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XIV. ON SOME AQUATIC OLIGOCHABTA IN THE COLLECTION OF THE INDIAN M U S E U M . By J. Stephenson, M.B., D.Sc. (Lond.), Government College, Lahore. During the past year I have, through the kindness of the authorities of the Indian Museum, received at various times specimens of small aquatic Oligochaeta for examination. An account of these is given in the present communication. Our knowledge of the Oligochaeta fauna of the Indian region has of late years been very considerably increased through the re-searches of Michaelsen {Mem. Ind. Mus., vol. i, No. 3, and Abh. aus dem Gebiete der Naturwissenschaften, Naturw. Verein, Hamburg, xix Band, 5 Heft) on the collections made by the Indian Museum. This increase in our knowledge however relates more especially to the terrestrial forms, and the number of aquatic Oligochaeta known from the Indian region is still very small. Especially is this the case with the large families of the Enchy-traeidae and Tubificidae, so common in Europe ; only one Tubificid, and one Enchytraeid, of which latter the genus is doubtful, having so far been recorded. This may perhaps receive a partial explanation in the small size of these worms, and the fact that they consequently elude the collector, unless he happens to be specially interested in them or specially looking for them. Still, seeing that the Naididae, com-prising the smallest or almost the smallest forms in the whole Order ^ are represented in the Indian fauna by about twenty species, it may not improbably be the case that Enchytraeids and Tubificids are actually somewhat rare. Another hindrance to our knowledge of these small and deli-cate forms is the difficult}^ of adequately describing them — or even, it may be, of identifying them — from preserved specimens only. Most of those I have received from Calcutta have been preserved, since it is difficult to transport the living worms safely for 1,300 miles in this climate ; of the species mentioned below, examples of Aulophorus tonkinensis however reached me alive. I am therefore conscious that the notes are not so full as is desirable, but considering the small amount that is known, it seems better to give the following descriptions, though incomplete in many ways, rather than to allow the material to be wasted.

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On some aquatic Oligochaeta in the collection of the Indian Museum

J Stephenson
Records of the Indian Museum 6: 203-214 (1911)

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