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EOLIS PAPILLOSA
EOLIS PAPILLOSA, Linnjeus, Sp.
E. ovato-oblonga, depressa, fusca, grisea, vel aurantiaca, brunneo et albo maculata; branchiis
numerosis, conicis, subcompressis, in seriebus 18—24 digestis; tentaculis dorsalibus parvis subconicis;
tentaculis labialibus planiusculis; angulis anterioribus pedis brevibus.
Doris spinis mollibus hirsuta, Baster, Op. Subs., v. 1, p. 81, pi. 10, f. 1.
Limax papillosus, Linn., Syst. Nat., 12th ed., v. 1, p. 1082.
Doris Bodoensis, Gunn., Act. Hav., v. 10, p. 170, f. l—13. (Copied in Encyc. Meth., pi. 82, f. 12.)
papillosa, Mull., Zool. Dan. Prod., p. 229. (Non Zool. Dan.)
Fab., Faun* Grcenl., p. 345*
Mont., in Linn. Trans., v. 11, p. 16, pi. 4, f. 3.
vermigera, Turt., Brit. Faun., p. 133.
Eolis Cuvieri, Lam., Anim. s. Yert., 2d ed., v. 7, p. 450, (excl. Syn. Cuv.)
Bouch. Chant., Catal. des Moll, du Boul., p. 33.
Stark, Elem. Nat. Hist., v. 2, p. 69.
Eolida papillosa, E\em., Brit. Anim., p. 285.
Eolidia papillosa, Johns., in Loud. Mag. Nat. Hist., v. 8, p. 376, f. 35.
Idem., in Ann. Nat. Hist., v. 1, p. 118.
Thompson, in Ann. Nat. Hist., v. 5, p. 89.
Cuvieri, Leach, Syn. Moll. Gr. Brit., p. 23, pi. 7, f. 3.
Eolida Zellandica, Forbes and Goodsir, in Proc. Brit. Assoc., 1839. Athenaeum, No. 618, p. 647.
JEolidia Bodoensis, Moller, Ind. Moll. Grcenl., p. 5.
JEolis papillosa, Loven, Ind. Moll. Scand., p. 7.
Macg., Moll. Anim. Aberd.,.p. 192.
Murrayana, Idem, Moll. Anim. Aberd., p. 193.
Lesliana, Idem, Moll. Anim. Aberd., p. 194.
Eolis rosea, Aid., and Hanc., in Ann. Nat. Hist., v. 9, p. 34.
obtusalis, Idem, in Ann. Nat. Hist., v. 9, p. 34.
papillosa, For. and Hanl., Brit. Moll., v. 3, p. 590.
Dalyell, Pow. Creat., v. 2, p. 314, pi. 45, f. 23—27.
Hab. Among rocks and under stones from beyond low-water mark to half-tide level, frequent on
nearly all our rocky coasts.
Body from an inch and a half to three inches long,* ovate, depressed, rather broad
* Mr. Cocks has sent 'us a drawing, “ natural size,” of a monster specimen found at Falmouth,
measuring 4^ inches; and Sir J. G. Dalyell had an. individual 4 inches long, “ measured from the tip
of the tentacula to the extremity of the tail.”