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Ind. 206. 48 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. I Derris amazonica Killip Lonchocarpus negrensis Benth. Journ. Linn. Soc. 4: Suppl. 98, 1860. Not Der- ris negrensis Benth. | Specimens examined: Brazil: Amazonas: Rio Negro, Spruce 1671 (type, Kew). Along Rio Negro, above Mandos, Killip & Smith 30044. Man4os, Killip & Smith 30191. Sao Paulo de Olivenca, Ducke 23400. Para: Gurupa, Ducke 17201. One of the specimens which Mr. Smith and I collected has mature fruits, the broad wings of which show that the species belongs to Derris rather than to Lonchocarpus. The legumes of the type specimen are not well developed. Under The American Code of Nomenclature the name for this plant would be Deguelia amazonica (not Deguelia negrensis Taub.). Tropaeolum longifiorum Killip, sp. nov. Herba scandens, glaberrima; stipulae lineares, subpersistentes; folia pel- tata, fere ad medium septemlobata, lobis obovatis, apice latioribus, rotun- datis, minute calloso-mucronulatis; pedunculi longissimi quam folia multo longiores; calcar cylindricum, conspicue nervosum, rectum vel subcurvatum; sepala oblonga; petala spathulata, subaequalia, subtruncata, subintegra, 2 superioribus coccineis, 3 inferioribus aurantiacis venis coccineis. Scandent herb, glabrous throughout; stipules linear, about 3 mm. long, coriaceous, subpersistent; petioles 3 to 4.5 em. long, cirrhose; leaves 2 to 3 cm. long, 2.5 to 4 ecm. wide, 7-lobed nearly to middle (lobes obovate, up to 1 cm, wide, rounded and minutely callose, mucronulate), peltate (propor- tion above petiole to below petiole about 7:1), papillose beneath; peduncles elongate, much exceeding the leaves, 12 to 15 cm. long; flowers 4 to 5 cm. long; spur cylindric, 3.2 to 3.5 cm. long, about 3 mm. wide at throat, con- spicuously nerved, the tip straight or very slightly curved; sepals oblong, 8 to 10 mm. long, 3 to 5 mm. wide, obtuse; petals similar and subequal, 1.3 to 1.5 cm. long, 6 to 9 mm. wide, subtruncate, subentire, the two upper scarlet, the three lower orange with scarlet veins, all with dark brown veins at base. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 1,473,481, collected near Atac, Rio Masameric Valley, Province of Jauja, Department of Junin, Peru, alti- tude 3,400-3,500 meters, April 25, 1913, by A. Weberbauer (no. 6641). The leaves of this species are of the same general outline as those of T. septemlobum and T. purpureum, though the lobes are longer and are broad- ened at the apex. The flowers are much larger, however, the spur being fully a centimeter longer, and the upperand the lower sets of petals are more nearly uniform than in either of these relatives. In leaf shape as well as in the size and form of the flowers the proposed species resembles 7’. bicolor, a repre- sentative of the Serrato-ciliata group of species. Tropaeolum purpureum Killip, sp. nov. Herba scandens, glaberrima; stipulae lineari-subulatae, caducissimae; folia peltata, septemlobata, lobis rotundatis vel truncatis, mucronulatis, basi truncata, subtus glauca; flores 2-2.5 cm. longi; calcar cylindrico- conicum, basi subcurvatum, brunneo-rubrum, sparse purpureo-punctatum ; JANUARY 15, 1934 KILLIP: NEW PLANTS 49 sepala oblonga; petala spathulato-unguiculata, sepalis longiora, apice crenu- lata, purpurea. Scandent herb, glabrous throughout; stipules linear-subulate, 1 to 1.5 mm. long, soon deciduous; petioles 3 to 6 cm. long; leaves 2.5 to 4 cm. long, 3 to 4.5 em. wide, 7-lobed (length of lobes: nerves: :1:4), the lobes rounded or truncate, mucronulate), peltate (proportion above petiole to below petiole about 4:1), epapillose, glaucous beneath; flowers 2 to 2.5 cm. long; spur cylindric-conical, about 1.2 em. long and 3.5 mm. wide at throat, slightly curved at tip, brownish red; sepals oblong, 8 to 9 mm. long, about 5 mm. wide, obtuse, brownish red; petals spatulate-unguiculate, crenulate at apex, purple, 5 to 6 mm. wide, the upper about 1 cm. long, the lower about 1.5 cm. long. Type in the herbarium of the Field Herbarium of Natural History, no. 605,323, collected at Marcapata, Province of Quispicanchi, Department of Cuzco, Peru, altitude 3,200 meters, February 15, 16, 1929, by A. Weber- bauer (no. 7788). Duplicate at Berlin. This species comes nearest 7’. crenatiflorum Hook. f. and T. septemlobum Heilb.; differing from bothin having purple, rather than yellow or yellowish red petals, a coloring found more usually in species of the Serrato-ciliata group. The flowers appear to be rather similar in shape to those of 7. crenati- florum, though they are much smaller. The leaves are 5-lobed in that species. From 7. septemlobum, a species of central Ecuador with leaves of similar outline, T. purpureum differs further in the crenate petals. Mabea acutissima Killip, sp. nov. Arbor gracilis glaberrima, inflorescentia excepta ;folia lineari-lanceolata, ad apicem subabrupte et acutissime caudata, basi subrotundata, minute ven- ulosa, supra nitidula, subtus glaucescentia; paniculae ramuli # glaberrimi, umbelliformes, 3-flores, pedicellis filiformibus, elongatis, bracteis linearibus, utrinque glandula nigra oblonga ornatis, sepalis late triangularibus, egland- ulosis; sepalis 9 ovato-lanceolatis, eglandulosis; stamina ca. 30. Slender tree about 6 meters high, glabrous throughout; leaves linear- lanceolate, 5 to 8 cm. long, 1 to 1.2 em. wide, subabruptly tapering to a long and very sharp point (this 1.5 to 2 em. long, up to 2 mm. wide), sub- rotund at base, short-petioled (petiole filiform, about 2 mm. long), minutely serrulate, bright green and lustrous above, glaucescent beneath; panicle 7. to 9 em. long, 2 to 3 cm. wide, deep red, the & branches glabrous, bi- glandular at base, the glands oblong, up to 2 mm. long and 1 mm. wide, black, 3-flowered, the flowers pedicellate, the pedicels filiform, 1 to 1.3 cm. long, minutely puberulent, ovate, the bracts about 3 mm. long, flowers o 2 to 3 mm. wide, deep red, the sepals broadly triangular, 0.5 mm. long, subobtuse, eglandular; sepals 9 ovate-lanceolate, 2 to 2.56 mm. long, 1 mm. wide, acuminate, eglandular; ovary ovoid, puberulent; style 1.2 to 1.4 cm. long, puberulent; stamens about 30. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,518,780, collected at Tu- tunendo, 80 kilometers north of Quibdé, Intendencia del Chocé, Colombia, altitude about 80 meters, May 19, 20, 1931, by W. A. Archer (no. 2133). In the monograph of the genus in Das Pflanzenreich® this species keys out 3 1V. 1475; 25-42. 1912. 50 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. 1 to the group of Umbelluliferae, species 16 to 19. From these four species it differs in having very narrow leaves, which more closely resemble those of M. angustifolia and M. longifolza. Buettneria flexuosa Killip, sp. nov. Frutex espinosus, ramulis juvenilibus flexuosis, crassis, subhexagonis, 6-costatis, ferrugineis, sparse vel dense hirsutulis; folia lanceolata vel ovato-lanceolata, acuminata, basi rotundata, denticulata, quinquenervia, utrinque ferrugineo-tomentosa; inflorescentia subpaniculata, pedicellis tenuibus, floribus parvis; calyx campanulatus, lobis lanceolatis; cucullus petalorum obcordatus, ligula filiformi, glabra. Shrub 3 to 4 meters high, spineless, the branchlets obscurely 6-angled, 6-costate, ferruginous, sparsely to densely hirsutulous; petioles 1 to 3 cm. long, ferruginous-villous; leaves lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, 6 to 9 cm. long, 2 to 5 em. wide, acuminate at apex, rounded at base, denticulate, 5- nerved (nerves impressed above), densely ferruginous-tomentose; inflores- cence axillary, subpaniculate, about 2 cm. long, the pedicels slender, 2 to 3 mm. long; calyx tube campanulate, about 1.5 mm. long, 3 mm. wide, the lobes lanceolate, 3 mm. long, 1.5 mm. wide, acute; petals about 1 mm. long exclusive of a filiform glabrous ligule 2 mm. long; stamen tube about 1 mm. long. : Type in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden, collected at Loja, Ecuador, November 12, 1876, by E. André (no. 4435). André’s K870, — from the same locality, and K879, from Chuquiribamba, Ecuador, both be- long to this species. In the general shape of the leaves and in the dense indument this species is suggestive of B. mollis H. B. K. and B. hirsuta R. & P., both of which are spine-bearing. In addition, B. mollis has deeply cordate leaves and a dif- fuse inflorescence. Abatia macrostachya Killip, sp. nov. Frutex ubique stellato-pubescens; folia ovata, apice acuta, basi auriculata, crenato-serrata; racemi terminales laxiflori, pedicellis tenuibus, 1.5—2 cm. longis, divaricatis, in fructu prope medium geniculatis; calycis segmenta anguste lanceolata, apice subulata, interne glabra; stamina fertilia ca. 35, sterilibus creberrimis; fructus subglobosus. 3 Shrub, the branchlets terete, finely floccose-tomentose with stellate yellowish-white hairs; leaves ovate, 10 to 18 em. long, 6.5 to 10 cm. wide, acute at apex, auricular at base, crenate-serrate, membranous, sparingly stellate-hirtellous above, densely stellate-floccose on the principal nerves beneath, the petioles 2 to 3 cm. long, quadrangular; racemes terminal, loosely flowered, 20 to 25 em. long, 5 to 6 cm. in diameter, the rachis sub- hexagonal, stellate-floccose, the pedicels slender, 1.5 to 2cm. long, divaricate, at length geniculate near middle, the upper half ascending; calyx 4-parted nearly to base, the segments narrowly lanceolate, 7 to 8 mm. long, 2.5 to 3 mm. wide, attenuate to a subulate apex, flavo-stellate-tomentose without, glabrous within; petals none; fertile stamens about 35, the filaments filiform, about 5 mm. long, the anthers narrowly oblong, nearly 1.5 mm. long; sterile stamens very numerous (several hundred?), capillary, about 4 mm. long; ovary globose-conical, densely flavo-stellate-tomentose; style subulate, 7 JANUARY 15, 1934 KILLIP: NEW PLANTS ol to 8 mm. long, glabrous; fruit subglobose, 5 to 6 mm. in diameter, densely flavo-stellate-tomentose. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 604,397, collected between Yanamechi and Amaibamba, Department of Cuzco, Peru, June 19, 1915, by QO. F. Cook and G. B. Gilbert (no. 1186). Also represented by Herrera’ S 1568, from the Urubamba Valley, in the same department. This is evidently a very handsome plant, with its long racemes of flowers. The pedicels of the individual flowers are much longer and more spreading than in the other species of this small genus. Turnera ulmifolia serissima Killip, forma nov. Caulis pilis brunneis adscendentibus dense vestitus; folia obovata, acuta, minute denticulata, dentibus mucronulatis, pilis albidis ubique densissime sericea. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 1,351,104, collected on the Mesa de los Santos, Department of Santander, Eastern Cordillera of Co- lombia, altitude 1 500 meters, December 12, 1926, by E. P. Killip and A. C. Smith (no. 15179). This plant is far more densely sericeous than any of the variants of the polymorphic species 7. ulmifolia. The toothing of the leaves is much finer than in most of the variants. Cajophora smithii Killip, sp. nov. Planta scandens; caulis villosulus, sparse retrorso-setulosus; folia lanceo- lata, supra medium pinnatilobata, infra medium pinnatipartita (segmentis jugi infimi petiolulatis), supra scabrida, subtus minute villosula; ovarium subconicum, dense setosum; lobi calycis lineares; petala cymbiformia; squamae saccato-convexae, oblongae, apice incrassatae, bicornes, trinerves, prope medium dorsi appendices 3 oblanceolatas acutas albas gerentes; staminodia ad quamque squamam 2, falciformia, papillosa, apice filiformia; stamina ca. 80. Herbaceous vine; stem sparsely and minutely villosulous, very sparingly setulose with minute retrorse hairs; petioles 2 to 3.5 cm. long; leaves lanceo- late, 5 to 7 cm. long, 3.5 to 5 em. wide, pinnately lobed in upper half, pin- natisect to rachis in lower half (lowermost pair of segments petiolulate, the segments ovate or lanceolate, dentate, the terminal segment denticulate), scabrid above with short appressed hairs, finely villosulous beneath; pe- duncles about 1 cm. long, very slender; ovary obconic, about 7 mm. long, 5 mm. wide at apex, densely setose; calyx lobes linear, about 1 cm. long, up to 1 mm. wide; petals cymbiform, 1 cm. long, 7 mm. wide, villosulous and sparingly and weakly setulose without, orange; scales green, saccate-convex, oblong, 4 mm. long, 1.5 mm. wide, strongly thickened at apex, 2-horned, 3-nerved, bearing dorsally near middle 3 oblanceolate acute white append- ages about 2 mm. long, 0.8 mm. wide; staminodia 2 to a scale, falciform, about 5 mm. long, papillose, white, filiform at apex; stamens about 80, 5 to 6 mm. long, the anthers ovate. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 1,358,846, collected at Car- papata, above Huacapistana, Department of Junin, Peru, altitude 3,000 meters, June 7, 1929, by E. P. Killip and A. C. Smith (no. 24419). 52 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. 1 Apparently this species comes nearest to the Argentinan C. clavatain Urban and Gilg’s monograph of Loasaceae, because of the general shape of the ap- pendages of the scales. In C. clavata these are said to be filiform, narrowly laminuliform-dilated at the apex, thus differing from those of the proposed species. The leaves of that species, moreover, are ovate. ZOOLOGY.—A new sea-urchin from Florida.1 Austin H. CuarK, U. 8. National Museum. ; While working at the Dry Tortugas laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington Mr. P. Powers of the University of Penn- sylvania obtained some specimens of a fine new species of Astropyga which he was so kind as to submit to me for study. As at present understood, the genus A stropyga includes two species, A. radiata, ranging from Zanzibar to the Hawaiian Islands, which was beautifully figured by Seba as Echionanthus major in 1758 and described by Leske as Cidaris radiata in 1778, and A. pulvinata, oc- curring on the west coast of Mexico and Central America, which was described by Lamarck under the name of Cidarites pulvinata in 1816. The discovery of a third species of this interesting genus of large and © conspicuous littoral sea-urchins in Florida waters at this late date is therefore a matter of no little interest, and this interest is increased by the fact that, with the sole exception of Tripneustes esculentus which sometimes slightly exceeds it, this new species is the largest of the regular echinoids in the shallow waters of the tropical Atlantic. The new species from Florida may be called Astropyga magnifica, sp. nov. Locality.—South of Dry Tortugas, Florida; 48 fathoms (88 meters); col- lected by Mr. P. Powers. Diagnosis.—Related to A. pulvinata but with the ambitus circular instead of rounded pentagonal; with longer spines, which reach slightly more than ~ half the diameter of the test in length; with a smaller peristome; and with only the outermost column of tubercles in each interambulacral area failing to reach the peristome. The color is uniform purplish black throughout. The test is 145 mm. in diameter and 52 mm. high, thin and flexible, the plates interiorly with abrupt deep circular or oval pits corresponding to the primary tubercles, these pits becoming very numerous on the actinal sur- face. The oculogenital ring and the bare forked lines extending outward from the genital plates are deeply sunken so that the inner two-thirds of the ambulacral areas on the abactinal surface are much swollen. The whole animal is covered with rather thick soft skin. The longest primary spines are about 75 mm. long; it is impossible to 1 Published with the permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Received September 13, 1933. JANUARY 15, 1934 CLARK: NEW SEA-URCHIN 53 estimate their length exactly as all of them are broken off at some distance from the tip. The interior of the spines is filled with a rather dense calcareous network so that they appear solid. The spines increase in diameter slightly and very slowly from the base for a distance of about 20 mm., then remain uniform for some distance, finally tapering gradually to the tip. In section they are circular at the base, becoming transversely oval outward and often considerably flattened distally. At the base they bear 20—24 sharply rounded ridges which a little way above the base break up into rows of elongated scales with overlapping distal ends. Distally these scales gradually become more and more oblique, finally making an angle of about 30° with the axis of the spine. They show a marked tendency to become arranged in irregular verticils. In the interambulacral areas on the actinal surface the outermost column of tubercles ends abruptly about one-third of the distance from the ambitus to the peristome, but the next column curves inward and reaches the peri- stome. There are 12 columns of tubercles in each interambulacral area at the ambitus. The diameter of the actinal system from the apex of one genital to the outer border of the opposite ocular is 28 mm. The diameter of the periproct, within the ring of encircling plates, is 11 mm. The diameter of the peristomal area is 42 mm. Type specimen.—Cat. No. E.3125, U.S. National Museum. A second large specimen is entered under No. E.3126, and two small ones under Nos. E.3127 and E.3128. Notes —Two young individuals 58 mm. in diameter and 18 mm. high and 49 mm. in diameter and 16 mm. high, resemble A. pulvinata more closely than do the adults. Their form is pentagonal with broadly rounded angles. The color (in formalin) is light reddish buff actinally becoming brighter pinkish in the interradial areas abactinally. Abactinally the bare central portion and the bare lines radiating from it are deep purple, this color being continued outward along the sides of the ambulacral areas as a progressively narrowing margin as far as the amitus, and further as a much lighter pinkish line to the peristome. Along this band bordering the ambulacral areas is a series of conspicuous brilliant blue spots, one to each plate. The spines are very light dull greenish with several narrow bands of bright pinkish-purple or sometimes more or less deep purple. Abactinally the ambulacral areas within the dark border are duller and less pinkish than the interambulacral areas. The ambulacral pores are arranged in a single irregular column. There are six columns of primary tubercles in each interambulacral area at. the ambitus. Remarks.—This species is very readily distinguished from all the other sea-urchins of the tropical Atlantic. In its general appearance and blackish color it suggests Centrechinus (or Diadema) antillarum; but it is at once differentiated from this species by its much shorter and more slender solid spines and its thin and flexible test, the inner side of which is deeply pitted. The young are very easily recognized by their conspicuous color pattern and by their form. This species should be compared with A. radiata, but no comparable specimens of that form are available. 54 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. 1 ZOOLOGY.—Two new parasitic worms of Didelphys aurita: Skrjabi- nofilaria pricei n. sp. and Gongylonema marsupialis n. sp. ZEFERINO VAz and CLEMENTE PEREIR, Instituto Biologico, Sao Paulo, Brasil. (Communicated by BENJAMIN SCHWARTZ.) Dr. Flavio da Fonseca of the Instituto Butantan, 8. Paulo, has kindly sent us for study three lots of nematodes collected during post-mortem examination of Didelphys aurita. One of the lots con- tained some specimens of a Metastrongylidae, Heterostrongylus heterostrongylus Travassos,” 1925, taken from the lungs. The contents of the second lot were taken from the subcutaneous tissue and proved to be a new filarid worm. The third contained a few specimens of a Gongylonema which appear to us to be a new species. Skrjabinofilaria pricei n. sp. Fig. 1. This new species can be included in the genus Skrjabinofilarza erected by Travassos, 1925, for a filarid worm parasitic in the subcutaneous tissue of the opossum. S. pricez is distinguished from S. skrjabinz by the following characters: (1) shape of the anterior extremity, (2) absence of buccal capsule, (3) position of the vulva, (4) trifid tip of the tail in S. pricez, (5) absence of caudal alae, (6) number of caudal papillae. Length: male 27-30 mm., female, 45-70 mm. Thickness: male 0.14 mm., female, 0.2 mm. Anterior extremity somewhat enlarged. Cuticle thin and smooth; lateral flanges absent. Mouth simple without lips, but surrounded by a small chitinous peribuccal ring; buccal capsule absent. Near the tip of the tail in each sex there is laterally a pair of small cuticular appendages giving the end of the tail a trifid appearance. Oesophagus divided in two portions: the anterior one measuring 0.36—0.5 mm. in length, and the posterior 0.7—1.01 mm.; sometimes there is no very clear line of demarcation between the two parts. Male.—Posterior extremity spirally rolled with four pairs of preanal pa- pillae and two pairs of postanal near the anus. Caudal alae absent. The anus is situated about 0.13 mm. from the trifid posterior extremity. Spicules un-— equal, the larger one measuring 0.16—0.18 mm. and the smaller 0.13—0.14 mm. Female.—Opistodelphys; ovoviviparous. The vulva is 0.9-1.4 mm. behind the anterior end. The vagina is 0.6 mm. long and directed backward. The anus is situated 0.4 mm. from the posterior end. Host.—Didelphys aurita Wied. Location.—Subcutaneous tissue. Geographic distribution.—S. Paulo, Brazil. Types and cotypes.—Helminthological collection of the Instituto Biologico de 8. Paulo, No. 1490. Paratypes. U.S. N. Museum helminthological collec- tion No. 32533. ; 1 Received September 14, 1933. 2 Comp. Rend. Soc. Biol. Paris. 93: 1255. 1925. JANUARY 15, 1934 VAZ AND PEREIR: PARASITIC WORMS 0 E S = Con & S : : vy mo S 9 X — S Ny > a @7. Fig. 1.—Skrjabinofilaria pricet. a, anterior end of female; 6b and c, posterior end of female; d, posterior end of male. Gongylonema marsupialis n. sp. Kies 2: Two well preserved female specimens and the anterior portion of another are the only material on which our description is based. It is possible that this species is a synonym of a Gongylonema already known; we have created it based on differences in the host and the geographic distribution. Only when male specimens have been studied can we say whether this new species is valid or not. Female.—Length 37 mm. Thickness 0.26 mm. Mouth surrounded by 56 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. 1 small dorsal and ventral lips. Cuticle thick, with transverse striations, bear- ing in the oesophageal region of the body a number of rounded or oval cutic- ular plaques arranged in three longitudinal rows on the dorsal and ventral parts. Cervical alae symmetrical and relatively broad, extending anteriorly to within 0.31 mm. of the extremity. The pharynx is very short, measuring 0.049 mm. in length. The muscular portion of the oesophagus measures 0.74—0.8 mm. in length by 0.04 mm. in breadth. We cannot distinguish the posterior glandular portion of this organ. Nervous ring 0.52 mm. from the anterior extremity. The vulva is situated towards the posterior extremity, 4.2 mm. from the tip of the tail. The short muscular ovejector is directed anteriorly. The uterus is entirely full of numerous little eggs; coils of uterine complex extending near the anus. The anus is situated 0.22—0.24 mm. from the very blunt posterior extremity. Host.—Didelphys aurita Wied. ' Location.—Mucous membrane of the oesophagus. F Geographic distribution.—S. Paulo, Brazil. " Allotypes.—Instituto Biologico de S. Paulo helminthological collection No. 1220. ww 29 a : - / | 0,05 rn rm Yo) e Fig. 2.—Gongylonema marsupialis. a and b, anterior end; c, posterior end of female. ZOOLOGY .—An annotation on the nematode genus Pontonema Leidy 1855.1. N. A. Cops and G. STEINER, Bureau of Plant Industry. Joseph Leidy described in 1855 and again in 1856 a new genus of free-living nematodes which he called Pontonema, and to which he re- 1 The figures for this paper were prepared by Josephine F. Danforth and Florence M. Albin, and technical assistance was given by Edna M. Buhrer, all of the Division of Nematology, Bureau of Plant Industry. Received October 21, 1933. JANUARY 15, 19384 COBB AND STEINER: GENUS PONTONEMA oO” ferred two species, P. vacillatum and P. marinum. Unfortunately Leidy’s incomplete characterization of the genus and the two species did not allow later observers to recognize or place them properly. In 1927 a revision of the nematodes still available in Leidy’s various collections was published by Walton. In this revision Pontonema vacillatum was referred to the genus Oncholaimus Dujardin and the species redescribed; P. marinum was transferred to Enoplus. About that same time, the senior author, in connection with investigations on nematodes from the New England coast, found it desirable to de- termine, if possible, the exact standing of the two forms. From the redescription by Walton (4) it may well be seen that Pontonema vacillatum belongs to the Oncholaims but its membership in the genus Oncholaimus proper seems doubtful. As to Enoplus marinus as redescribed by Walton a more detailed characterization also seemed necessary to properly differentiate the form from other species. Such a revision was made possible through the courtesy of Dr. J. Perey Moore of the University of Pennsylvania, to whom we express our thanks. THE GENUS PONTONEMA LEIDY 1855 ( =PARONCHOLAIMUS FILIPJEV 1916) Reexamination of the type material collected by Leidy proved that Pon- tonema vacillatum belongs to the genus Paroncholaimus Filipjev 1916. The latter genus is therefore a synonym of Pontonema which is now reestablished and diagnosed as follows: Oncholaiminae with an anterior circle of six papillae and a posterior circle of ten short setae on the head, with three teeth in the buccal cavity, the two subventral ones of symmetrical position, equal size, and both larger than the dorsal one. Buccal cavity of strict dorso-ventral symmetry. Tail short, obtuse, curved. Female apparatus amphidelphic. Gubernaculum well de- veloped. . Type: Pontonema vacillatum Leidy 1855.? REDESCRIPTION OF PONTONEMA VACILLATUM LEIDY 1855 The body tapers slightly toward the head end; the tail of both sexes is short and obtuse, (fig. le, e, f) somewhat digitate in the male. The smooth, transparent cuticle is 6—-7u thick. There are six flap-like lips, each with a papilla at its base (fig. la). In addition there are ten short cephalic setae, of which one occurs in each lateral and two in each submedial sector. Short somatic setae also occur in longitudinal series in the oesophageal region of the body. The inconspicuous amphids are situated opposite the point of the dorsal tooth. | The buccal cavity is of typical shape, about 38-43 wide and 75—85y long, and the three teeth are placed as shown in fig. ld. As in related forms the cane velannius vulgaris (Bastian 1865) was declared type of the genus by Filipjev in 1916. 58 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, NO. 1 5: i Ape : of 4 a J : 4 e si Fig. 1—Pontonema vacillatum Leidy 1855 a.—Top view of head. X515. b— c.—Tail of male. 235. d.—Lateral Detail of male ventro-median supplement, e.—Tail of male. X235. j.—Tail of female showing view of head of female. 515. spinneret. X515. g.—Detail of spicula and gubernaculum. JANUARY 15, 1934 COBB AND STEINER: GENUS PONTONEMA 59 oesophagus is of cylindrical shape, increasing somewhat posteriad in diam- eter. It is surrounded by the nerve-ring at about 0.5—0.6 mm. from the an- terior end. The position of the caudal glands was not made out, but is undoubtedly preanal, as in other members of the group; their outlet, the spinneret, is very minute (fig. le, f). The excretory pore opens about four and one-half times the length of the buccal cavity behind the head end. The female apparatus is amphidelphic, with a larger posterior branch. This inequality in the size of the two branchesis especially noticeable by the number of smooth, thin shelled eggs in the two uteri, the anterior containing up to eleven, the posterior up to twenty-four. These eggs are oval, measure 45X55u and are apparently deposited unsegmented. The ovaries are re- flexed. In the male, the spicula are quite slender and of much simpler form than the gubernaculum, which, as shown in fig. 1g, is of complicated structure and almost as long as the spicula themselves. A pair of large preanal papillae is located a short distance anteriad of the anus, and farther forward, at about twice the spicula length in front of the anus, a ventromedian supplement is present (fig. le and fig. 1b). A number of papillate structures is furthermore spread over the male tail and also as a preanal ventrosubmedial series (fig. 1c). Oe als (eee cao 2 OO aD, ss WS TT OA. eae Oe .98 .59 Al eee. ME O92:2 EE LD 2D TOD. 43 ? OAR = T. Habitat—Kennebunk Port, Maine. Diagnosis.—Pontonema with the tail slightly longer than the anal body diameter with very short cephalic setae, with amphids opposite the point of the dorsal tooth, with the excretory pore at about four and one-half times the length of the buccal cavity behind the anterior end, with a longer pos- terior branch of the amphidelphic female apparatus; with gubernacula only slightly smaller in size than the spicula and also in the male with a pair of slightly submedial papillae in front of the anus. REDESCRIPTION OF ENOPLUS MARINUS (LEIDY 1855) WALTON 1927 The cuticle is thin, measuring on the head only 5.5u, in the oesophageal region 8u. It is traversed by fine transverse striae. The head is set off by a fine line, a suture, as in other Enoplids, about two-thirds head-width back. There are ten cephalic setae—one in each lateral and two in each submedial sector. The latter are of unequal size, the longer one measuring about 22u, its companion being about one-third shorter. A few short, small setae are scattered in the oesophageal region and on the tail. Around the ora] opening six lips are seen, obscurely grouped in pairs. Each of the lips bears a mammi- form papilla. In the buccal cavity the three equal, yellowish, slightly arcuate mandibles of 35u length have their normal position, one dorsal and one in each ventro-submedial sector. Each mandible, 35u long, has two slightly retrorse, distinctly separated prongs. Anteriorly each mandible is about 16y 60 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. I wide but tapers posteriorly rather regularly to its blunt end which is exactly opposite the aforementioned encircling suture. The lip region is supported by a refractive transverse triangular framework, serving for the attachment of the powerful buccal muscles. The small amphids occur a short distance behind the lateral setae; their ellipsoidal, transverse openings are about. 12u long. Their opening leads into a pouch-like structure behind which follows a fusiform cavity containing the sensilla. As in other Enopli the three oesophageal glands empty near the base of the mandibles into the alimentary tract. No ocelli or pigment spots were seen on the oesophagus, but long preservation of the material may have caused their disappearance. Behind the buccal cavity the oesophagus is about three-fifths, at the nerve-ring about one-half and at the base again three-fifths as wide as the corresponding portion of the body. The lateral chords opposite the middle of the oesophagus are about one-third as wide as the body, whereas in the middle of the nematode they seem to be more nearly half the corresponding body width. The number of cells making up the intestine in a cross section is estimated to be about 20; a few scattered intestinal cells are considerably larger than the rest. The rectum is about as long as the anal body diameter. The base of the tail tapers conically and thence onward it may be said to be subcylindroid in the posterior two-fifths, although the terminus is slightly sy e Fig. 2.—Enoplus marinus (Leidy 1855) Walton 1927 a.—Tail of male. X170- b.—Lateral view of head of male. X490. c.—Tail of female. X170. d.—Top view of head of male. X380. e.—Detail of tail showing spinneret. 490. JANUARY 15, 19384 SCHMITT: NOTES ON PYCNOGONIDS 61 swollen. A spinneret forms the opening of the large tubular outlets of the caudal glands. The inconspicuous excretory pore is located halfway back to the nerve- ring. Vulva slightly raised, vagina leading in at right angles; female apparatus amphidelphic, ovaries reflexed. Three to four eggs, each about as long as the body is wide and two-thirds as wide as long, are contained in each uterus. The egg shell (1—2u thick) seems to be smooth. The male has two equal, rather flatly arcuate spicula, about two-thirds as long as the tail; they taper throughout their length. A double gubernacu- lum is about one-fourth as long as the spicula and a telamon slightly longer. The single tubular supplement (65X15) is located about twice the length of the spicula in front of the anus. Its length is about one-third the cor- responding body width and it forms an angle of about 45° with the body axis. About one hundred posteriorly continuous oblique copulatory muscles (about 12u wide) occur for a distance in front of the anus equal to 2-3 times the length of the tail. A few are located behind the anus. i ogee ae Oe je 696.00 SSS PG TLE ic 129 1.6 iho) 1.3 OPA iol. TZ, M Tall SO SS Cia TNT OE A 1.4 2.2 1.4 Habitat—Kennebunk Port, Maine, and in oyster bed, Atlantic City, New Jersey. Diagnosis—Enoplus resembling FE. brevis Bastian, 1865, but differing from it by larger size (8-9 mm. instead of 4.-5.5 mm. in EF. brevis), by a slightly shorter tail in the female, by regularly tapering spicula and by a more slender and smaller preanal supplement in the male. LITERATURE CITED 1. Finipsev,1.N. Les nématodes libres contenus dans les collections du Musée Zoologique de l’Académie Impériale des Sciences de Petrograd. Annuaire Mus. Zool. Acad. Imper. Sciences. 21: 59-116. 2. Letpy, JosEPH. Contributions towards a knowledge of the marine invertebrate fauna of the coasts of Rhode Island and New Jersey. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Proc. 3: 135- i525 SoD: . Letpy, JosEpH. A synopsis of entozoa and some of their ecto-congeners, observed by the author. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Proc. 8: 42-58. 1856. 4. Watton, ARTHURC. A revision of the nematodes of the Leidy collections. Acad. Nat. Sei. Phila. Proc. 79: 49-163. 1927. » OO ZOOLOGY .—WNotes on certain pycnogonids including descriptions of two new species of Pycnogonum.! Waupo L. Scumirt, U.S. National Museum. Along with various collections of invertebrates received at the National Museum, there are a number of pycnogonids which seem worthy of record. Included are two apparently new species of Pycno- 1 Published by permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Re- ceived November 3, 1933. 62 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, NO. 1 gonum, P. rickettsi and P. hancockv. The first of these new species comes from Pacific Grove, Monterey Bay, California, where it was collected by the donor, Mr. E. F. Ricketts, owner and director of the Pacific Biological Laboratories. The second was taken in the Gala- pagos Islands in the course of the recent survey of that zoologically unique group of islands by Captain G. Allan Hancock, of Los Angeles and Santa Maria, California, sponsor and leader of the Hancock Galapagos Expedition of 1933. This second new species is here pub- lished in advance of the more complete account of the results of the expedition in order to make this interesting find known without de- lay. Pycnogonum rickettsi, new species So far as I am aware, this is the first reticulated Pycnogonum found in the northern hemisphere. The proboscis is nearly as long as the first three trunk segments taken together, and is about half as wide as long. Measured across the crurigers the first trunk segment is almost twice as wide as long in the median line; the width across the crurigers of the third segment is equal to the length of the first two segments, the width of the second segment is intermediate between the first and third. The first seg- ment is about as long as the second and half the third taken together; the third is less than half the first in length and from two-thirds to three- fourths the length of the second. The abdomen is a little longer than the fourth segment and the fused por- tion of the crurigers forming part of it taken together; it extends posteriorly as far as the first coxae of the last, fourth, pair of legs and its width is ap- proximately equal to half its length. The oculiferous tubercle arises a little behind the anterior margin of the segment; it is cylindrical, more or less rounded above, with the suggestion of a small ‘‘granular”’ tip or apex, and carries no accessory spines or tubercles either before or behind; the eye spots are faintly marked, of just slightly deeper and darker color than the body, and not at all as conspicuous‘as in the drawing. On the ‘“‘neck”’ of the first segment in line behind the oculiferous tubercle is a stout conical, somewhat apically pointed spine, which is per- haps half again as high as the oculiferous tubercle; similar but stronger spines top the second and third segments, that on the second is the largest of the three. The third is intermediate in size between the first and second; the dorsum of the small triangular portion of the fourth segment proper is but slightly convexly raised medially, forming in some specimens more than in others a low, blunt, rounded and rather inconspicuous eminence. The lateral processes of the body or crurigers are subequal to the first coxae in length, except that the first pair are a little longer than the corresponding coxae and the last pair, which bulk less than half, or only a third the size of the subjoined coxae. Each cruriger is armed at the middle of its upper distal margin with a well formed small spine or conical tubercle; these spines or tubercles decrease in size and height from last to first; the first are very small yet distinct and noticeable, the last pair are stouter and less spine- like; the others are intermediate in size and form. Similar stouter and larger tubercles are located on the distal margin of the first coxae of corresponding ambulatory legs; those on the first coxae of the last or fourth legs, are each JANUARY 15, 1934 SCHMITT: NOTES ON PYCNOGONIDS 63 somewhat curved backward and outward; those on the first coxae of the third legs are less curved than those on the fourth pair and like the spines or tubercles topping the crurigers, they also decrease in size and prominence back to front; but individually each pair is slightly larger and stouter than the corresponding spines on the crurigers. The second and third coxae of the ambulatory legs are without any par- ticular armature; they are swollen or expanded distally, the first coxae of each leg appear somewhat nodulose, in dorsal view at least. All of the joints of the walking legs are roughened, more or less tubercular-granulate on the upper or outer surface; above, the distal margin of the femoral and first tibial joints are armed each with a pair of juxtaposed, stout, conical, lumpy, tu- bercles, the tibial pair of which is smaller than the femoral; similarly placed on the second tibial joint is an inconspicuous pair of small tubercles or nodules; between each of these several pairs of tubercles or nodules on the femoral and tibial joints arises a stout seta or hair. In length the second tarsal joint of the third right leg about equals the second tibial joint and the first tarsal taken together; the terminal claw is about half, more or less, the length of the second tarsal joint; beneath, the first and second tarsal joints have a fairly dense fringe or multiple row of short spinules; similar spinules fewer in number and less definitely in rows occur on the under side of the second tibial joint; and some few scattered spinules are to be found here and there on the lower surface of the first tibial joint, and even more sparingly on the femoral joint. Type and distribution—One of two male specimens taken ‘‘from an anemone, probably Metridiwm, brought in by a ‘dragboat’ from deep water (60 fms.), Pacific Grove, March 31, 1925,” by Mr. Ricketts has been selected as the holotype. It is slightly the larger of the two, and measures approxi- mately: proboscis, length 3 mm.; greatest width, 1.2 mm; length of trunk to base of posterior crurigers, 3 mm.; abdomen 0.9 mm. long. The largest specimen of this species at hand is a female, which is but very little larger than the type. It has the proboscis 3.5 mm. long by 1.5 mm. wide; and trunk 4, and abdomen about 1.1 mm. long (measurements approximate). Regard- ing it, Mr. Ricketts says, ‘‘The large female was taken June 24, 1925, in 40-50 fms., mud bottom, off Pt. Davenport, about 14 miles N.W. of Santa Cruz on an anemone or Polynices shell. “Tt is interesting to note that Pycnogonum stearnsi occurs almost invari- ably on Metridium on wharf piling, on barnacles that also have Metridium, or on Bunodactis in the tide pools; whereas the other larger [new] species of Pycnogonum seems to occur also in connection with Metridium, but entirely on the giant Metridium from deep water. Ecologically, as well as taxonomi- cally, it would appear that these two Pycnogonums are closely related, since the mud bottom association of deep water is most closely related to the wharf piling associations of the intertidal zone.”’ There is still a fourth specimen of this species in our collections, also col- lected and donated by Mr. Ricketts, from Pacific Grove, 1927. Remarks.—P. rickettsi seems to be the only reticulated Pycnogonum known at present, in which the spines, or processes on the first three trunk segments, are individually much stronger than, and considerably exceed the ocular tubercle in height. P. cataphractum, in which the first of the median processes is larger than the ocular tubercle, is at once set apart by its very spiny legs. In P. mucronatum the median row of spines or processes topping the trunk 64 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, NO. 1 Fig. 1—Pycnogonum rickettsi. a, Dorsal view of holotype, X about 8; b, Lateral view; c, Third right leg, X about 29; d, Oviger, X about 60. JANUARY 15, 1934 SCHMITT: NOTES ON PYCNOGONIDS 65 segments are more or less subequal in height with the ocular tubercle, they may slightly exceed it but they are much less stout, indeed feeble in com- parison ; moreover, the very long slender spine-like processes topping the distal upper margins of the crurigers are quite distinctive of this species and readily set it apart from all others. P. madagascarensis, which, regrettably, seems never to have been figured, has its proboscis in the shape of a truncate cone like P. mucronatum, but the median dorsal tubercles are low and not so elevated and columnar- appearing as in that species, while spines or tubercles on the crurigers above seem to be wholly wanting. Pycnogonum hancocki, new species A very striking reticulated species of light tan, with reticulation a deep rich red-brown color, contrasting sharply with the bright white articulating ends of the various joints. The ocular tubercle forms quite a conspicuous feature in the color pattern of this species because of its darker coloration and greater concentration of brown. This is due chiefly to the presence of the dark brown pigmented eye-spots and to the fact that two of the dark brown lines forming the reticulations divide the ocular tubercle roughly into four quarters. The proboscis is subcylindrical, truncate, and a little narrower anteriorly than posteriorly. It is about 2} times as long as its greatest width. In length the proboscis is very slightly longer than the first two and half the third trunk segments taken together. The first trunk segment is equal in length to the second, third, and fourth taken together; its greatest width over the outermost angles of the crurigers equals the combined length of the first, second, and about a fourth of the third trunk segments taken together. The greatest width of the second segment is equal to the length of the first two trunk segments taken together. The third segment is about as wide as the length of the first trunk segment plus one-third the second. The posterior pair of crurigers are fused for a part of their length. The abdomen is about two-fifths the proboscis in length. In line behind the only moderately high, rounded ocular tubercle are three rounded tubercles, each smaller and less robust than the ocular; of these the third on the third trunk segment is the larger; the first is situated on the hinder margin of the first trunk segment; the second of these three tubercles is but little larger than the first and, like it, is placed on the hinder margin of its, the second, segment. On the dorsum of the last trunk segment there is no eminence or raised place worthy of comment, under a higher magnification there appears to be a very slight elevation or swelling at about the midpoint of the center line. The distal margins of the crurigers seem to be rather inconspicuously, slightly nodulated, or perhaps just a bit more coarsely granulated, than the rest of the body surface. The distal margins of the first coxae of all the ambulatory legs seem little swollen, there being a tiny nodule or tubercle either side of the brown line of the reticulations which divides the white area into two; at about the distal mid portion of the proximal half of the second coxae of the second and third legs there is a single small nodule of comparable size, the second coxa of the first leg seems without a trace of nodulation, while the second coxae of the fourth pair each carry a pair of 66 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, NO. 1 Fig. 2—Pycnogonum hancocki. a, Dorsal view of holotype, X nearly 9; 6, Lateral view; c, Third right leg, X about 19; d, Oviger of male, X about 70. JANUARY 15, 1934 SCHMITT: NOTES ON PYCNOGONIDS 67 nodules or noticeable small rounded tubercles, one on the middorsal line, and the other transversely in line and a little behind the median axis of the coxa. The remaining joints of the ambulatory legs are rather uniformly finely granulate, as is the entire animal. In the third right leg the three coxal joints are more or less sub-equal in length as are the femoral and the first tibial joints approximately; the second tibial joint and the second. tarsal exclusive of the terminal claw are also of about the same length; measured on the ventral margin, the first tarsal joint is very little longer than the terminal claw; the second tibial joint is about two-thirds the length of the first, and either two coxal joints are equal to three-fourths the femoral joint in length. Much as in the preceding species, the inferior borders of the tarsal joints are finely spinulate, and to a lesser extent the tibial joints near their distal ends only. Type and distribution.—The largest of four specimens before me, a female, has been taken as the type. It was taken Feb. 9, 1933, in company with a somewhat smaller male carrying eggs on its ovigers at Sta. 65, Hancock Galapagos Expedition, at low tide from a small rocky reef, offshore, north of Tagus Hill, Albemarle Island, Galapagos, latitude 0°14’ S. It measures approximately: proboscis 2.4 mm. long by 0.9 mm. wide; trunk, exclusive of posterior crurigers, 2.6 mm. long; and abdomen 1.0 mm. The two other specimens at hand, both females, were taken respectively at Chatham Island, January 31, 1933, in the course of dredging in 2-3 fathoms east of Wreck Bay; and during shore collecting along the rocky shore east of Cormorant Point, Charles Island, Galapagos, February 6, 1933. Remarks.—P. hancock: is one of the reticulated species of Pycnogonum be- longing to the group having a few tubercles on the ambulatory legs. From the species so grouped, P. indicum, madagascarensis and mucronatum, it differs, in the case of the first, among other characters, in lacking the armed ridge running back from the ocular tubercle, and in having a subcylindrical proboscis instead of a decided conical one; the proboscis of P. madagascar- ensis, like that of P. indicum, forms an obtuse cone; in P. mucronatum the height of the median dorsal tubercle of the trunk serves to differentiate it from P. hancockt, aside from the fact that the former has long slender spinous or tubercular processes on the crurigers which are wholly lacking in the latter. The very low dorsal tubercles of the trunk segments of this species seem rather unique among the reticulated Pycnogonums, particularly those with legs comparatively or almost wholly free of noticeable tubercles. NYMPHON GROSSIPES (Fabr.) On occasion of a reconnaissance in the Bering Sea in the furtherance of the National Geographic Society’s interest in the possibilities of aerial Arctic exploration, Capt. R. A. Bartlett made a number of dredgings for marine invertebrates. In one haul made about fifteen miles north of Big Diomede Island, Bering Strait, June 14, 1924, two specimens of Nymphon grossipes were obtained. The only previous records of this species off the West American coast are those of John 68 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. 1 Murdoch at Point Franklin in 134 fathoms and at the head of Norton Sound, Alaska, in 5 fathoms, respectively August 31 and September 12, 1883. PHOXICHILIDIUM FEMORATUM (Rathke) A very ragged, yet identifiable, specimen of this species was re- ceived from the U. 8. Biological Survey as a part of the stomach con- tents of Histrionicus histrionicus pacificus Brooks, the Pacific har- lequin duck, collected by A. M. Bailey Sept. 1, 1920, at Stephens Pas- sage, Alaska. At the time of its receipt, the specimen represented a noteworthy eastward and southward extension of the range for the species, which heretofore on the west coast of America had only been known to range from Unalaska to Orea (Cole). However, I have also had occasion to determine another specimen of this species from much farther south, from Ucluelet, Vancouver Island. This specimen is listed a second time below as one of the pycnogonids seen from British Columbia. AMMOTHEA LATIFRONS Cole A portion of fragments of sixteen specimens of this pyenogonid were determined for the Biological Survey from the stomach contents of the Pacific harlequin duck, Histrionicus histrionicus pacificus Brooks, taken by P. A. Tavener at Kiska Island, Aleutians, April 16, 1924. AMMOTHEA PRIBILOFENSIS Cole This species has been determined from stomachs of Histrionicus histrionicus pacificus Brooks, the Pacific harlequin duck, as well as Somataria v-nigra Gray, the Pacific eider, on several occasions in quantities of one to three specimens. The birds in which these identi- filable specimens were found were secured by G. Dallas Hanna on St. Paul Island, Pribilofs, January 13 and 29, 1918, and Mar. 21, 1915. In several other specimens of each of these two ducks, fragments of pycnogonids which could not be definitely named were found, as well as in a pigeon guillemot, Cepphus columba Pallas, also obtained by Dr. Hanna on St. Paul Island, Dec. 9, 1914. Hydroids of at least two species were found in the stomachs of several of the birds from which pycnogonids were sorted at the Survey. The remarkable variety of marine animals eaten by the ducks at least would indicate that the pycnogonids were very probably ingested along with the hydroids, some algae, crustacea, mollusks, echinoderms, and the like, which form the bulk of their varied fare. JANUARY 15, 1984 SCHMITT: NOTES ON PYCNOGONIDS 69 PYCNOGONIDS FROM MONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA As it may be of some interest, a list of the Monterey Bay pycno- gonids that were identified a few years ago for Mr. E. F. Ricketts of the Pacific Biological Laboratories is here appended. Eight species are to be recorded from the region: ANOPLODACTYLUS ERECTUS Cole, 1 specimen, collected in 1927, ‘from compound ascidians far out; tide pools.’’ HALOSOMA VIRIDINTESTINALIS Cole, 16 specimens, chiefly taken in 1928, “from wharf piling, Obelza colonies.”’ 7 AMMOTHEA LATIFRONS Cole, 2 specimens ‘‘from 80 fathoms,”’ re- ceived in 1928. These specimens seem to be of a somewhat more slender build as regards the appendages, eye-tubercle, and abdomen than most of those available for comparison from farther north. How- ever, one from Sanborn Harbor, Nagai, Alaska, determined by Leon J. Cole, appears so well to link the California specimens to the species that I have so identified them in spite of what appears to be a very considerable extension of range southward. AMMOTHELLA TUBERCULATA Cole, | young specimen, received 1927. LECYTHORHYNCHUS MARGINATUS Cole, 3 specimens, data as for A. erectus above. TANSTYLUM INTERMEDIUM Cole, 2 specimens, received in 1927. PYCNOGONUM STEARNSI Ives, 9 specimens received in 1927. One of specimens was found on an anemone. PYCNOGONUM RICKETTSI Schmitt, specimens and occurrence as given with the description of the species above. PYCNOGONIDS FROM SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AMMOTHELLA BI-UNGUICULATA Dohrn, 3 specimens from San Pedro (Pt. White), collected by E. P. Chace, May 5, 1919. AMMOTHELLA SPINOSISSIMA Hall, 1 specimen, as above, May 18, 1919. PYCNOGONUM STEARNSI Ives, 13 specimens, collected by E. P. Chace; three males, one female, from tide pools, Point Fermin, Mar. 28, 1918; and three males, six females, from mussels, north of Santa Monica, Nov. 17, 1918. PYCNOGONIDS FROM BRITISH COLUMBIA From Ucluelet, Vancouver Islands, W. Spreadborough, May—July, 1909, sent in pyenogonids of four species for identification, while a fifth but tentatively determined was taken from Virago Sound, Queen 70 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, NO. 1 Charlotte Island, from 8-15 fathoms by M. Dawson, 1878. The specimens seen are as follows: PHOXICHILIDIUM FEMORATUM (Rathke), 1 specimen. AMMOTHEA GRACILIPES Cole, 4 specimens. AMMOTHELLA, TUBERCULATA Cole, 5 specimens. ? AMMOTHEA ALASKENSIS Cole, 1 specimen; close to if not identical with this species; from hydroids. SCIENTIFIC NOTES AND NEWS Prepared by Science Service NoTEs National Academy of Sciences.—A number of contributions were made by Washington scientists at the autumn meeting of the National Academy of Sciences at Cambridge, November 20 to 22. Dr. F. EK. WricHt announced new data obtained in polariscopic examination of moonlight, and their bearing on the problem of the nature of the lunar rocks. Dr. C. G. ABBoT spoke on his recent discovery of a 23-year weather cycle, and its correlation with periods of sun-spot maxima. Dr. ARTHUR E. Morgan, director of the Tennessee Valley Authority, delivered the principal evening lecture, on Muscle Shoals and the Tennessee Valley Problem. Dr. JoHN C. MERRIAM pre- sented a review of the present status of the problem of the antiquity of man in North America. Gen. GEorGE O. SQuiER discussed a proposal for a com- bined sound and light distributor. National Institute of Health—Researches at the National Institute of Health and at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York City indicate that encephalitis patients develop immune bodies in their blood. In both investigations a virus-susceptible strain of mice was used. The animals were inoculated with material from the brains of encephalitis vic- tims, producing typical symptoms. But susceptible mice given preliminary injections of blood serum from encephalitis patients were protected from the disease. The Colorists organized.—The artistic, commercial, scientific, and other aspects of color will be the concern of an informal group organized under the name of The Colorists. While color enters into many activities of daily life and is of interest to groups of artists, physicists, and industrialists in many aspects, Washington has not heretofore had a society whose primary object was color in all of its many aspects. At the organization meeting held at the Cosmos Club, CHarLEs BiTTincEeR, Washington artist who has made a scientific study of color, presided. Miss Dorotuy NicksErson, color expert of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics of the Department of Agri- culture, was also one of the leading organizers. Among those who participated in the formation of the organization were Dr. E. C. CRITTENDEN, assistant director of the U. 8. Bureau of Standards, and Mr. A. EH. O. MunsE x1 of the Munsell Research Laboratory, Baltimore, Md., who has been a leader in the commercial standardization of color. The U.S. Bureau of Standards was also represented by Dr. K. 8. Gipson, Dr. DEANE B. Jupp, R. T. MEAss, J.T. BREwstTErR, WILLIAM D. Appr, R.S. Hunter, Dr. Percy A. WALKER, JANUARY 15, 1934 SCIENTIFIC NOTES AND NEWS (fi Miss Rusy K. Worner, Miss GENEVIEVE BEcKeER, and Dr. H. D. HusBarp. Among the representatives of the U. 8S. Department of Agriculture were: B. A. Brice, M. R. Coz, C. C. Firretp, Paut E. Hown, Grorce PFEIFFEN- BERGER, CHARLES E. Sanpbo. From the University of Maryland came Dr. Braumont and LEE SHRADER. The Paint and Varnish Institute was repre- sented by L. P. Hart, J. R. Stewart, G. G. Swarp and A. W. Oan. Dr. T. S. Bracxetr and Dr. E. D. McAtistTrer attended, representing the Division of Radiation of the Smithsonian Institution. Dr. 8. W. Boaes, geographer of the State Department and Miss Epna S. Banks of the Library of Congress Map Division represented geographical interest. Lieut. BERN ANDERSON mentioned the color problems of the U. 8. Navy. Other Washing- ton fields of color interest were represented by CHARLES VAL CLEAR, director of the Art League, I. H. Gopuove, color counselor, and Fetrx MAHonrEy, artist. National Zoological Park.—A “ghost wolf” (Chrysocyon jubatus) from Brazil has been acquired by the National Zoological Park. The animal, which is about five months old, is believed to be the only one in captivity. The National Zoological Park has also started a collection of birds whose names are familiar in English literature; it includes specimens of the English robin, European shrike, goldfinch, chaffinch, hawfinch, bullfinch, lapwing and waxwing. Specimens of the bulbul and shamas thrush, Asiatic birds also often mentioned by English authors, are also included. National Bureau of Standards.—On the evening of Saturday, November 18, the members of the staff of the Bureau of Standards gave a reception in honor of Dr. Lyman J. Briaas, the new Director of the Bureau. In addition to staff members there were in attendance the Secretary of Commerce and the heads of the scientific bureaus of the Government. An exhibit of recent developments in science was arranged in connection with the recep- tion. PERSONAL ITEMS Dr. GuNTHER ROEDER, director of the Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim Germany, lectured before the Archaeological Society of Washington on discoveries made by his expedition at Hermopolis, in Egypt. Dr. Witut1aM WALLACE CAMPBELL, president of the National Academy of Sciences, president emeritus of the University of California and director emeritus of the Lick Observatory, was the principal speaker at the annual Carnegie Day exercises of the Carnegie Institute of Technology on November 28. Dean A. A. Porrrr of Purdue University has been added to the committee on railway research of the Science Advisory Board. Dr. W. F. G. Swann, director of the Bartol Research Foundation of the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, gave a cello recital before the Arts Club of Washington on the evening of Thursday, December 14. Dr. Karu F. Kevuerman has been appointed head of a new division of plant disease eradication and control in the Bureau of Entomology, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Freperick D. RicHry, now in charge of corn investigations in the 72 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, No. 1 Bureau of Plant Industry, has been promoted to be associate chief, effective January 1. Dr. JAMES RosBeERTSON, director of the Nautical Almanac office of the Naval Observatory, was given the degree of Doctor of Science by George- town University on the evening of Friday, December 24. Among those who witnessed the ceremony was the Rev. EH. C. Puiuurps, 8.J., formerly astron- omer at Georgetown and now Father Provincial of the Baltimore Province of the Society of Jesus. Dr. W. B. BE tt, of the Bureau of Biological Survey, attended the 47th annual convention of the Association of Land Grant Colleges and Uni- versities, at Chicago, Ill. RicHARD KILBOURNE, forester for the Extension Service of the University of Maryland during the last three years, has resigned to become assistant chief of planting in the forestry department of the Tennessee Valley Au- thority at Knoxville. W. C. HENDERSON, associate chief of the Bureau of Biological Survey, spoke over the radio on the subject, A critical time for ducks and geese, on November 12. His talk was broadeast by Station WMAL in Washington. He pointed to overshooting as one of the chief causes of the decrease in water- fowl and the only one that can be remedied immediately. Park Naturalist PauL R. FRANKE of Mesa Verde National Park and Park Naturalist D. 8. Lippy of Crater Lake National Park are in the Washing- ton Office at the present time. Mr. FRANK will remain in Washington for several months assisting with the motion picture program being lined up for the Civilian Conservation Corps camps by the Branch of Research and Education. Mr. Lipsey will also remain in the Washington Office for several months to assist with the Emergency Conservation Work program being carried out in the reservations under the jurisdiction of this office. Mr. Earu A. TRAGER, geologist in the branch of research and education, office of National Parks, Buildings and Reservations, U. 8. Department of the Interior, will give a talk on the geology in the national parks at the forth- coming meeting of the Geological Society of America to be held in Chicago at the end of December. F, P. Parris and E. M. SxHook of the department of historical research, Carnegie Institution of Washington, received training in December at the department of terrestrial magnetism in making astronomical observations for the determination of latitude and longitude and in observing the magnetic declination preparatory to taking up work in connection with the proposed archaeological excavations in Central America. Mr. Jason R. SwWALLEN, assistant agrostologist, Bureau of Plant Industry, sailed Nov. 22 for Para, Brazil. He will spend six months collecting and studying grasses in the states of Para, Maranhao, Piauhy, Ceara, and Rio Grande do Norte. The grasses of this region are very little known, the few botanists who have visited northeastern Brazil having as a rule neglected the grasses. CONTENTS ORIGINAL PAPERS Page Chemistry—The ammoniation of waste sulfite liquor and its possible utilization as a fertilizer material. Max Puruuips, M. J. Goss, B. E. Brown, and ve R. FRB ee Oy a hate aed a os De CON GOR Rata a a en 1 Hydrology.—The history and development of ground-water hydrology. abun EpWaRp UMBINZER } os 000408 Sa oo a Oe 6 Botany.— Hawaiian algae collected by Dr. Paul C. Galtsoff. Marsnaun A. BOWE cis ee fe Pa eS ee A eS an BSR 2 en 32 Botany.—New plants mainly from western South America—lV. ELusworts P. | FORTE G2) ee ee a ke eo oa Sea ne a et ted ee cr Gude Why abe Zoology.— A new v sea-urchin from Florida. Austin H. OUARK...........-++.-. 52 foology —Two new parasitic worms of Didelphys aurita: Skrjabino; apie pricet n. sp. and Gongylonema marsuptalis n. sp. ZEFERINO Vaz and CLEMENTE PRT R 5 Re og ORs Ta de aa ate int Oo Geto, ae tag ts ee a BE 54 Zoology.—An annotation on the nematode genus Pontonema. N.A.Copgand G. SPMINER woo ol Ry oa ists Ce ee Zoology.—Notes on certain pycnogonids including descriptions of two new species _ of Pycnogonum.’ «WawLno L: SCHMITT. 3.0. ge a ee 61 Scrunrivic Notes anp NewS. 0.40. Oyo i ee Oe 5 On 70 This Journal is indexed in the International Index to Periodicals Bt Psd LW 2 Vou, 24 | Frepruary 15, 1934 No. 2 JOURNAL | “vod: OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BOARD OF EDITORS Wiutmot H. BrapLrey JOHN A. STEVENSON F. G. BRICKWEDDE U. 8. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY BURBAU OF STANDARDS ASSOCIATE EDITORS H. T. WENSEL Haroup Morrison PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY -E. A. GotpMAN W. W. Rupey BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY GHOLOGICAL SOCIETY AGNES CHASE J. R. SWANTON BOTANICAL SOCIETY ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIBTY R. E. Grsson CHEMICAL SOCIETY PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 450 Aunalrr Sr. at MenasHa, WISCONSIN Entered as second class matter under the Act of August 24, 1912, at Menasha, Wis. Acceptance for mailing at the special rate of postage provided for in the Act of February 28, 1925. Authorized January 21, 1933. gy Buenal of ae Washington Academy of Sciences This JOURNAL, the official organ of the, Washington Academy of Scienees (1) short original papers, written or communicated by members of the Ac proceedings and programs of meetings of the Academy and affiliated so notes of events connected with the scientific life of Washington. The Journ monthly, on the fifteenth of each month. Volumes correspond to calendar years. 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Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washington, D. C. Meee CN tae Exchanges.—The JOURNAL does not exchange with other publications. ; hey a f . Ae is Missing Numbers will be replaced without charge provided that claim is made to Sea the Treasurer within thirty days after date of following issue. r § OFFICERS OF THE ACADEMY President: L. B. TuckERMAN, Bureau of Standards. Corresponding Secretary: Paut E. Hows, Bureau of Animal Industry. Recording Secretary: CuHaries TuHom, Bureau of Chemistry and Soils. Be cal ta Treasurer: Henry G. Avers, Coast and Geodetic Survey. | lean ae JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VoL. 24 FEBRUARY 15, 1934 No. 2 BOTANY.—Two new varieties of Salix scouleriana Barratt. “ CARLE- TON R. Batu, University of California. The well marked but variable species complex known as Salix scouleriana is distributed from New Mexico and southern California to the Yukon Valley of Canada and Alaska. In altitude it ranges from sea level along the Pacific Coast, from California to Alaska, to eleva- tions of 8000 or 9000 feet in the southern part of the Rocky Moun- tains and in the San Bernardino Mountains of California. It has been described under several specific names, including S. scouleriana Barratt (1839), S. flavescens Nuttall (1841), S. stagnalis Nuttall (1841), S. brachystachys Bentham (1857) and S. capreoides Andersson (1858). Probably some of the plants so named represent distinguishable varieties, but none of them is so recognized as yet. This is due in part to the difficulties of current herbarium material. It is a species of extremely precocious flowering and the promptly deciduous aments fall before the leaves develop. Some plants flower in December on the Pacific Coast. Except in the rare cases where col- lections are made from the same plant at intervals of some weeks, therefore, it is almost impossible to know what observed leaf forms are associated with certain ament and flower characters. The species certainly would be better understood if it could be split into varieties. Happily it now is possible to segregate and describe two varieties hitherto unrecognized. The writer desires to express thanks for the many courtesies re- ceived from the staff of the Department of Botany, University of Cali- fornia. SALIX SCOULERIANA var. coetanea Ball, var. nov. Sectio Capreae. A specie typica amentis coetaneis, pistilliferis iis speciei aliquando laxioribus, et ambobus in pedunculis brevibus folioso-bracteatis fultis differt. * Received October 17, 1933, 73 74 JOURNAL OF THE WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES VOL. 24, NO. 2 Shrub usually 2-4 or rarely 5 m. high. Branchlets rather slender, fragile (or readily deciduous in drying), divaricate, the 2-year brown to dark brown and glabrate to glabrous, the 1-year and seasonal shoots yellowish to brown and usually finely and often sparsely puberulent. Bud scales small, colored and clothed as the branchlets. Stipules wanting, or rarely 2-5 mm. long on vigorous shoots, broadly lanceolate, dentate, puberulent. Blades oblance- olate and acutish to obovate and obtuse or rounded at apex, cuneate at base, 3 to 5 cm. long by 1.5—2.5 cm. wide, or the larger up to 6 by 3 cm., entire and slightly revolute on the margins or the distal on seasonal shoots irregularly crenulate-denticulate, dark green above, glaucescent to glaucous beneath, puberulent on both surfaces (probably becoming glabrate in age). Aments coetaneous, borne on short, leafy-bracted peduncles, the Sena nate peduncle about 5 mm. long, with small bracts, the pistillate peduncle 5-15 mm. long and bearing 3—5 smal] leaf-like bracts, 0.5-2 em. long. Stam- inate aments 1-2 cm. long, Pistillate aments 1.5—4 cm. or sometimes 5 cm. long; pedicels of the capsules 0.5-1 or 1.5 mm. long; styles short, stigmas elongated, 1 mm. long, usually entire. Flower scales in both sexes elliptical- obovate, acutish to rounded, black, longvillous. This is a shrub with the general characters of S. scouleriana, but differing from type concept of that species and the next variety in having the aments coetaneous, the pistillate rather lax, and both sexes borne on short, leafy- bracted peduncles. For the material on which the description is based, bota- nists are indebted chiefly to two very discriminating collectors, Joseph P. Tracy of Eureka, California, and J. William Thompson of Seattle, Washing- ton. The writer is glad to acknowledge his personal obligation to both. As will be noted from the specimens cited, variety coetanea flowers from May to June, and fruit may be found during June and early July, in marked contrast to the early spring flowering of the species. Even at sea level, flowering did not occur until mid-March. There must be admitted the possibility that this condition results from physiological disturbance of the plant. The increasing number of collections, over a wide area, however, make this unlikely. The type specimen (pistillate) is Thompson No. 9297 in herbarium C. R. Ball (2 sheets). So far as available material indicates, this variety is confined to the central part of the range of the species. It occurs sparingly from northwestern Cali-. fornia to Nevada and Utah, and north to south-central Washington, western Montana, and the mountains in the southern parts of Alberta and British Columbia. It is found, therefore, in the Wasatch, Rocky, Sierra-Cascade, and Coast Range mountain systems. Except for the one collection near the ocean, where precipitation and fog maintain low temperatures, the collec- tions are all from elevations of 4000 to 6000 feet. It seems probable that the variety will be found to have an even wider range. Specimens examined are cited below. The containing herbariums are: CRB, Carleton R. Ball; NMC, National Museum of Canada; PC, Pomona College; UMont. University of Montana; and UC, University of California. CaLirornia: Humboldt Co. Ferndale, alt. 100 ft., shoots from cut and FEBRUARY 15, 1934 BALL: NEW SALIX VARIETIES 19 burned stump, Joseph P. Tracy 10921, (UC). Trinity Summit, shrub 10 ft. tall, on dryish slopes back from the meadows, Corral Prairie, alt. 5000 ft., Joseph P. Tracy 10507, (CRB, UC); shrub with erect branches, 15 ft. tall, at edge of meadow, same locality, Tracy 10518 (UC). Trinity Summit, common shrub in moist places, 6-10 ft. tall, rocky, ex- posed places, head of Devil’s Hole, alt. 6000 ft., Tracy 10694, (CRB, UC). Trinity Summit, rocky exposed places, head of Brett Hole, alt. 6000 ft., Tracy 10714, (UC). Modoc Co. In lodgepole pine woods, north slope of Bidwell Mtn., Warner Mts., Elmer I. Applegate 7619, (CRB). Nevapa: Head of Fall Creek, Ormsby Co., elev. 2460 m., C. F. Baker 1153, (PC; distrib. unnamed; 9 and