Abstract

Four aeolid species, all newly recorded for New Zealand waters, are described. Three are known species; they are Tularia bractea (Burn) and Eubranchus rubeolus Burn from Australia and Eubranchus agrius Marcus from Chile; the New Zealand specimens show slight variation. The fourth species, Coryphella albomarginata sp. nov., is distinguished from close relatives by the opaque white band along the margin of the foot, two centrally placed (in relation to the main reproductive ducts) bursae copulatrices and several small, blunt denticles on the outer edge of the lateral teeth of the radula. The families to which these species belong, the Flabellinidae (Coryphella albomarginata, Tularia bractea) and Eubranchidae (Eubranchus agrius, E. rubeolus), are recognized and defined and the constituent genera examined and reduced in number. A new genus, Paracoryphella, and family, the Paracoryphellidae, are created for Coryphella islandica Odhner. The classification of the aeolids is reviewed:Odhner's order Aeolidacea is considered a very satisfactory major category, but his grouping of the families into tribes is discarded on the grounds that the diagnostic character, the position of the anus in relation to the cerata, is too variable within individual families.

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