Report on the scientific results of the voyage of "Scotia" during the years 1902, 1903 and 1904, under the leadership of William SBruce . irteen $, twelve ?, one damaged [H 930]. Onesomewhat damaged specimen, $, probably of this species [H 137-|.Previous Records.—Cape of Good Hope ; False Bay, Cape is quite possible that some of the young specimens recorded as femalesmay be males in which the secondary sexual characters were as yet undeveloped. (ROY. soc. KDIN. TRANS., VOL. XLVIII., 280.) CEPHALOPODA OF THE SCOTTISH NATIONAL ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. 99 SEPIID^ austraUs, Quoy and


Report on the scientific results of the voyage of "Scotia" during the years 1902, 1903 and 1904, under the leadership of William SBruce . irteen $, twelve ?, one damaged [H 930]. Onesomewhat damaged specimen, $, probably of this species [H 137-|.Previous Records.—Cape of Good Hope ; False Bay, Cape is quite possible that some of the young specimens recorded as femalesmay be males in which the secondary sexual characters were as yet undeveloped. (ROY. soc. KDIN. TRANS., VOL. XLVIII., 280.) CEPHALOPODA OF THE SCOTTISH NATIONAL ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. 99 SEPIID^ austraUs, Quoy and Gaimard, 1832. Locality.—Station 480, eight miles north of Dassen Island, Cape Colony. 35fathoms. 18th May 1904. One specimen, ? [H 932]. Previous Records.—Cape of Good Hope, Agulhas Bank ; North Queensland ;New South Wales. This is not S. austraUs, dOrbigny : that author changed QUOYS name to S. capensis,and gave the name S. austraUs to a quite different form. The tentacular club (fig. 8) shows three suckers much larger than the others,which diminish in size towards the tip, the third being about half the diameter ofthe FIG. 8.—Tentacular club of Sepia austral a [H 932]. x75. Hemisepius typicus, Steenstrup, 1875. Locality.—Station 482, Saldanha Bay, Cape Colony. 19th May 1904. 8-10fathoms; trawled. Two specimens, $ [H 933 and 1380].Previous Record.—Table Bay, Cape Town. ingens, Smith, 1881. Locality.—Off the South Orkney Islands. Lat. 60° 10 S., long. 42° 35 February 1903. From the stomach of a Ross seal: a number of half-digestedfragments [H 925]. Station 325, Scotia Bay, South Orkneys. 1st January 1904. One specimen [H 928]. (ROY. soc. EDIN. TRANS., VOL. XLVIII., 281.) 100 DR WILLIAM EVANS HOYLE ON THE A drawing of the radula is given in fig. 9, as its form differs in a few details fromthat shown by SMITH.*


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbrucewil, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1912