoidal, shorter and broader ; the transverse obscurely punctate grooves, moreover, are very deep, and the umbilicus is conspicuous and open. (Ad.). L. NIPHONENSIS A. Adams. PL 49, fig. 7. Shell white, thin, oblong-oval ; whorls 3£, a little convex, trans- versely sulcate, the interstices punctate. Aperture oblong, subpro- duced in front ; inner lip with an oblique fold, scarcely conspicuous ; outer lip acute, simple. (Ad.). •• 16 miles from Mino-Sima, off Niphon ; Strait oj Corea, 63 fms. (Ad.). Leucotina niphonensis AD., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), v, p. 407. — Tornatella niphonensis REEVE, Couch. Icon, xv, pi. 4, f. 16. This species is the type of Adams' genus Leucotina. L. EXARATA A. Adams. Shell ovate-conic, white, umbilicated, rather solid; whorls 4-], a little convex, transversely lirate, the interstices very delicately long- LEUCOTINA. 169 itudinally striated. Aperture ovate, acute behind ; parietal fold nearly median, small, oblique. (Ad.). Tabu-Sima, Japan, 25 fms. (Ad.). Leucotina exarata AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), vi, p. 421, Dec., 1860. L. INSCULPTA A. Adams. Shell acuminate-ovate, white, perforate, rather solid, whorls 4J, a little convex, transversely lirate, the interstices strongly punctate. Aperture oblong, narrowed behind, dilated in front, the inner lip thickened, parietal fold nearly concealed. (Ad.*). Strait of Corea, 46 fins. (Ad.). Leucotina insculpta A. AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), vi, p. 421 ; Ann. Mag. (3), viii, p. 138. Adams republished this species, from the same locality, but with a new diagnosis, in 1861. His later description is here given : Shell ovate-conic, rimate, white, rather solid. Spire elevated, acute. Whorls slightly convex, transversely lirate, the lirse flat, equally spaced, the interstices closely, subtly punctate. Aperture ovate; with a parietal fold above; lip subexplanate in front; um- bilical region impressed, rimate. (Ad.). L. PUNCTATA A. Adams. Shell ovate, rather solid, imperforate; spire produced, acute; whorls a little flattened, transversely sulcate, the sulci deeply punc- tate; aperture ovate; lip somewhat thickened in front; parietal fold superior. (Ad.). Tabu-Sima, Japan, 25 fms. (Ad.). Leucotina punctata AD., L c.} p. 139. L. JAPONICA A. Adams. Shell turrited-subulate, white, subpellucid ; whorls a little flat- tened, transversely sulcate, the sulci distant, interstices punctate ; aperture oblong, subreflexed in front; inner lip rather straight, furnished above with a scarcely conspicuous oblique fold; outer lip sulcate within, the margin crenulated. (Ad.). Strait of Corea ; off Niphon (Ad.). Myoniajaponica A. AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), v, p. 406, May, 1860. 170 LEUCOTINA. Most nearly allied to A. lauta A. Ad. This species is the type of the genus Myonia A. Ad. L. ELEGANS A. Adams. Shell subulate, thin, semi-opaque, graceful. Whorls 6, slightly convex, transversely sulcate, the sulci oblique, distant and punctate. Aperture ovate, acuminate posteriorly ; parietal fold thin, median, oblique ; lip simple. (Ad.). Gulf of Pe- Chili, 5 fms. (Ad.). Myonia elegans AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), viii, p. 241, Sept., 1861. Most like M. punctigera A. Ad., but more slender and transparent, with longer whorls and a thin inner lip ; the transverse grooves, moreover, are not so coarsely punctate. (Ad.). L. SCITULA A. Adams. Shell subulate-ovate/white, opaque, shining. Whorls 4, a little flattened, transversely sulcate, the sulci distant, closely punctate; sutures impressed. Last whorl large, elongated. Aperture ovate, dilated in front, acuminate behind; parietal fold conspicuous, oblique, lip simple. (Ad.). Mino-Sima, Japan, 63 fms. (Ad.). Myonia scitula AD., t. c., p. 242. A small species, somewhat similar in appearance to M. punctigera from the Gulf of Pe-chili, but shorter and more ovate. (Ad.). L. MODESTA A. Adams. PI. 49, figs. 8, 9. Shell elongate-conic, subpellucid, thin, white. Spire turrited- acute. Whorls slightly convex, transversely sulcate, the sulci equi- distant, punctate; longitudinally striated. Aperture oval; col- umella oblique, uni-plicate. (Ad.). Corrigidor 7 fms. (Cuming). Actceon modestus A. AD., P. Z. S. 1854, p. 60. — Torjiatella mod- esta REEVE, Conch. Icon, xv, pi. 4, f. 20. This is an elongated, semipellucid species, resembling more a Monoptygma than an Actceon, with the spire elevated, and the plait on the columella near the hind part. (Ad.). L. ESTHER Angas. PI. 49, fig. 19, Shell ovate, rather solid, scarcely rimate, whitish : whorls five, transversely grooved and crossed with very fine longitudinal lines; LEUCOTINA. 171 aperture oblong-ovate, half the length of the shell; columella white straight, parietal fold hardly visible. Length 2? lines, breadth H lines. Port Jackson, deep water (Coll. Angas). Leucotina esther ANG., P. Z. S. 1867, p. 116, 225, pi. 13, f. 31. L. SINUATA Angas. PI. 49, figs. 14, 15, 16. Shell elongately turreted, thin, semipellucid, white, transversely striated with narrow, equidistant, opaque diaphanous lines, and crossed on the last whorl with extremely delicate longitudinal striae; whorls 8, convex; sutures channelled; aperture ovate, angled above, rounded below ; columella arcuate, a little flattened and reflected over the body-whorl ; outer lip deeply sinuous above, form- ing a sharp angle at its junction with the last whorl, rounded and effuse below. Alt. 3J lines, diam. H lines. (Aug.). Dredged on the "Sow and Pigs" reef, Port Jackson (Brazier). Myonia sinuata ANG., P. Z. S. 1877, p. 39, pi. 5, f. 18. Although in this shell the slight plait or twist on the columella is not discernible, it otherwise resembles a Myonia; and I have, there- fore, placed it in that genus, which belongs to the Acteonidce, rather than with Monoptygma or Menestho. The sinuous outer lip is a re- markable feature in this species. (Aug.*). L. MINUTA Smith. PI. 60, fig. 17. Shell minute, oblong, white ; whorls 5, the nucleus rounded, intro- verted, spirally lirate ; the following whorls convex, with spiral delicate lirse (about 7 on the penultimate whorl), the interstices a little narrower than the lirse and very delicately longitudinally sculptured. Aperture ovate, acuminate above; below, with the arcuate and dilated columella, slightly effuse ; columellar fold central, distinct. Alt. 2}, diam, J mill. Shorter variety 2j mill, long, 1 mill. wide. (Smith). St. Helena. Leucotina minuta E. A. SM., P. Z. S. 1890, p. 298, pi. 24, f. 9. The apex of this species is peculiar, being introverted as it were, and partly enveloped by the succeeding whorl. It is not smooth as is frequently the case in other species, but obliquely spirally lirate. The raised lines iu the grooves between the ridges produce a sub- punctate appearance. 172 LEUCOTINA-ACT^ONINA. L. ELONGATA Sowerby. PI. 49, figs. 22, 23. Shell elongated, white ; spire turrited, very lightly convex, whorls 8, slightly convex, spirally sculptured with about 8 incised sulci, which are rather narrow, moderately deep and obscurely punctured ; sutures deep. Last whorl oblong. Aperture oblong- ovate, small, the columella straight, peristome simple. Length 13, diam. 3£ mill.; aperture long. 3£, width 2i mill. (/Sow6.). ^ Port Elizabeth, S. Africa. Leucotina elongata SOWB., Shells of S. Africa, p. 52, pi. 11, f. b\ A white shell, spirally grooved, of a more elongated form than the known species of the genus. (Sowb.~). L. PUNCTURATA Smith. See MANUAL VIII, p. 314. Whydah, W. Africa. Monoptygma (Myonia) puneturata E. A. S., P. Z. S., 1871, p. 734, pi. 75, f. 16. L. CASTA A. Adams. PI. 18, fig. 72. See MANUAL VIII, p. 314. Monoptygma casta A. AD., P. Z. S., 1851, p. 223; Thes. Conch., ii, p. 818. — Leucotina casta SOWB., Sh. S. Africa, p. 52. — Odostomia (Parthenia) casta WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 487. — Monoplygma concinna AD., Thes. Conch., ii, p. 819, pi. 172, f. 34. — Myoma concinna ANGAS., P. Z. S., 1867, p. 225. China Seas (Ad.) ; Port Jackson (Ang.) ; Bass Strait (Chall.) ; Port Elizabeth (Sowb.). L. LAUTA A. Adams, pi. 18, fig. 75. See MANUAL, VIII, p. 313. Philippines. L. AMOENA A. Adams, pi. 18, fig. 76. See MANUAL, VIII, p. 313. Philippines. L. SPECIOSA A. Adams, pi. 18, fig. 73, 74. See MANUAL, VIII, p. 314. Philippines. L. PURA A. Adams, pi. 18, fig. 77. See MANUAL, VIII, p, 314. New Zealand. L. SENEGALENSIS Malzan. Unfigured. Goree. Actceon (Amathis') senegalensis MALZ., Nachrbl. d. m. Ges., xvii, p. 29. Genus ACT^ONINA d'Orbignj, 1850. Acteonina D'ORB., Prodr. Paleont. Stratigr. Universelle, etc., p. 118, 226, type Chemnitzia carbonaria Koninck, Descr. Anim. Foss. Carb. Belg., pi. 41, f. 15. Paleont. Franoaise, ii, p. 161, 1850. ACT^ONINA. 173 Shell shaped like Acteeon, imperforate, oval or fusiform, with the spire prominent, but shorter than the last whorl. Whorls angular or channelled in the vicinity of the suture. Aperture long and nar- row, rounded at base, the columella concave, somewhat thickened, without folds or teeth. Type A. carbonaria Kon. This genus was proposed for fossil forms having the contour of a slender, long-apertured Actceon, but without folds upon the colum- ellar lip. Orbigny claims the date 1847 for Aclceonina, but it was not actually published in that year. See Prodr. Pal. Strat. Univ., i, p. lix. The genus has been restricted by Meek, who removed from it the peculiar groups Conactceon and Euconactwon. The typical forms extend from the Carboniferous to the Portlandian formation. The two recent species referred to the genus are to be regarded as very doubtful members of it. They are more likely to be an in- dependent group of foldless Actceonidae near Bullina, than descend- ants of this long extinct genus, the shells of which have a fades quite different. A. EDENTULA Watson. PI. 49, figs. 12, 13. Shell fragile, ovate, white, with a thin, chestnut-colored epider- mis, a bluntish scalar spire, a largish mouth, inner lip untoothed. Sculpture: Longitudinals — there are very many close set minute lines of growth, with here and there one much stronger than the rest, which cuts in like a fault on the spirals, interrupting their con- tinuity. Spirals — there are many regular, but not sharp-cut nor stippled furrows which corrugate even the interior surface of the shell : about 70 of these are on the body ; about 20 on the penulti- mate whorl. They are strongest toward the middle of the body- whorl, and somewhat faint toward the upper suture ; the flat surface between them which is about thrice their breadth, is more or less distinctly scored by a very faint furrow. Color opaque white, covered with a thin, glossy chestnut-colored epidermis, which is a little darker below the suture and on the base. Spire rather high, roundedly and bluntly conical, scalar. Apex slightly eroded, but evidently blunt, large and slightly inverted. Whorls 5£, somewhat convex, of rather rapid but regular increase ; the last is long and cylindrical, with a rounded produced base. Suture oblique, strong; axially impressed rather than channelled. Mouth long, transversely pear-shaped, narrowing very gradually above, open and rounded below. 174 ACT^ONl NA. Outer lip a little patulous above, a good deal so on the base ; it rises from the body-whorl at a right angle but immediately bends downwards and runs forward to the base quite straight and parallel to the axis; across the base it is slightly emarginate. Inner lip; a thin, narrow glaze crosses the body and borders the pillar, which is narrow and concave, with a rounded, slightly twisted, and feebly marginated edge. There is no tooth. Alt. 1 in. ; diam. O5. Penul- timate whorl, height 0'2. Mouth, height 0'65 ; breadth 0'31. This fine species is represented by only one somewhat broken specimen. (Wats.). Balfour Bay, Royal Sound, Kerguelen Island, 60 fms. (Challenger.) Aetceon edentulus WATS., Journ. L. Soc. Lond., xvii, p. 284. — Actceon (Actceonina) edentulus WATS., Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 632, pi. 47, f. 6. A. CHARIIS Watson. PL 49, fig. 5, 6. Shell small, ovate, thin, translucent white with flatly rounded whorls, a short subscalar very bluntly tipped spire, a largish roundish mouth, sinuated outer lip, and edentulous pillar. Sculpture : Longitudinals — there are numerous, unequal, sinuous hair-like, obsolete lines of growth. Spirals— the whole surface is scored with flattish rounded threads and shallow furrows of half their breadth between ; these become feeble in the middle of the whorls ; the fur- rows are not stippled. Color translucent-white and glossy. Spire conical, scarcely scalar. Apex extremely blunt, being sud- denly truncated and flattened ; the extreme tip is very slightly in- verted. Whorls 4%, constricted above, flatly rounded in the mid- dle, and very faintly constricted below ; the last is very little tumid, with a rounded and slightly produced base. Suture strong, slightly oblique, impressed and slightly channelled. Mouth roundly pear shaped, very bluntly pointed above. Outer lip : there is a strong, shallowish and wide sinus above; beknv this the lip edge (straight in its direction) is prominent, with a very slight emargi- nation on the patulous and rounded base-line. Inner lip: an ex- cessively thin and narrow glaze crosses the body, which is scarcely convex ; the line of junction with the pillar and out to the point of the shell is roundly concave: the lip edge on the pillar is narrow and sharp, and there is behind it a small furrow. Alt. O'l in.; diam. 0'05. Penultimate whorl, height O02. Mouth, height O05; breadth 0'03 inch. ( Wats.). Off San Miguel, Azores, in 1000 fms. (Challenger). BULLTNA. 175- Actceon (?) chariis WATSON, Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond., xvii, p. 288.— A (Acteonina) chariis WATS., Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 633, pi. 47, f. 7. This species is very slightly like Actceon exilis Jeffr., still more Actceon bovetensis Seguenza, but is obviously different from both. Genus BULLINA Ferussac, 1821. Bullina FER., Tab. Syst, p. xxx, 1821, proposed for Bullaundu- lata Brug., physis, amplustre, scabra and velum Dillw. — H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll., ii, p. 8. — A. AD., in Sovvb., Thesaurus Conch., ii, p. 563. — Bullinula (Beck) SWAINS., Malacol. p. 360, type B. lineata Sow., Man. f. 253.— GRAY, P. Z. S. 1847, p. 162. Shell oval, generally rimate, with short, projecting spire, sinistral apex, and large, swollen body-whorl ; rather thin, spirally punctate- grooved, decorated with red or brown lines. Aperture about three- fourths the shells' length, narrow above, widened below; the colum- ella vertical, often with an indistinct fold above, obliquely truncated at base. Operculum small, horny, linear, transverse. Type B. scabra. This genus differs from other Act(eonidce in the style of coloring,, the rather large distorted apex, and the very distinct basal trunca- tion of the columella, more marked than in Rictaxis. In Ferussac's publication of the name Bullina, no diagnosis is given, and his list of species includes representatives of four genera. The first species named, '' Bullaundulata Brug." (evidently an error for B. undata Brug.), cannot be considered the type because Brug- uiere described no species under that name, arid Ferussac did not even have the true undata Brug. in mind, his "undulata" being probably an Oriental species. It would hardly be allowable to fol- low a type through paths so devious, especially when the identifica- tion rests upon the correction of two errors in Ferussac's work^ on purely hypothetical grounds: first, that by "undulata Brug.," Ferussac meant " undata Brug. ; " and second, that by this name he intended to indicate the species brought from Guam by Freycinet, and subsequently described by Quoy as Bullcea guamense. This inference is based upon Ferussac's words, " deux tentacules dis- tincts," his information being probably obtained from Freycinet's specimens. It seems to me that we can hardly agree with Martens that B. guamensis, or with Fischer that B. undata is the type of Bullina ; too many guesses being involved in either case. Ferussac included also in Btillina, " B. amplustre" the type of the prior genus 176 BULLINA. Aplustrum Schura.; B. physis and velum, belonging to Hydatina Schum. ; and B. scabra, which H. & A. Adams and others have con- sidered the type of the genus. The few species are Indo-Pacific in distribution. Key to Species. a. Shell with spiral and longitudinal lines or bands of red. b. Spiral bands wide, B. bruguieri. bb. Spiral lines narrow, B. scabra. aa. Shell translucent, with or without two spiral brown lines. b. Columella obliquely truncated below, B.vitrea. bb. Columella not truncated at base, B. deshayesii. B. SCABRA Gmelin. PI. 45, figs. 18-22. Shell ovate, obese, rimate or perforate; white or faint roseate with two distant red spiral lines, and numerous arcuate or zig-zag longitudinal red lines. Spire very short; whorls about four, the nuclear whorl large, polished, reversed and distorted ; the following whorls closely spirally grooved, the grooves formed of confluent oblong punctures; interspaces flat above, becoming narrower and rounded on the base. Aperture large, narrow behind ; outer lip arched forward; columella vertical, straight, showing a very slight fold above, and obliquely truncated at base ; the free edge of the columella recurved over the more or less open umbilical chink. Alt. 12, diam. 7'7 mill. (Port Stephens, K S. Wales). Alt. 14, diam. 9 mill, (Nemoto, Boshiu, Japan). Java (Chemnitz) ; Mauritius, Polynesia (Martens) ; Port Eliza- beth (Sowb.) ; Coogee Bay, Port Stephens, Middle Harbor, Lake Macquarie, Port Jackson, N. S. Wales, Australia (Brazier, Angas. Cox et al.) ; Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand (Hutton) ; Sandwich Islands (Pse.) ; Nemoto, Boshiu, Japan (F. Stearns). Bullet scabra, etc., CHEMNITZ, Conchyl. Cab. x, p. 118, pi. 146, f. 1352, 1353; GMELIN, Syst. Nat. (13), p. 3434, and of DILLWYN Catal., i, p. 484. LAMARCK, and other authors. — Bullina scabra AD., Thes. Conch., ii, p. 563, pi. 120, f. 1.— SOWB., Conch. Icon., xviii, f. 1. — MARTENS, Moll. Mauritius, p. 303. — DKR., Ind. Moll. Mar. Jap. p. 163. — Aplustrum scabrum WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 633. Valuta ziczac MUHLF., Ges. Naturforsch. Freunde zu Berlin, Mag. fiir die neuesten Entdeck., etc., viii, 1818, p. 5, pi. 1, f. 4. Conf. MKE., Mai. Bl., i, p. 40.— Tornatella ziczac MARTENS & BULLINA. 177 LANGKAVEL, Donqm Bismarckianum, eine Samml. Siidsee- ConchyL, p. 51, pi. 2, f. 20, 187l.—Bulla lineata GRAY, Ann. Philos. (N. S.) ix, p. 408, 1825.— WOOD, Index Test. SuppL, p. 9, no. 1, pi. 3, f. 1. — Bullina lineata A. AD., Thes. Conch., ii, p. 563, pi. 120, f. 2.— SOWB., Conch. Icon., xviii, pi. 1, f. 2.— BRAZIER, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, x, p. 92, 1885.— BUTTON, Man. N. Z. Moll., p. 120, 1880.— ANGAS, P. Z. S., 1867, p. 225.— Bullina undata H. & A. AD., Gen. Rec. Moll., ii, p. 8 ; iii, pi. 56, f. 5a, not Bulla undata Brug. — Bullina lauta PEASE, P. Z. S., 1860, p. 19. — SOWB., in Conch. Icon., xviii, f. 5. In the series of specimens before me from New South Wales (Cox), Sandwich Is. (Pease) and Japan (Stearns), I am unable to see differences of any specific value. The absolute size, the eleva- tion of the spire, the prominence of the obsolete columellar folds and the width of the umbilical perforation vary somewhat, but in my opinion the supposed species lineata, ziczac and lauta are not distinct from the widely distributed Indo-Pacific B. scabra. B. BRUGUIERI A. Adams. PI. 45, figs. 23, 24. Shell oval, ventricose, perforated. Pink, with two yellowish-* white bands, crossed by longitudinal pink undulating lines; trans- versely ribbed, ribs fiat, rough ; interstices with elevated longitudi- nal lines. Spire prominent, apex obtuse. Whorls 3, rounded. Aperture narrowly ovate, anteriorly produced ; outer lip acute, grooved internally ; inner lip posteriorly thin, reflected, adnate, anteriorly twisted (Ad,). Ceylon (Sibbald). Bullina bruguieri AD., in Thes. Conch., ii, p. 563, pi. 120, f. 3 (1855 ?).— SOWB., in Conch. Icon., xviii, pi. 1, f. 3, 1870. I have not seen this form, which seems to be distinguished from B. scabra by its longer spire and broad spiral bands. B. VITREA Pease. PL 45, figs. 25, 26. Shell ovate, thin, fragile, white, with or without one or two sets of two or three fine transverse black lines on body whorl, transversely finely grooved ; interstices punctured ; spire obtuse ; apex acute ; whorls four; aperture oval, dilated at the base; slight fold at the base of the columella (not imperforate, umbilicated). (P«e.). Sandwich Is. (Pse.). Bullina vitrea PSE., P. Z. S., 1860, p. 19. — SOWB., Conch. Icon., xviii, pi. 1, f. 4. 178 BULLINA-OVULACT^EON. Of the two specimens (types) in the British Museum, one is with- out the bands. The columella is obliquely truncated. This species differs from the preceding in being very pellucid, in the gray, not red color of the spiral bands, and the absence of longitudinal wavy lines. B. DESHAYESII Pilsbry. PL 45, figs. 27, 28. Shell ovate-turgid, thin pellucid ; apex obtuse, white ; encircled by two narrow, distant black lines. Spire short, obtuse. Whorls 5, narrow, convex, separated by a subcanaliculate depressed suture ; last whorl large, obtuse with base transversely delicately sulcate. Aperture ovate-elongate, narrow and subemarginate behind, colum- ella cylindrical, narrow, straight. Alt. 15, diam. 10 mill. (ZM.). Island of Reunion (Dh.). Bulla vitrea Pease, DESHAYES, Moll. Reun., p. 56, pi. 8, f. 2, 3.— Bullina vitrea MARTENS in Mobius' Reise n. Mauritius, p. 304. This species differs from B. vitrea Pse.in the non-truncated colum- ella and more obese form. The shell is thin, semi-transparent, milk-white, with two lines of intense black-brown. The suture is deep and somewhat channelled ; last whorl five-sixths the entire length of the shell. Entire surface sculptured with fine, equal, shallow spiral grooves, in the bottoms of which a lens shows a regu- lar punctation like that of Actceon. The outer lip is arched forward, forming a sort of shallow sinus behind. Genus OVULACT^EON Dull, 1889. Ovulactceon DALL, Blake Gastropoda, Bull. M. C. Z., xviii, p. 42. Shell cyprseiform, involute, with an apical perforation, as in Bulla; columella simple, without plaits; margin of the aperture continuous, simple, thickened, the callus on the body elevated, parallel with the outer lip; aperture narrow, almost linear, slightly effuse at the extremities, as long as the shell. Type 0. Meekii Dall. This interesting form resembles an involute Globiconcha with perforate apex and thickened aperture, or a rounded Actceonella without plaits. In the unplicate series of the Adceonidce it holds a place analogous to that of Cyprceactceon White among the plicate forms. (Dall). O. MEEKII Dall. PI. 49, figs. 20, 21. Shell with the outline of a small Cyprcea, like C. edentula, widest in its posterior third, white, polished with fine, distinct, im- OVULACT^ON-KLEINELLA. 179 pressed incremental lines, and the faintest trace of spiral linear markings ; a depressed line or sulcus indicates a previous resting stage half a whorl behind the present thickened aperture in the older specimens ; in the younger, the varical sulcus is three quarters of a whorl behind the aperture. The apex in the older shell is per- forate, the whole rounding over the perforation, and the spire in- visible ; in the younger specimen the perforation is proportionally wider, and about half a turn can be seen. The lines of growth be- come stronger and more regularly grooved as they pass over the summit into the pit. The aperture is very narrow, curved with the profile of the shell, and extending beyond the summit. Unlike Cyprcea, the thickening of the outer lip is altogether internal, simple, and smooth, the callus opposite is narrow, with a sharply-defined abrupt outer margin, and the inner margin raised sharply up paral- lel with the outer lip, with which it is continuous at the extremi- ties : the flat part of the callus is widest anteriorly, polished but not smooth, but the raised edge is without teeth or transverse striation of any sort. The extremities of the aperture are elevated to follow the profile of the body of the shell. Lon. of largest specimen, 5'5 ; max. lat. 3*0 mill. (Dall). Off Havana (Sigsbee) in 450 fins ; West of North Bernini, Bahamas, in 200 fms., sand (Dr. Rush). 0. meekii DALL, /. c., p. 43, pi. 33, f. 3, 4. This extremely interesting shell is well shown by the figure. There can be little question as to its probable relations. The char- acters of the aperture are essentially different from anything among the Cyprceidce, and it has not the polished laquer which species of that family owe to the expanded mantle-margin. Only one speci- men was obtained at either locality (Dall). Genus KLEINELLA A. Adams, 1860. Kleinella AD., Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), v, p. 302, April, 1860, type K. cancellaris. Shell ovate, thin, umbilicate, with cancellated surface; spire pro- duced, the apex obtuse; aperture elongated, anteriorly produced and entire ; inner lip thin, simple ; outer lip angled behind, straight in the middle, margin acute. This genus most nearly resembles Actceon, but is without any fold on the columella; the umbilicus moreover is wide and deep, and the surface of the shell is cancellated. The outer lip forms an angle 180 KLEINELLA-TORNATINID^E. posteriorly with the last whorl, and is straight in the middle (Ad.)t This is a group of entirely problematic affinities, but, in my opinion, it does not belong to the Actceonidce. The species are here described because precedent has established this position for the group. K. CANCELLARIS A. Adams. Shell oblong, widely and profoundly umbilicated ; spire rather raised, the apex obtuse ; pale brown ; whorls 3£, slightly convex (the last ventricose), regularly cancellated. Aperture oval; inner lip thin, simple ; outer lip straight in the middle, angulated behind. Length 3i mill. (Ad.). Strait of Corea, 63 fms. (Ad.). Kleinella cancellaris AD., Ann. Mag. (3), v, p. 302. K. SULCATA A. Adams. Shell oblong, thin, turbinate, deeply umbilicated ; spire elevated, conoid ; dull white ; transversely sulcate, the sulci distant, inter- stices longitudinally closely striated ; whorls 3i, flat, angulated above ; last whorl ventricose. Aperture oblong, anteriorly everted and subeffuse; lip thin, angulated behind (Ad.). Suwonado Sea, Japan, 7 fms. (Ad.). Kleinella sulcata A. AD., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), ix, p. 295, April, 1862. Family TOKNATINID^E Fischer. Shell spiral, cylindrical or fusiform, external, capable of contain- ing the soft parts ; spire short or sunken and concealed, the apex more or less turned over ; aperture long and narrow, wider below ; columella with a fold or simple; umbilicus none or very narrow. Animal with the foot shorter than the shell, entire behind ; head- shield short, quadrangular, produced in two erected processes behind, near the bases of which are the eyes. Radula-teeth wanting ; giz- zard armed with three oval, tuberculate plates (See pi. 60). These snails differ from Scaphandridce in the shorter differently shaped head-shield, the lack of epipodial (lateral) lobes andradula; the differently shaped gizzard-plates, etc. They are unlike Actceon- idce in wanting operculum and radula. Although the characters of the animal are so obvious and distinc- tive, it is by no means easy to classify many species known by the shell alone, certain forms referred to Retusa being excessively similar in ACTION I D^E. PLATE 100 101 ACT^EONID^E. PLATE 19 ACTVEONID^. PLATE 20 PLATE 20 A 62 63 65 66 67 TORNATINID^:. PL-ATE 21 TORNATINID^, Etc. 16 22 23 27 26 28 30 29 31 3E 33 35 36 4-0 37 38 39 41 TORNATINID^E, Etc. PLATE 23 45 46 43 44 47 « 50 51 48 53 52 56 54 55 57 58 59 \I 61 60 65 67 71 70 74 TORNATINIDyE. PLATE 24 TORNATINID/E. PLATE 25 TORNATINID^E, Etc. PILATE 26 79 80 SCAPHANDRID^E. PLATE 27 81 87 88 0 I, 82 83 84 85 86 89 90 91 93 SCAPHANDRID^E. PL-ATE 28 4-5 46 47 SCAPHANDRID^:. PLATE 29 17 SCAPHANDRID^E. PLATE 30 ID 12 SCAPHANDRID^E. PLATE 31 SCAPHANDRID^E. PLATE 32 SCAPHANDRIDvE. PLATE 33 69 BULLID^E. PLATE 34 BULLID^E, PLATE 35 BULl-ID^E. PLATE 36 BULLID>E. PLATE 37 38 BULLID^E. PLATE 38 50 53 54 51 65 BULLIDvE. 76 79 BULLION. PLATE 4O 82 83 80 81 84 85 86 •-> 89 90 88 i 92 94 95 96 91 93 97 1 1 98 99 100 I 2 IV ' - 67 86 10 BULLID^E. PLATE 41 « M 12 15 16 2~r '••• • • ~ 26 31 30 17 f 27 28 38 33 24 29 34 35 • 36 37 38 39 BULLID^E. PLATE 42 36 37 38 TORNATINID^E-TORNATINA. 181 shell characters to the Cylichna group of Scaphandridce. It is there- fore very important to observe the soft parts when they can be obtained, for it is only by such patient observation by local natural, ists that these interesting little snails can be understood and rightly classified. In Tornatinidce some whole genera and subgenera, such as Tornatina and Sao, are still known only by the shells ; and many- species of the other groups are doubtless incorrectly placed at pres- ent. Synopsis of Genera. Genus TORNATINA A. Ad. Shell cylindrical, with conic or flattened spire, the apex projecting and mamillar, sinistral, tilted, at an angle with the body-whorl ; suture channelled. Columella with one fold. Genus RETUSA Brown. Shell cylindrical, the spire slightly convex, flat or concave, apex intorted ; suture not distinctly channelled. Columella with one fold or none. Section Cylichnina Monts. Shell Cylichna-sh aped, with the summit perforated in the centre, spire sunken. Type B. umbilicata Mont. Section Pyrunculus Pils. Shell pear-shaped, wide below, narrow above ; spire as in Cylichnina. Type C. pyriformis. Genus VOLVULA A. Adams. Shell fusiform, the last whorl forming a projecting process above the spire, apical perforation narrow or closed ; aperture as long as the shell, narrow; columella with no distinct fold. Genus TORNATINA A. Adams, 1850. Tornatina AD., Thes. Conch., ii, p. 554. — FISCHER, Manuel, p. 555. Shell cylindrical or oblong with conical or flattened spire, the apex projecting and mamillar, sinistral, tilted so that its axis lies at an angle of about 90° with that of the shell. Suture channelled. Aperture long, narrow above, dilated and rounded below, the outer lip arched forward, retreating at suture and base ; columella arcuate, calloused, with one spiral fold at its junction with the whorl. Type T. voluta Q. & G. Animal externally as in Retusa (pi. 60, f. 18, T. voluta.} 13 182 TORNATINA. Tornatina differs from Retusa in the conspicuously channelled suture and the peculiar, projecting apex ; but it has been united with that group by some authors, and until the soft parts are known, the exact status of the group is a mere matter of opinion. We pre- fer not to assume, with Fischer, that in anatomy it is like "Coleo- physis," although that is not in the least improbable; for that assumption would force us to disturb the received nomenclature to a radical degree ; and it is always better to continue to use well known generic names until the necessary changes can be placed upon a sound basis. At present, the dentition of Tornatina is absolutely unknown ; and as that name has become well established in conch- ological nomenclature, I consider that no good end would be reached by reducing it to a subgenus of Retusa — a course inevitable if Fischer's ideas are followed to their logical conclusions. This genus consists of small and minute shells, white or light brown in color, with peculiarly projecting, teat-like, uptilted, nuclear shell and one small columellar fold. The distribution of the group is practically world wide. They live at moderate or considerable depths, and probably subsist mainly upon Foramiuifera. The species are numerous, but not especially- difficult to distinguish if properly described and figured ; but, unfortunately, a considerable number of A. Adams' forms are known by poor, small figures only, with insufficient descriptions ; so that until these are refigured from the types, their identification will not be easy. Species of the Azores and West Africa. T. PROTRACT A Dautzenberg. PI. 25, figs. 39, 40, 41. Shell 1*5 mill, high, *75 mill, wide, ovate-cylindrical, convoluted, very shining ; first whorl intorted, very much projecting ; last whorl rather flattened below the suture, then becoming rather convex. Surface smooth, with very fine growth-lines only. Aperture elon- gated, contracted above, dilated toward the base ; columella simple, arcuate ; lip sharp, subarcuate ; color white, throughout (Dautz). Pico, Azores, in 1287 meters. Tornatina protracta DAUTZ., Res. Campagnes Sci. Prince Albert I, p. 22, pi. l,f. 4, 1889. In its general form, as well as the conformation of the apex, this species approaches T. leptekes Wats., but it is smaller, less elongated, with fewer whorls. TORNATINA. 183 T. KNOCKERI Smith. PL 22, fig. 28. Shell cylindrical, whitish ; spire turrited, very short ; apex tuber- cular; whorls 5, the last polished, smooth, angular and plicate above. Aperture nearly as long as the last whorl ; lip straight ; •columella uniplicate. Alt. 4'5, diam. 2 mill. (Smith). Whydah, West Africa. Tornatina knockeri SMITH, P. Z. 8., 1871, p. 738, pi. 75. f. 30.— Conf. COOKE, Ann. Mag. N. H. (5), xvii, p. 129. Easily known by its flattish spire, tubercular apex, and the pli- cations at the upper part of the bodv-whorl (Smith'). This species is closely allied to the Red Sea forms mucronata Phil, and issellii Pils. Species of the East Coast of America and the West Indies. The forms found in this region all have a conspicuous, mamillar, upturned nucleus. a. Surface spirally striated. b. Large, alt. about 10 mill., bullata. bb. Small, alt. about 2 mill., recta. aa. Surface of body-whorl without spiral striae, canaliculata, candei, liratispira. T. BULLATA Kiener. PI. 50, fig. 30 ; pi. 22, figs. 17-19. Shell solid, ivory-white, cylindrical, a little constricted in the middle, having faint growth-striae and very fine spiral wavy strice all over, but fainter on the shoulder. Spire conical, terraced, the apex minute, overturned, and projecting, mamillar. Suture deeply chan- nelled, but whorls not concave above. Aperture long and narrow above, the outer lip inflexed somewhat, columella short, concave, with one stout fold. Alt. 11, diam. 5 mill. ; alt. 9, diam. 3*8 mill. Florida Keys, entire West Indies. Tornatella bullata KIENER, Sp. et Icon., Coq. Viv., p. 5, pi. 1, f. 4. —Tornatina bullata MORCH, Mai. BL, xxii, p. 171. — DALL Cat. Mar. Moll. S.-E. U. S. p. Sl.—Bulla canaliculata ORB. (not Say), Moll. Cuba p. 133, pi. 4 bis, f. 21-24.— Tornatina olivula A. AD., Thes. Conch., ii, p. 569, pi. 121, f. 34. This is the largest of the West Indian Tornatinas. It has the same general form of T. canaliculata and T. candei, but is distin- guished by its close spiral striation. The synonymous T. canalicu- lata Orb. (not Say) is shown in pi. 22, f. 17-19 ; and T. olivulu Ad., also a synonym, in pi. 25, f. 47. 184 TORNATINA. T. RECTA Orbigny. PI. 22, figs. 13, 14, 15. Shell oblong, cylindrical, straight, thin, white, shining, delicately spirally substriate; spire short, the suture channelled. Aperture linear, straight above, suddenly dilated below, the columella with a slight fold. Alt. 2, diam. 1 mill. Florida Keys ; entire West Indies ; St. Helena. Bulla recta ORB., Moll. Cuba, i, p. 131, pi. 4 bis, f. 17-20.— Tor- natina recta MORCH., Malak. Bl., xxii, p. 171. — DALL, Rep. Blake Gastr., p. 45 ; Cat. Mar. Moll. S.-E. IT. S., p. 84.— SMITH, P. Z. S., 1890, p. 297. Distinguished from T. candei by the weakness of the columellar fold and the spiral striation ; from bullata by its small size. T. CANALTCULATA Say. PI. 22, fig. 23 ; pi. 50, fig. 25, 26. Shell small, cylindrical, with low, conoidal terraced spire and mamillar, strongly projecting minute apex. Ivory-white, with very delicate growth-lines but no other sculpture. Whorls separated by a channelled suture, concave-topped and more or less keeled at the shoulder ; the last whorl cylindrical, tapering below. Aperture about eight-tenths the shell's length, narrow above, broadly rounded below, the outer lip thin, arched forward, retracted below ; colum- ella thickened, concave, with a strong spiral fold. Alt. 5*5, diam. 2'75 mill. (S. Carolina specimen). Alt. 4'2, diam. 2'] mill. (Massa- chusetts specimen). Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to Haiti, and Silam, Yucatan, 0 to 63 fms. Volvaria canaliculata SAY, Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., v, p. 211, 1822. — Bullina canaliculata SAY, Amer. Conch., pi. 19. — Bulla canaliculata GLD., Inv. Mass., p. 166, f. 97. — Utriculus canaliculatus STIMP., Check-lists, 4. — BINNEY-GOULD, Invert. Mass., p. 219, f. 510. — WATSON, Chall. Rep. Gastr., p. 655. — Tornatina canaliculata AD., Thes. Conch., ii, p. 566, pi. 121. f. 25.— DALL, Blake Gastr., p. 45 ; Cat Mar. Moll. S.-E. U. S., p. 84.— Bulla obstricta GLD., Silli- man's Journ. Sci., xxxviii, p. 196, 1840 ; Invert. Mass., p. 167, f. 96.— Tornatina obstricta AD., Thes., ii, p. 566, t. 121, f. 29. This is a larger species than the West Indian T. candei, with smaller nuclear shell. Plate 50, figs. 25, 26, represent New Bedford specimens. Fig. 23 of pi. 22 was drawn from a Massachusetts speci- men which had lost its apex, a common mutilation, even in living shells. The apex is uptilted at an angle of 90°, as in T. candei, etc., but it is much smaller than in that species, although the shell is TORNATINA. 185 larger. Fig. 24, of plate 22, represents B. obstricta Gould, which seems to have no distinctive characters. T. CANDEI Orbigny. PI. 22, figs. 21, 22 ; pi. 50, figs. 27, 28, 29. Shell small, cylindrical, tapering below, milk-white, rather solid but thin ; spire conical, terraced, the apex large and projecting. Surface shining, smooth, except for faint growth-lines; whorls of spire concave or channelled above. Aperture long and narrow ; uter lip strongly arched forward, retracted at base ; columella short, concave, with a moderately strong fold. Alt. 2-6, diam. 1-3 mill. Alt. 3, diam. 1-4 mill. Alt. 4, diam, 1-8 mill. Off Hatteras ; West Florida and Fla. Keys, South to Martinique, 0— 48 fms. Bulla candei ORB., Moll. Cuba, i, p. 128, pi. 4, f. l-4.— Torna- Una candei VERRILL, Trans. Conn. Acad., vi, p. 468, pi. 45, f. 13. — DALL, Blake Rep., 45; Cat. Mar. Moll., S.-E. U. S., p. 84. This species is constantly much smaller than T. canaliculata, with larger, apex and more strongly curved outer lip. The spire varies in height, being often somewhat scalar. Morch sees this species .in Bulla pusilla Pfr., but the description of that form is hardly suffi- cient for positive identification. T. PUSILLA Pfeiffer. Shell oblong, solid, shining white ; spire short, the apex mamil- late; whorls 2, the last four times as long as the spire; columella uniplicate at base ; outer lip arcuate in the middle ; aperture nar- rowed above. Alt. 2, diam. \ lines (Pfr.~). Cuba (Pfr.). Bulla pusilla PFR., Arch. f. Naturg., 1840, p. 250.— MORCH, Mai. BL, xxii, p. 171. Probably identical with T. candei Orb. The T. pusilla of A. Ad. (Thes. p. 568) seems to be something different. It is said to have a rather wide umbilical fissure. T. LIRATISPIRA Smith. Unfigured. Shell cylindrical, a little wider above than at base, white, shining, striated with curved growth-lines. Whorls 5, acutely margined above, the first tubercular ; spire very short, turrited ; suture widely channelled, divided by a hair-like thread in the middle ; aperture 186 TORNATINA. narrow, dilated at base ; columella spirally one-folded. Alt. 6, diam. 3 mill. ($w.). Rio Janeiro. T. liratispira E. A. SMITH, Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), ix, p. 354. This species is allied to T. knockeri from West Africa, but it may be known from it by its larger size, and the absence of the plications at the upper part of the body whorl ; the columellar fold also is less strongly developed. The very fine ridge in the middle of the sutural channel Droduces the appearance of a double edge to the whorls (so- Some specimens of T. canaliculata show a spiral thread in the sutural channel. Species of the Californian and Panamic Provinces. a. Shell without spiral striae or color lines. b. Upper part of body-whorl vertically ribbed, harpa. bb. Entire shell smooth except for growth-striae, cerealis, incultaf infrequens, carinata. aa. Shell large, solid, brown, with spiral strise, culcitella. T. HARPA Dall. PI. 22, fig. 16. Shell small white of four and a half whorls ; tabulate and sharply carinate above, characterized by sharp grooves and raised lines parallel with the lines of growth, which extend half over the whorls and become obsolete anteriorly ; apex mammillated, minute, globular, prominent, suture canaliculated. Anterior portion of the last whorl smooth. Last whorl slightly narrower above. Aperture long, narrow, effuse below, with a deep narrow sinus at the suture. Columella thickened with a thin layer of white callus, columellar plait obsolete in the adult, rather prominent in young shells. Car- ina intersected by the grooves and slightly dentate. Alt. '24, diam. '12 inch. (Dall). Monterey, California ; adhering to the tentaculse of Actinias ; three specimens. Tornatina harpa DALL, Amer. Journ. Conch, vii, p. 136, pi. 15,. f. 11 (Nov. 2, 1871). This pretty and very distinct species is unlike any other from the coast, and is readily recognized by the characteristic grooves, (Dall). TORNATINA. 187 T. INFREQUENS C. B. Adams. Unjiyured. Shell cylindric, not compressed about the middle; white ; smooth; apex papillary, very minute and prominent; spire moderately elevated, convex ; whorls four and one-half, acutely shouldered, with a deeply channelled suture ; aperture long and narrow, ante- riorly rounded ; labrum very thin, much advanced along the middle ; columella terminating in a very robust spiral plait. Mean divergence about 130° ; length '28 inch ; breadth '11 inch ; length of spire *03 inch. (Ad.). Alt. -14, alt. of spire '03, diam. -05 inch. (Cpr.~). Panama (C. B. Ad., 2 specimens) ; Mazatlan, very rare, on Spondylus calcifer. (Cpr.). Bulla (Tornatina) infrequens C. B. AD., Panama Shells, p. 214, 319. — Tornatina infrequens CPR., Maz. Cat., p. 171. — ? Bulla (Torn- tina) gradlis MKE., Zeitschr. f. Mai. 1850, p. 162, not of A. Adams. Menke's species being white, not horn-coloured like T. gradlis from the China Seas, and being identified from a single specimen wedged in the mouth of a dead Conus puncticulatus, is almost cer- tainly the same as that described by C. B. Ad. from Panama. T. infrequens is distinguished by the olive-like spire, more or less ele- vated and deeply channeled along the suture. The body whorl is not swollen anteriorly, and the fold lies slanting on its base. (Cpr.). T. CARINATA Carpenter. Unfigured. Shell cylindrical, white, smooth, acutely carinated below the ap- pressed suture, between the suture and the carina excavated. Whorls 5, the two earlier being discoidaland affixed vertically upon the spire, which is more or less apparent. Aperture elongate, the lip acute and produced in the middle, slightly sinused behind ; inner lip thin, swollen above the junction with the columella proper. Columella provided with a stout spiral fold where it joins the parietal wall. (Cpr.). Alt. '037 (smallest specimen). Alt. '11, diam. '05 inch.; length of spire *02 inch. Mazatlan, on Chama and Spondylus, very rare (Liverpool Colin.) ; San Diego, California. Tornatina carinata CPR., Maz. Cat., p. 171. — Rep. Brit. Asso. Adv. Sci. 1856, pp. 250, 313 ; Moll. Western America, Smiths. Misc. Coll. no. 252, pp. 37, 97, 133, 194. 188 TORNATINA. Known from T. infrequens (1) by the smaller size, and more irreg- ular spire ; (2) by the suture, which is not channeled ; (3) by the shoulder, which is sharply carinated, with the space hollowed be- tween the keel and suture; (4) by the swelling of the body-whorl at the base ; and (5) by the plait which runs more transversely, below the body whorl, instead of obliquely, almost on it, as in T. infrequens. By some of the above characters it is further distinguished from T. cerealis Gld. which resembles T. infrequens much more closely than this species. All the three forms begin life as a small discoidal body, like a tumid Planorbis. After making about two turns of this, they proceed in the regular way affixing the disk vertically, or sometimes in a slanting direction at the top of the spire. The length of spire in this species, which is not so rare as T. infrequens, is ex- tremely variable. (Cpr.\ T. INCULTA Gould. PL 59, fig. 15. Shell minute, ivory-white, rather solid, elongate-oval, longitudin- ally most minutely striated ; spire elevated ; whorls 4, squarely ter- raced ; aperture about seven-eights the length of the shell, dilated below; outer lip inflexed, rounded behind; columella arcuate, calloused, with one fold. The spire is sometimes scarcely exserted. (Gld. & Cpr.). Alt. 5'5, diam. 2'5 mill. San Diego (Gld.) ; Monterey (Gabb), California. Tornatina inculta Gld., GLD. & CPR., P. Z. 8. 1856, p. 203.— CPR. Brit. Asso. Adv. Sci. 1856, pp. 227, 313, 351 ; Moll. Western N. A. p. 79. My figure is drawn from a beach-worn specimen collected by Gabb. The upper half of the body-whorl is rather contracted, the lower half swollen, and the sutures are rather deeply channelled. T. CEREALIS Gould. PI. 50, figs. 39, 40. Shell cylindrical, with very short spire, light brown. Surface smooth except for curved growth-striie. Aperture long, narrow, somewhat widened below, the outer lip arched forward ; columella rather straight, oblique, with a spiral fold. Alt. 4, diam. 1-9 mill. San Diego, California to Vancouver Island. Balla (Tornatina) cerealis GLD., Bost. Journ. N. H. vi, 1852, p. 375 ; Otia p. 184.— GLD. & CPR., P. Z. S. 1856, p. 203.— CPR., Rep. TORNATINA. 189 Brit. Asso. 1856, pp. 227, 313, 349 ; Moll. W. N. A., Smith. Misc. Coll. 252, p. 23, 133. The height of the spire varies, being sometimes nearly flat, some- times low-conoidal; the uptilted nucleus projecting. In all adult specimens I have seen, the nucleus has been lost by erosion, as in the figures. T. CULCITELLA Gould. PI. 50, fig. 38. Shell cylindrical-fusiform, with elevated, conical spire ; solid ; white under a very thin buff cuticle, densely marked with close finely undulating, chestnut spiral lines. Whorls 5, separated by deep sutures, the apical whorl mamiljar and uptilted. Aperture long and narrow above, about eight-tenths the entire length of the shell, dilated below, the outer lip arched forward, abruptly and deeply retracted above, effuse below. Columellar fold very strong. Alt. 8-5, diam. 3*2 mill. (San Pedro specimen). Alt. 1, diam. I inch. (Old.). Santa Barbara (Jewett) and San Pedro, California. Bulla (AJcera~) culcitella GLD., Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist, vi, p. 375, Apr., 1852 ; Otia, p. 184.— Tornatina culdtella GLt>. & CPU., P. Z. S. 1856, p. 203.— CPR., Kep. Brit. Asso. Adv. Sci. 1856, pp. 313, 349 ; Moll. W. N. A., Smiths. Misc. Coll. 252, p. 23, 133.— KEEP, West Coast Shells, p. 125. f. 114. The close spiral brown striae are characteristic, as well as the •conically elevated spire. T. EXIMIA Baird. Unfigured. Shell cylindrical, greenish-buff, striated, the strise minute, close, undulating ; spire very short and concavely excavated. Aperture long, effuse at base ; lip acute , columella abruptly arcuate at base. Alt. 12-5 mill. (Ed.). Esquimalt Harbor, Vancouver's Island. Bullina (Tornatina} eximia BD., P. Z. S. 1863, p. 67, and in Lord's The Naturalist in Vancouver Isl. and Brit. Columbia, ii, p. 361, 1866.— Tornatina eximia Bd., CPR., Moll. Western N. A., pp. S9, 90, 133. 190 TORNATINA. Indo- Pacific and Australian species. T. SANDWICENSIS Pease. Unfigured. Shell small, cylindrical, shining, white, finely striated transversely ; spire elevated ; whorls 4 ; aperture contracted posteriorly, dilated anteriorly; slight fold on columella. (Pse.). Sandwich Is. (Pease). T. sandwicensis PSE., P. Z. S. 1860, p. 19. T. EXILIS Dunker. PI. 22, fig. 25. Shell white, thin, subdiaphanous, ovate-oblong, very delicately longitudinally striated ; spire conical, channelled and mucronate. Aperture narrow above, dilated toward the base; columella with an obsolete fold. Alt. 4J, diam. 2 mill. (Dkr.~). Japan. Sulla exilis DKR., Malak. Bl. vi, p. 222 ; Moll. Jap., p. 25, pi. 2, f. 14 ; Index, p. 164. — LISCHKE, Jap. Meeres-Conch., p. 105. T. DELICATULA A. Adams. Unfigured. Shell cylindric-ovate, white, thin, shining, the spire truncated, apex mammillate ; longitudinally substriate, aperture linear, dilated below, the inner lip with a conspicuous oblique fold; lip margin slightly arcuate. (Ad.). Mino-Sima, Japan, 63 fms. (Ad.). T. delicatula AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), ix, p. 153. In the obtuse, subtruncate spire and the papillary apex this species resembles T. pusilla Pfr. ; but it is longer and more slender, and the aperture is more produced anteriorly. (Ad.~). T. PERSIANA Smith. Unfigured. Shell very minute, short cylindrical, white, roughened by curved lines of growth ; whorls 3, the first consisting of a large tubercle, the rest encircled above by a large rounded cord ; suture depressed. Aperture rather wide, shorter than the last whorls, sensibly dilated at base ; columella short, thickened, hardly twisted. Alt. 1'33, diam. •75 mill. (Sin.). Persian Gulf, 14 fms. (Col. Pelly), T.persiana SM., Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), ix, p. 354 (May, 1872). TORNATINA. 191 Its minuteness constitutes the principal distinctive character of this species. The tubercle which forms the apex is proportionately very large. (Sm.). T. ISSELII Pilsbry. PI. 22, fig. 33. Shell minute, cylindrical, smooth, translucid, whitish ; apex mucronate ; spire nearly flat ; whorls 3, separated by a distinct suture, the first extremely narrow, the last long, a trifle tapering at the base. Aperture linear, wider below, rounded ; right margin simple nearly straight ; columella short, intorted. Alt. 2-25, diam. 1-2 mill. (Isset). Harbor of Suez. Tornatina pusilla ISSEL, Mai. Mar Eosso, p. 172, pi. 1, f. 15, 1869. Not T. pusilla Pfr., or of A. Ad. T. MUCRONATA Philippi. Unfigured. Shell minute, oblong, linear, smooth, surface obsoletely longitu- dinally striated; spire retuse, produced in a mucro in the middle;, whorls 4, deeply plicated at the suture, subcoronated. Aperture narrowly linear above, dilated below, uniplicate ; lip straight, a little reflexed in the middle. Alt. H lines. (Ph.). Aden (Phil.). Sulla mucronata PHIL., Malak. Bl. 1849, p. 22. — Tornatina mucro- nata Phil., ISSEL, Mai. Mar Rosso, p. 172. This is perhaps the species referred to by Mr. A. H. Cooke as- near to T. knockeri Smith. It evidently belongs to the group of knockeri and isselii. .T. OLIV^FORMIS Issel. PI. 22, fig. 34. Shell minute, thin, cylindrical-oblong, whitish, smooth, shining, slightly subdiaphauous ; the apex a little acute, sinistral ; spire conic ; whorls 4, separated by a channelled suture, the first narrow, flat, the last large, subcylindrical, over three-fourths the altitude, .attenuated at base. Aperture elongated, narrow above, dilated below androun ded ; right margin little arcuate, produced, acute ; columella white, callous, at the base uniplicate and a little reflexed, Alt. 4, diam. 1-5 mill. (Inset). Gulf of Suez. SAVIGNY, Descript. de TEgypte, Coq. ; pi. 6, f. 25. — Tornatina olivceformis ISSEL, Mai. Mar Rosso, p. 171, 1869.— COOKE, Ann. Mag. K H. (5), xvii, p. 129. 192 TORNATINA. Cooke finds no difference between this and T.fusiformis A. Ad., and considers them synonymous, the latter name having priority. T. PLANOSPIRA A. Adams. PI. 25, fig. 45. Shell cylindrical, apex truncated (in the very poor type specimen), white, smooth, subpellucid, longitudinally grooved ; spire depressed, level-topped ; whorls 4, grooved, radiately striated ; aperture nar- row, anteriorly dilated; columella callous, with a single plait. (Ad.). Sorsagon, Luzon, Philippines, 4 fms. (Cumin g) ; Red Sea (Cooke) Tornatina planospira AD. Thes. Conch, ii, p. 568, pi. 121, f. 32; Ann. Mag. (3), ix, p. 153. — COOKE, Ann. Mag. N. H. (5), xvii, p. 130. T. INCONSPICUA H. Adams. PL 22, fig. 26. Shell elongate-ovoid, rather solid, delicately transversely striated anteriorly, whitish ; spire little exserted. Aperture narrow, coarc- tate in the middle, dilated below ; columella furnished with a minute fold ; lip margin arcuate. Alt. 3, diam. 1/5 mill. (H. Ad.). Red Sea. T. inconspicua H. AD., P. Z. S. 1872, p. 11, pi. 3, f. 12.— Conf. COOKE, Ann. Mag. N. H. (5), xvii, p. 130. Mr. A. H. Cooke considers this very close to, or synonymous with, T. planospira. The " autice transversim tenuissime striata " of H. Adams' description seems, however, to be a distinguishing character. T. BIPLEX A. Adams. PL 25, fig. 46. Shell cylindrical, apex subtruncated, white, solid, shining trans- versely striated ; spire depressed, whorls four ; aperture linear, con- tracted in the middle, anteriorly dilated ; outer lip posteriorly pro- duced, a little receding, reflexed in the middle, anteriorly with a single strong tubercle; columella with a single plait. {Ad.). China Sea (Cu ruing). T. Uplex A. AD., Thes. Conch, ii, p. 568, pi. 121, f. 33.— BRAZIER, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, ii, p. 82. Brazier reports this from Torres Strait. T. POLITA A. Adams. PL 25, fig. 52. Shell ovately cylindrical, rounded above ; apex truncated, white, solid, shining, inferiorly transversely striated ; spire depressed, TORNATINA. 193 whorls three, rounded smooth ; aperture narrow, posteriorly pro- duced, rather contracted in the middle, dilated anteriorly, outer lip rather bent in and thickened in the middle ; columellawith the fold very distinct. (Ad.). Bay of Manilla, 3 fms. (Cuming). T. polita A. Ad., Thes., p. 571, pi. 121, f. 39. T. SIMPLEX A. Adams. PL 25, fig. 51. Shell ovately cylindrical, white shining, polished, smooth, covered with a fuscous epidermis ; spire elevated, whorls five, the first one mammillated ; spiral lamina conspicuous ; aperture narrow, dilated anteriorly ; columella slightly callous, plait obsolete. (Ad.*). Cagayan, Mindanao, Philippines, 35 fms. (Cuming) ; Japan (A. Ad.). T. simplex AD., Thes. Conch, ii, p. 570, pi. 121, f. 38 ; Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), ix, p. 153. T. CINCTELLA A. Adams. PL 25, fig. 48. Shell cylindrically fusiform, apex acuminated, rather smooth, semipellucid, longitudinally sulcated, encircled with two white spiral bands ; spire acuminated, whorls four, the first prominent ; aperture narrow, anteriorly dilated ; columella with a very distinct plait ; umbilical fissure deep. (Ad.). China Sea (Cuming). T. cinctella A. AD., Thes. Conch, ii, p. 569, pi. 121, f. 35. The two white bands on a pellucid ground, and the umbilical fis- sure distinguish this species. T. COARCTATA A. Adams. PI. 25, fig. 44. Shell ovately cylindrical, somewhat narrowed in the middle, white, shining, engraved with very fine close spiral lines ; spire somewhat depressed, whorls four, suture deeply channelled, encircled with a spiral lamina from the columellar callus ; aperture narrow, contracted in the middle, inferiorly dilated ; columellar callus with an obsolete fold ; outer lip rounded above, subinflexed in the middle. (Ad.). Ticao, Philippines, in 6 fms. (Cuming) ; Mauritius (Martens). T. coarctata AD., Thes. Conch, ii, p. 568, pi. 121, f. 31.— MAR- TENS in Mobius' Reise nach Mauritius, p. 303. 194 TORNATINA. T. GRACILIS A. Adams. PI. 25, fig. 49. Shell cylindrically fusiform, slender, semipellucid, horn-colored, apex acuminated, transversely engraved with a very fine spiral striae; spire produced, pointed, whorls four, the first prominent; aperture narrow, dilated anteriorly ; columella with a single plait. <4 umbilical chink ; pillar broad, flattened and curved ; fold obscure. (Jeffr.). Alt. 5?, diam. 3 mill. European Seas, from Godfiavn, Greenland, to the Mediterranean. Bulla obtusa MONTS., Test. Brit, (i), p. 223, pi. 7, f. 3.— A. AD. in Sowb. Thes. Conch, ii, p. 571, pi. 120, f. 2Q — Utriculus obtusus JEFFR., Brit. Conch, iv, p. 423, pi. 4, f. 2, 3 (animal). — SOWB., Conch. Icon., f. 5. — JEFFR., Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), vi, p. 84 v. minor and (4) xix, p. 333. — Oylichna obtusa LOCARD, Coq. Mar. Cotes France, p. 27, fig. 14. Var. TURRITA Moller. PI. 23, fig. 52. Shell elongated, nearly twice as high as wide, slightly tapering above; the spire elevated, obtusely conical, with subscalariform whorls. Alt. 3-3J mill. Greenland; England; Norway. Bulla turrita MOLLER, Ind. Moll. Groenl., p. 6. — A. AD., Thes. ii, p. 567, pi. 121, f. 28. — Utriculus turritus LECHE, K. Svensk* Akad. Handl. 1878, p. 71. — U. pertenuis v. turritus SARS, Moll. Reg. Arct. Norv., p. 288, pi. 17, f. 20. — U. obtusus v. lajonkaireana JEFFR., Brit. Conch, iv, p. 424. Var. CANDIDULA Locard. Unfigured. Smaller than E. obtusa, more cylindrical, with higher spire ; last whorl quite descending toward its termination, with more rectilinear profile ; aperture smaller and more regularly narrow. Alt. 2-3, diam. lf-2 mill. (Loc). Atlantic coast of France. Cylichna candidula Loc., Coq. Mar. Fr. p. 28, 1892. — C. lajon- kaireana Loc., Prodr., p. 72. This does not seem to differ materially from the preceding variety. Var. MINOR Jeffr. Apex depressed, Mediterranean, 30 fms. (Jeffr.~). This form has also received the name Utriculus minutissimus H. Martin (Journ. de Conchyl. 1878, p. 159. — Conf. Locard, Les Coq. Mar. des Cotes de France, p. 29). It is characterized, according to Monterosato, by the small size, and median contraction ; the normally flat spire 216 RETUSA. is rarely mamillate or scalariform. This form is common in the Mediterranean. Alt. 1-1 4, diam. ^-f mill. R. PERTENUIS Mighels. PI. 23, figs. 48, 49. Shell small, thin, translucent whitish or light brown, cylindrical, the spire very low-convex ; whorls 3?, the first somewhat turned in- ward ; sutures deeply impressed ; last whorl descending, sculptured with irregular, light, arcuate growth-striae. Aperture narrow above, dilated below ; outer lip strongly arched forward and bent slightly inward in the middle ; columella thickened but not plicate. Alt. 3'2, diam. 1-8 mill. Massachusetts Bay ; Fernandina, Fla. ; Coast of Maine ; Green- land', Norway. Bulla pertenuis MIGHELS, Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist, ii, p. 346, pi. 16, f. 3 — Utriculus pertenuis GOULD (W. G. B. edit.) p. 218, fig. 509. — SARS, Moll. Reg. Arct. Norv. p. 287, pi. 17, f. 19.— AD., Thes. Conch, ii, p. 371, pi. 120, f. 19.— Sows., Conch. Icon. f. 4.— BALL, Blake Gastr., p. 45 ; Cat. Mar. Moll. S.-E. U. S., p. 86.— AURIVIL- LIUS, Vega-Exped. Vetenskap. Arbeten iv, p. 371. — D lap hana per- tenuis VERRILL, Amer. Journ. Sci. (3), xx, p. 399. This species has been united with R. obtusa and R. semen by many authors, but the three are here retained distinct because proof of their complete intergradation is still lacking. R. obtusa seems to be a more solid, larger shell, replacing pertenuis in English and southern European waters ; B. semen is a somewhat shorter form from high latitudes. R. SEMEN Reeve. PL 23, figs. 55, 56, 57. Shell cylindrical-ovate, rather tumid, the spire depressed convex, suture impressed ; whorls smooth, slightly convex, the last a little descending in front ; tawny-white. Of a short cylindrical form, somewhat swollen, with a depressly convex spire, having the suture faintly channelled. (Rve.~). Port Refuge ; Nova Zemblia. Alt. 6, diam. 3.] mill. (Leche). Alt. 4i, diam. 3 mill. (Leclie}. Bulla semen RVE., in Belcher's Last of the Arctic Voyages, ii, p. 393, pi. 32, f. 4a-c, 1855. — Utriculus semen LECHE, Kongl. Sv. Akad. Handlingar, xvi, no. 2, p. 71, 1878, (with v. elongata). Leche describes a form with higher spire as Var. elotigata. It is not the same as R. turrita Moll. RETUSA. 217 Northwest Atlantic and West Indian species. R. GOULDII Couthouy. PL 23, figs. 58, 59. Shell small, ovate, shining, of a dead white color, covered with a yellowish epidermis; whorls four, rounded at their upper edges, their dividing line well marked ; the last whorl is as long as the shell, and includes all the others; under the magnifier its surface appears covered with revolving lines ; the whorls all rise to about the same level, £o that the summit is nearly flat ; the anterior extrem- ity is rather narrower than the posterior; the aperture is narrow behind, and suddenly enlarged by the curvature of the inner mar- gin, which is a little thickened, white, and polished. The outer lip, from its junction behind, advances a little as it turns forward by a regular curve, and finally turning backward by a rather sharp turn, it joins the body of the shell with a gentle twist; umbilicus none. ( Old.*). Alt. 7i, diam. 3f mill.. Maine to Hatteras. Bulla gouldii COUTH., Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist, ii, p. 181, pi. 4, f. 6, 1839.— GOULD, Inv. Mass., p. 163, f. 94.— DeKay, N. Y. Moll, p. 15, pi. 5, f. 101. — Utriculus gouldii STIMP., Check-lists, p. 4. — GOULD, Inv. Mass. (Binuey edit.) p. 217, f. 508. — Utriculus (Retusa) gouldii DALL, Cat. Moll. S.-E. U. S., p. 86. — Cylichna gouldii VER- RILL, Amer. Journ. Sci. (3), xx, p. 399. — Aplustrum gouldii SOWB., Conch. Icon., f. 1. R. PERPLICATA Dall. Unfigured. Shell ivory white with a very thin translucent epidermis, marked only with delicate lines of growth and a few faint incised spirals near the columella; anterior half of the shell wide and rounded, posterior half narrowing toward the apex with the sides somewhat compressed or flattened; outer lip thin, straight except in front where it expands a little before rounding to the rather thick twisted pillar ; behind deeply notched and behind the notch arching over and turning forward to meet a carina which revolves about the apex ; apex truncate, carinated by a line which forms the outer boundary of the path of the notch ; within vorticiform, about one and a half whorls visible around the central perforation and descending into it ; body with hardly any wash of callus ; pillar strong, with a large horizontal fold and a minute chink behind it ; aperture as long 218 BETUSA. as the shell, straight and narrow behind, wide and somewhat oblique in front; max. Ion. of shell, 5'0 ; max. lat. 3'0 ; lat. of apex, 1'75 mill. (Dalf). Off BaUa Honda, Cuba, in 220 fms. ; Barbados, 100 fms, Coleophysis perplicatus DALL, Blake Rep. Gastr., p. 45. It is difficult, or rather impossible, to determine the generic place of these small Tectibranchs without a knowledge of the soft parts. They are referable to Coleophysis, Cylichna, or Diaphana, or even Sao, at the option of the describer guided only by the characters of the shell. The presence of the plait would indicate the first men- tioned section for the present species. It is perhaps nearest in general form to the Cylichna ovata of Jeffreys, or Diaphana gemma of Verrill, which has no plait and is much more attenuated behind. R SPATHA Watson. PI. 25, figs. 53, 54, 55. Shell large, cylindrically oblong, gradually and slightly narrow- ing forwards, more abruptly so up the short stumpy and very blunt spire, thick, exquisitely reticulated, with a truncated and toothed pillar and a straight, slightly contracted outer lip. Sculpture : Lon- gitudinals — the whole surface is delicately and sharply scored in the lines of growth with very fine rounded furrows parted by sharper and much narrower ridges, which are about ysW of an inch apart. Spirals — a little stronger than the longitudinals which they cut across, are spiral lines very distinct above, one or two on the shoulder being even stronger and remote, more delicate and similar to the longitudinals in front, and in the middle very faint indeed, only sufficient to produce a satiny sheen ; round the top of the whorls below the suture is a very broad shallow furrow or slight constric- tion bordered by a very feeble keel below, which forms a vague shoulder. Colour ivory-white. Mouth f of the whole length of the shell, in shape somewhat clavate, being shortly broad in front, elon- gately conical throughout the most of its length, and rapidly con- tracted at the top. Whorls 2£, rounded above with a very slight concave constriction below the suture, subcylindrical in the middle and rounded in front. Suture linear, impressed, and very slightly horizontally margined below. Outer lip contracted amd appressed above, so that the top of the mouth runs up to a long and very nar- row point, bluntly angulated at the shoulder, below this it is straight but draws in towards the axis, in front it is patulous and well RETUSA. 219 rounded ; the edge line is convex, and retreats very rapidly in front, where the shell is abruptly truncate. Top very bluntly rounded, the apex being to some extent enveloped in the succeeding whorl, which rises slightly above it. Inner lip: a thick pad of glaze, with well-defined edge, extends down the slightly convex body, and passes with gradual sweep into the twisted subconcave pillar which is truncate in front ; at the top of the pillar the glaze is much thick- ened, and presents for a short distance two very oblique twistedl parallel folds, which are parted by a small furrow; another furrow lies outside, between the exterior fold and the glaze edge. Alt. O5 in. diam. 0'14. Mouth, height O25, breadth 0'03 inch. ( Wats.\ North of Culebra L, W. Indies, 390 fms. Utriculus spatha WATS., J. L. S. L. xvii, p. 333; Chall. Rep. Gastr. p. 649, pi. 48, f. 7. This exceedingly peculiar form in many respects recalls, rather than a Utriculus, one of the long narrow low-spired Marginellas, such as Marginella nevillii Jouss., or Margin ella avena Kien.. ( Wats.-). R. MAYOI Dall. Shell solid, white, with a yellowish polished epidermis and well marked lines of growth, spiral strise very faint and few, or none p whorls 3i-4, spire distinct, little elevated, nucleus small, rounded,, not prominent, aperture long, rather wide and straight, the posterior commissure rounded, the anterior wide, the margin spirally curved showing the axis (though this is not pervious) ; umbilical-chink none, pillar broad, white, oblique without any trace of a plication ;. outer lip thin, arched forward in the middle ; suture very deep ; inner lip with a wash of callus. Lon. of shell, 8'3 ; of aperture^ 7-0 ; max. lat. 4-6 mill. (Dall). Portland, Maine, from fish stomach (Mayo). Utriculus mayoi DALL, Blake Gastr., p. 46. This shell recalls Bulla turrita Moller, but is much larger, with proportionately shorter spire, straighter sides and more width ante- riorly. (Dall). R. FRIELEI Ball. PI. 21, fig. 8. Shell rather large, solid, polished opaque white, broader behind than before its middle ; apex perforate, around which the margin of 220 BETUSA. about two turns is usually visible; this margin, formed by the rather broad P -shaped posterior sinus of the aperture,.resembles the notch- band of some Pleurotomidse in that the surface is flattened, with a well-marked boundary on each side, and on this surface the succes- sive marginal edges are often raised into scales, one fitting into another, composed of an extension of the body callus on one side and a reflection of the free margin on the other; the surface of the band varies in different specimens from nearly smooth to distinctly and regularly undulated or imbricately scaled as above mentioned ; other transverse sculpture of lines of growth which are hardly visible while of spiral sculpture there is none, though, with a strong reflected light, under the microscope numerous spiral markings may be observed which are neither grooved nor raised, but are visible in most smooth spiral shells, and are probably due to growth, somewhat as are the lines commonly recognized as "lines of growth." Aper- tture nearly or quite as long as the shell, narrow, rounded in front, and terminating in the P -shaped sinus behind ; outer lip straight, sharp, thin, not incurved, rounded to join the stout columella into which it passes imperceptibly; pillar broad, short, with a thin callus which also extends along the body ; shell widest about the posterior third ; distinctly narrowed anteriorly. Lon. of shell and aperture (the latter occasionally a trifle less), 8*2. Max. lat. of shell (at pos- terior third), 4:0; at anterior third, 3'5 ; of aperture, 1*75; min. lat. of aperture, 0'5 mill. (Dall). Off Cape San Antonio ; Yucatan Strait, 640 fins. Utrieulu8ffrieleiV±KL, Bull. M. C. Z. ix, p. 104, 1881 ; Blake Oastr., p. 47, pi. 17, f. 4. Utriculus leucus Watson seem to approach this species as nearly as any known form, but has sundry distinctive characters. There is no doubt, however, that there are differences of form and develop- ment of the tip of the spire in these enrolled forms, in adult individ- uals, as well as during the stages of one individual. It will not do, therefore, to draw the specific lines too taut on this sort of character. (Dall). R. PERVIUS Dall. Unfigured. Shell short, stout, truncate apically, white, polished, sculptured only with faint incremental lines ; form subcylindrical, larger ante- riorly, a little compressed just behind the middle ; aperture long, narrow behind and rounded at the posterior commissure, where it RETUSA. 221 has a shallow rounded notch, the outer boundary of whose path is marked by the summit of a raised line ; anterior part of aperture wider, not very oblique, rounded in front ; outer lip straight, thin, arched forward in the middle ; pillar thin, simple, with no trace of a plait ; body without perceptible callus ; behind the pillar a small very deep umbilical perforation ; apex nearly flat, bounded by the above mentioned raised line, within which the fasciole of the notch is rounded over but does not reach the level of the line referred to ; nucleus somewhat depressed, but not deeply ; about three and a half whorls are visible on the apex. Max. Ion. of shell 4*0 ; max. lat. 2-5; lat. of apex T5 mill. (Dall). West Indies (U. S. Fish Commission), probably from near Barba- dos, in about 80 fms., sand. Utriculus pervius DALL, Blake Gastr. p. 48. This species is remarkable for its deep though minute umbilicus and its dish-like apex. Its general form is not unlike U. perplica- tus, but the sides are straighter and the other characters quite dif- ferent. The locality is unfortunately doubtful though it was some- where in the Antilles (Dall.). K. OMPHALIS Morch. Un figured. Shell subcylindrical, short, slightly contracted in the middle, with obsolete growth strife, regular and elegantly expressed toward the spire ; spiral striae very obsolete, irregular. Spire openly umbili- cated, surrounded by a white pellucid line. Aperture very narrow posteriorly, dilated anteriorly ; columella straight, thick ; external margin acute. Alt. nearly 4, diam. 2 mill. (M). St. Thomas (Riise). Retusa omphalis MORCH, Malak. Bl. xxii, p. 172, 1874. Not dissimilar from CylieJinella bidentata, but larger, thinner, with umbilicate spire and straight columella, etc. R. SULCATA Orbigny. PI. 23, figs. 73, 74. Shell cylindrical, white, dilated below, thin, pellucid, longitudi- nally sulcate, truncated at summit and concave, the spire umbili- cated. Aperture linear, suddenly dilated below. Alt. 2, diam. 1 mill. Cape Hatter as ; West Indies, 14-31 fms. Sulla sulcata ORB., Moll. Cuba i, p. 129, pi. 4 bis, f. 9-12.— Utri- culus (Retusa) sulcata DALL, Blake Gastr. p. 45 ; Cat. Mar. Moll. .S. E. U. S, p. 86. 222 RETUSA. E. CECILLII Philippi. PI. 23, fig. 53. Shell ovate-oblong, subcylindrical, very thin, whitish, the spire depressed-conic ; sutures impressed and plicate ; aperture linear, at base dilated. Alt. 5'5, diam. 2*66 lines. Whorls 4-4*. (Phil.) Japan (Dkr.); China (Largilliert). Bulla cecillii PH., Zeitschr. f. Mai. 1844, p. 164.— DKR., Ind. Moll. Mar. Jap. p. 164, (as Utriculus). Shell almost exactly cylindrical, thin, smooth, shining; with arcuate growth-striae, but little conspicuous, but somewhat plicated at the suture. Spire much depressed, obtuse or somewhat acute. Aperture linear, dilated below. This species corresponds to B. jeverensis Schroeter of the German Sea, but is thrice the size * B. valuta Q. & G. is narrower with very deep sutures (PA.) A. Adams gives the locality " Mexico." His description is as follows, the above figure being copied from the Thesaurus. Shell ovately cylindrical, thin, smooth, covered with an olivaceous epidermis, longitudinally substriated ; spire distinct, rather elevated, whorls five, suture corrugated ; aperture narrow, anteriorly widely dilated ; columella arched, simple. Mexico (Mus. Hanley). Bulla (Utriculus) cecillii, A. ADAMS, in Thes. Conch, ii, p. 572, pi. 120, f. 22.— U. cecillii SOWB., Conch, on. f. 3. Southern and Indo-Pacific species. R. SUCCINCT A A. Adams. Unfigured. Shell cylindrical, coarctale in the middle, the vertex truncate ; white, longitudinally striate throughout, transversely banded, bands pale and rather distant. Aperture linear, narrowed in the middle, dilated in front, the inner lipobsoletely plicate (Ad.). Tsu-Sima, Japan, 16 fms. ; Aiva-Sima, at low water (Ad.). Tornatina succincta AD., Ann. Mag. N. H. (3), ix, p. 154. In form the species most resembles T. truncata J. Adams ; but it is more elongated and much narrower, and marked with indistinct pale bands ; the whorls of the spire are visible but sunken, and the parietal plica is not conspicuous (Ad.). R. BORNEENSIS A. Adams. PI. 23, fig. 46. Shell ovate-cylindrical, smooth, subpellucid, white, covered with a ferruginous epidermis, longitudinally striated ; spire distinct, flat, RETUSA. 225 whorls 4, rounded, the first mamillate, aperture narrow, dilated in front; coluraella long, semitortuous, umbilicus none (Ad.). Borneo (A. Ad.) ; Mauritius (Mobius.) Utriculus borneensis A. AD.. Thes. Conch, ii, p. 572, pi. 120, f. 23. — SOWB., Conch. Icon. f. 6. — v. MARTENS, in Mobius' Reise n. Mauritius, p. 303. A much smaller shell than B. cecillii. It is narrower, more cyl- indrical ; the aperture is more produced anteriorly ; the colu- mella is longer and straighter, and the spire is more depressed. The mud flats at the mouths of many of the rivers of Borneo are parti- ally covered at low water with this animal; the shell is always cov- ered, when the animal is alive, with a rust-colored epidermis (Ad.). R. COMPLANATA Watson. PI. 21, fig. 2. Shell minute, cylindrical, truncated and flat on top, very much and obliquely truncated in front, with whorls angulated above and furrowed longitudinally and spirally, a papillary apex, a longish pillar, and a club-shaped mouth. Sculpture: Longitudinals — the furrows on the lines of growth are strong and curved. Spirals — the whole surface is scored with sharp irregular furrows parted by flat intervals of about three times their width. Color white.. Mouth the full length of the shell, narrow above, oblong and roomy in front, club-shaped. Whorls 3 ; on the top of the shell they are rounded. Suture slightly impressed. Outer lip rises roundly, the least thing above the top ; its course is straight, with a very slight concavity; its edge is prominent. Top perfectly flat, with a roundly angulated edge ; the individual whorls are rounded, and are parted by a somewhat impressed suture ; the central tip, which is glossy, is papillary, but depressed. Inner lip is, on the body, slightly concave in its course ; the pillar is oblique, nearly straight,, and is patulous. Alt. 0'05 in., diam. 0'028. Breadth of mouth at same place, 0'013 inch (Wats.). West of Cape York, off southwest point of Papua, 28 fms. Utriculus complanatus WATS., J. L. S. L. xvii, p. 335 ; Chall. Rep. Gastr. p. 650, pi. 48, f. 9. This is a very small species, the solitary specimen of which is not in good condition. It is a good deal like Utriculus truncatulus (Brug.) ; but the sculpture is a very marked feature of difference,, and the form is more stumpy ( Wats.). 224 RETUSA. R. AMPHIZOSTUS Watson. PL 21, fig. 4. Shell small, rather broadly cylindrical, but contracted in the middle, and broadest below the contraction, very bluntly rounded in front, longitudinally striate and very finely spiralled, with a flat but slightly depressed crown and a small papillary apex. Sculp- ture : Longitudinals — there are a great many small hair-like ridges and furrows on the lines of growth ; they are nowhere strong, but are feeblest on the base. Spirals — the whole surface is very equally striated, with delicate shallow scratched lines parted by flat sur- faces four or five times the width of the lines ; there is a very slight and gradual constriction most apparent near the outer lip about the middle of the body, and in front of this the shell is slightly tumid. Color translucent white, with vague trace of spiral bands. Mouth the full length of the shell ; shaped like a racket, being oval in front, long and narrow above ; it is small and rounded at the top, which just rises to the crown. Whorls 4, of which only the small rounded tops are seen on the crown, where they are .slightly and radiatingly ridged, the last envelopes all the others. Suture impressed and distinct. Outer lip rounded at the top where it does not rise above the crown ; it runs straight and parallel to the inner lip till below the middle where it bends outwards in exact symmetry with the corresponding bend of the inner lip on the base, forming a very regular oval curve in front ; the edge line is regu- larly curved, retreating slightly behind and in front, and advancing in the middle where the lip is contracted. Top flat, but slightly de- pressed, with a small papillary apex in the middle, the outer edge is roundly angulated. Inner lip straight down the body, concave on the pillar, which has a very slight twist and a narrow patulous edge, behind which is a scarcely appreciable umbilical depression ; the point of the pillar projects in front clear of the sweep of the •basal curve. Alt. 012 in., diam. 006. Breadth of mouth at same place, 0'02 inch (Wats.). Near Gape York, N. E. Australia, 6-8 fms. (Chall.). Utriculus amphizostus WATS., J. L. S. L. xvii, p. 336 ; Chall. Gastr. p, 652, pi. 48, f. 11. This species is very like Utriculus truncatulus (Brug.) ; but that has much stronger longitudinals, no spirals, and an oblique crown, sloping down from left to right on which side the top of the mouth and outer lip rise in a rounded loop very considerably above the top •of the body whorl (Wats.). RETUSA. 225- R. FAMELICUS Watson. PI. 21, fig. 6. Shell long, narrow, subconically cylindrical, with straight out- lines, abruptly truncate above, with a deeply impressed papillary apex, rounded and slightly tumid in front, harshly striate above and delicately so below. Sculpture : Longitudinals — the lines of growth are very slight, but round the top of the shell is a coronal of folds forming ridges and furrows of about equal strength ; these ex- tend over the top and into the hollow crown. Spirals — round the top, harshly scoring the coronal, are four or five deep, but not broadr sharp cut furrows, parted by flat surfaces of about twice their breadth ; below these to a fourth of the length, there are distant furrows so obsolete as to be almost invisible ; below this the whole surface is superficially scratched with delicate sharp-cut fretted fur- rows parted by broadish flat intervals. Color translucent white* Mouth the entire length of the shell, being considerably produced posteriorly, wkere it is slightly enlarged ; in the middle it is nar- row, the two sides being almost perfectly parallel, in front it is elon- gately oval ; in its entire shape it resembles a spoon. Whorls 4t but the earlier ones are so deeply sunken, and the hole in the crown (where alone they are visible) is so small, that it is difficult to count them ; the apex is papillary. Suture slight. Outer lip rises straight from the crown, with a slight inclination in towards the center, is narrowly rounded above, and advances straight for about two-thirds of the shell's length, at which point it is slightly expanded and then becomes somewhat patulous ; it sweeps rather freely round to join the pillar. Top small, oblique, harshly radia- tingly striate and deeply narrowly impressed. Inner lip long and straight, slightly convex in front, oblique and slightly concave on the pillar which is bluntly toothed in front, and has a very narrow scarce patulous prominent edge with a minute furrow behind it. Alt. 0*18 in., diam. 0'06. Mouth breadth at same place, 0019 inch (TFafe.). LevuJca, Fiji, 12 fms. (Challenger). Utriculus famelicus WATSON, J. L. S. L. xvii, p. 338 ; Chall. Rep. Gastr. p. 653, pi. 49, f. 1, This species, whose thin and famished look suggested the name chosen, belongs to the group of which the Mediterranean Utriculus striatala (Forbes) may be taken as a type, though in that species the features attributed to the subgenus Sao (of Cylichna) are much more strongly developed. Compared to this species of the Chal- t 226 RETUSA. lenger, Cylichna fijiensis E. A. Smith is broader, not squarely trun- cate above, and not so plicate around the top of the body. Utricu- lus phiala A. Adams, from Japan, is not nearly so long and narrow, and is more cylindrical. Cylichna decussata A. Adams, which is like in sculpture, is shorter, less cylindrical, and the outer lip rises much higher behind. Cylichna pyramidata A. Adams, which is puckered above, is much less cylindrical and is smooth in the body. E. SIMILLIMA Watson. PL 21, figs. 9, 10. Shell small, short, truncately conical, with straightish outlines, a perforated crown, and a small papillary apex, rounded and tumid in front. Sculpture : Longitudinals — the lines of growth are very slight ; but round the top of the shell is a coronal of delicate folds forming ridges and furrows of about equal strength ; these extend over the top and into the perforation of the crown. Spirals — round the top is a slight but marked constriction ; above this the top •converges, and is finely scored" with small close-set furrows ; the rest of the shell is superficially scratched with delicate, sharp-cut, fretted, remote furrows parted by flat surfaces ; on the base the furrows are closer and coarser, and the intervals rounded. Color translucent white. Mouth the entire length of the shell, being considerably produced posteriorly, where it is enlarged ; in the middle it is nar- row and slightly bent, in front it is large and oval. Whorls 3 to 4 ; the apex is papillary but very small and so deeply immersed as to be doubtfully visible. Suture very difficult to distinguish, but ap- parently impressed. Outer lip rises from the inner side of the per- foration and bends in over it so as partially to cover it ; it arches freely round and is not at all emarginate ; it runs pretty straight forward for about three-fifths of its length, at this point it is slightly constricted and contracted, but immediately bends to the right and curves very regularly round the base, where it is patulous. Top contracted, rounded, oblique, harshly radiatingly striate, and deeply narrowly impressed. Inner lip convex, tumid in front, oblique and slightly concave on the pillar, which is feebly toothed, and has a very narrow, scarcely patulous, prominent edge, with a minute fur- row behind it. Alt. O'l in., diam. 0*047. Mouth breadth at same place 0-024 inch ( Wats.). Torres Straits and Winder's Passage, N. E. Australia, 3-11 fins. Utriculus simillimus WA* s., J. L. S. L. xvii, p. 340 ; Chall. Gastr. p. 654, pi. 49, f. 2. RETUSA. 227 This species exceedingly resembles the young of Ulriculus fameli-