LJ •VPRHK OT TH* [UHIVBRSIT7] j?jS».°* ,^«W« i^?IUp|nfl.»\^ UNITED STATES EXPLORING EXPEDITION, UNITED STATES EXPLORING EXPEDITION. DURING THE YEARS 38, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842. UNDER THE COMMAND OF CHARLES WILKES, U. S. N. ZOOPHYTES. BY JAMES D. DANA, A. M., GEOLOGIST OF THE EXPEDITION, MEMBER. OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES OF BOSTON, ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA, ETC. WITH A FOLIO ATLAS OF SIXTY-ONE PLATES. PHILADELPHIA: LEA AND BLANCHARD. 1848. THE cruise of the Exploring Expedition afforded unusual opportunities for the study of Coral Zoophytes. Nearly all the groups of islands west of the latitude of the New Hebrides, both north and south of the equator, were visited by vessels of the squadron ; and these Pacific wanderings were followed up by a rapid passage among the reefs of the East Indies. The attention of the author was first directed to this subject in the Fn-ji >• Group, the department during a previous summer having been in the hands of Mr. J. P. Couthouy. The field for geological investigation there offered, was limited, as we were shut out from the interior of the islands by the character of the natives : at the same time, coral reefs spread out an inviting field for observation, hundreds of square miles in extent. The three months, therefore, of our stay in that group were principally devoted to ex- ploring the groves of the ocean, where flowers bloomed no less beautiful than those of the forbidden lands, and rocks of coral growth afforded instruction of deep interest. The specimens were obtained by wading over the reefs at low tide, with one or more buckets at hand to receive the gathered clumps : or, where too deep for this, by floating slowly along in a canoe with two or three natives, and, through the clear waters, pointing out any desired coral to one of them, who would glide to the bottom, and soon return with his hands loaded, lay down his treasures, and prepare for another descent. When taken out of its element, the coral often appears as if lifeless ; but placing it in a basin of sea- water, the polyps after a while expand, and cover the branches like flowers. Four-fifths of the observations in this department were made at the Feejee Group. The number of species collected in the course of the cruise, exclusive of the HydroMra and the Bryozoa, amounts to two hundred and sixty-one, of which two hundred and thn1'1 are here described as new. The animals of seventy species were figured from the living specimens ; yet minute dissections were necessarily few where the time was so short, and the novelties so numerous. Investigations, with such advantages, were calculated to throw much light upon a department less thoroughly understood than any other in the Animal Kingdom. The minute Hydroidca, and some Caryophylliae and Alcyonaria are found in the European B VJ PREFACE. seas ; and this part of the subject has been wrought out with great beauty and minuteness by different investigators since the time of Trernbley and Ellis. But the vast majority of the larger coral zoophytes are in remote regions, and require a patient residence upon the spot to study out their living forms. The voyages of Peron and Lesueur, and Quoy and Gaymard, together with the journey of Ehrenberg to the Red Sea, give nearly all hitherto known with regard to them. It is, therefore, no presumption on the part of the author to say that a large amount of new information was obtained, nor a fact which might not have been anticipated, that such information has detected numerous errors in the received systems or suggested changes of fundamental importance. In making out the Report, it was found impossible, in many genera, to describe the discovered species without giving new and more definite characters to the old ; and the genera themselves sometimes required a modification of their limits, and changes in their associations. In every part of the subject, a thorough revision seemed desirable ; for only , by such a course could the facts obtained be clearly or satisfactorily set forth. The Report, therefore, has necessarily become a Treatise on Zoophytes. Various collections in our country have been consulted in the course of its preparation, among which are Peale's Museum, at Philadelphia ; the Cabinet of the Academy of Natural Sciences, in the same city ; and that of the Natural History Society at Boston: all were liberally thrown open, and every convenience given to aid in the researches. It will appear, from the results, that the plan adopted was the only one that could have done justice to the department of Zoophytes in the Expedition, and honour to the country which had con- tributed so largely in her appropriations to the promotion of science. Out of the four hundred and eighty-three species of zoophytes in the tribe Actinaria, (exclusive of the Actiniae,) which the Report contains, but two hundred and fifty-four, or little more than half, are to be found in previous works. The asterisked names in the catalogues of species, under each genus, show how large a proportion of the whole have been described anew, from specimens examined by the author. The Report is indebted to the Journal of Mr. J. P. Couthouy for drawings and descrip- tions of a species of each of the genera, Fungia, Tubularia, and Renilla. Drawings and notes of several of the Hydroidea have been contributed by Dr. C. Pickering. The coloured figures of the Actiniae, with two or three exceptions, are from the skilful pencil of Mr. J. Drayton, by whom the descriptions of the species have been drawn up for the volume, from the notes of Mr. J. P. Couthouy, and from his own observations. In the preparation of the following pages, Lamarck's Treatise has been a book of con- stant reference, together with the more recent works of Blainville and Ehrenberg. The Memoir by the latter in the Berlin Transactions for 1832, is especially valuable for its original views on the nature and growth of coral zoophytes, and contains, besides, a larj, damsel, and aXff, sea, appears the most probable. The word Corcdlium has been in most general use; but as it is now the name of a particular genus, it has of late been rejected for polypifer, potypary, and polypidom, signifying polyp-bearer, or a hive or house of polyps. These terms are all objectionable, for the reason that the polyps contain the coral, instead of the coral containing the polyps. On this ground neither of them has been adopted here, but instead the old word Corattum, which is sufficiently distinct from the name of the genus Corallium. We have then the term Zoophyte for the whole polyp mass, whether simple or com- pound, coral-making or not ; the term polyp for the individual animals ; and Corallum for the framework or skeleton secreted by polyps. To express the fact that certain polyps secrete a corallum, we use the expression coral-forming or coralligenous. The animals of a coral zoophyte are coral-animals or coral-polyps. f The definition of Zoophytes excludes the Flustroid tribe of polyps, called Bryozoa by Ehrenberg.* The peculiarities of these animals were first pointed out by Milne Edwards and Audouin,b who showed that in place of the simple digestive sac of the Ser- tularidce, to which they had been thought allied, they have a regular stomach, and an intestine which curves upon itself and terminates in the disk ; and besides, their arms or • Berlin Trans., 1832. — The name Bryozoa is derived from /8/>t/o», moss, and {air, animal. The other zoophytes Ehrenberg calls Anthozoa, meaning flower-animal, — excepting the Sertularidce and the allied species, which he subsequently named Dimorphcea. b Annales des Sci. Nat. xv. 1828. — Edwards and Audouin here point out the relations of these ani- mals to the Ascidiffi. 16 ZOOPHYTES. 10. General Divisions of Zoophytes. Zoophytes constitute natu- rally two distinct groups, differing in mode of reproduction and in internal structure. The visceral cavity in some of them is, as de- scribed, a simple tubular sac. In others, it is divided vertically by fleshy lamellae, proceeding from the walls and forming a radiate series around the cavity. Connected with these peculiarities, we observe striking differences in the mode of ejecting the ovules. When there are lamellae in the cavity, the ovules are formed by them, and appear in clusters attached to the margin, from which they are finally de- tached, and make their escape out of the mouth. But when there are no lamella, the ovules are produced in the walls of the visceral cavity, and make their readiest escape outward through the sides of the polyp, instead of the more indirect route, into the visceral cavity and out of the mouth. The following are the divisions based on the characters mentioned :* ORDER HYDROIDEA. Visceral cavity, a simple tubular sac ; reproductive functions re- siding only in the walls of the cavity; young or ovules pullulating from the sides of the parent. ORDER ACTINOIDEA. Visceral cavity, divided vertically by fleshy lamellae, which possess reproductive functions; ovules formed within the cavity from some of the lamella? and ejected through the mouth. The polyps of the order HYDROIDEA are mostly minute, and the coralla, when any are formed, are either horny or membranous ; they are very delicate, and, when compound, usually consist of minute caliclesf (or little cups), arranged in series along a tubular axis. tentacles are furnished with vibratile cilia. Excepting their calcareous secretions and mode of budding, they are widely removed from true zoophytes. (See farther §§ 106-8.) The definition also excludes sponges, as already intimated, which, excepting the most general attribute of animal matter (if they are animals), possess nothing in common with the polyp. No single character, except their forms, has ever been pointed out which indicates a relationship. * The names below have the following derivations : — Hydroidea is from the included genus Hydra, and Actinoidea from the included genus Actinia,. This last name (from axTiv, ray of the sun,) alludes to the radiated character of the animals. "\ The term calicle (from caliculus, a liUle cup,) is used for the prominences which con- tain the cells in many corals ; and cell is restricted to the cavity itself. By cellule, as here- after used, the minute pores of the corallum will be referred to. GENERAL STRUCTURE OF ZOOPHYTES. 17 From each cup the extremity of a polyp protrudes itself with its coronet of slender tentacles. The ACTINOIDEA, which comprise all the common coral-forming species together with the tribe of Actinias, include polyps of various sizes, from the microscopic point to a diameter of eighteen inches. The presence of internal reproductive lamellae, and the fact of their ejecting the ovules by the mouth, separate them widely from the Hydroidea. The tentacles are in one or more series, or scattered. The coralla may be either calcareous or horny ; but the calicles, when any exist, are always calcareous. In the remarks which follow, I shall be brief with the first order, as my own observations can contribute little to what is already known. Some general account of these animals is required in this place, to serve for comparison with the Actinoidea, on which I shall dwell more at length. CHAPTER III, HYDROIDEA. 11. THE Hydroidea are minute polyps, of extreme simplicity of structure and delicacy of form. Though sometimes single animals, swimming at large, like the Hydra, they usually constitute compound zoophytes, hundreds and often thousands to a cluster. Some, as in Fig. 1. la. the annexed figures,* grow in crowded tufts of thread-like stems; many are much branched, and each branch is tipped with a star of * These figures are by J. P. Couthouy, and represent a Tubularia from Rio de Janeiro, which he designates T. ornata. Figure 1 shows the natural size of the animals. 20 ZOOPHYTES. 3. tentacles (fig. 6). In the greater part of the species, minute calicles, or little cups, but indistinctly visible to the naked eye, are arranged in one or more series along the branchlets, and the cluster is a neat imita- tion of the most delicate plumes (fig. 2), trailing vines, or mossy tufts ; and, when alive, every calicle is the site of a polyp-flower. They are occasionally but a few lines high ; yet others, no less minute in their cells and polyps, attain a length of several feet. Quite a variety of species may be gathered along our sea-shores, upon sea-weeds, shells, or the rocks of the coast; and Hydras are common among the duck-weed in almost any stagnant waters. 12. The species are sometimes fleshy throughout, forming no cells or corallum ; but, in general, the zoophytes have a very delicate cor- neous or cartilaginous exterior, nearly or quite transparent, and the same kind of horny membrane constitutes the calicle. In the Hy- droidea, having sessile calicles along the branches, faint joint-like divisions may be distinguished in the stem, yet without a moveable articulation. The corallum is commonly considered the hardened cuticle. But other observers, among whom is Dr. Fleming, make it an inner tissue secretion ; and, if so, it corresponds to the coral secretions of other zoophytes. The calicle is usually an open cup, or short tube, generally with a slight con- striction or an imperfect cross partition at base, partially separating it from the stem below. They appear to the naked eye like mere points, edging the branchlets (fig. 1); but, when enlarged, the cup-form is brought out, as is shown in the annexed figures, 2, 3, 3«, and 4. Though sometimes toothed, the edge of the calicles is generally entire, as in figures 9, 10, 11, on a following page. Each contains the stomach and upper part of a polyp ; and, when unexpanded, the circlet of tentacles is here withdrawn and concealed. The calicles are arranged on one or more sides of the branch, and are either oppo- site or alternate, though generally the latter. 13. The tentacles are mostly slender tubular organs, arranged, in a single series, around a small disk containing the mouth, and the mouth, or the centre of the disk, is sometimes quite prominent, as is Sertukria. HYDROIDEA. 21 represented in figure 6. The circle of tentacles is commonly sym- metrical, yet is sometimes oblique. In the Tubularia group, the tentacles are often short and sluggish, and are in one or more series, or irregularly scattered. The disk is prolonged into a high cone, as in figure la, and is tipped with a row of oral tentacles immediately about the mouth opening. The tentacles of the Tubularise and Campanu- laridse, are described as differing from those of the Sertularidse and Hydra, in not being properly tubular organs. The stems and branches of these zoophytes are tubu- V fi lar ; and the stomachs of all the several polyps — which are simple cavities directly beneath the mouth — com- municate more or less freely with one another through this common tubular axis, which ramifies from the main stem into all the branchlets. Thus the polyps of a cluster are united, not only by their external envelope, but also through this internal communication. The annexed figure exhibits this character in one of the Campanularidae from the Feejee Islands ; and the same is seen in the other compound Hydroidea. The axis is described by some as pulpy or medullary. In the author's examinations of one of the Sertularidae (fig. 9), a vibrating motion of the contents of the tubular axis was distinctly observed, and the pulp, which had a greenish tint, appeared to have been de- rived in part at least from the digested food of the stomach. The investigations of J. J. Lister,* since seen, confirm this opinion. The pulpy fluid was found by this able observer to vibrate occasionally * J. J. Lister, Philosophical Transactions, 1834, p. 369, with fine illustrations on plates ix. and x. We quote the following from his very interesting observations. The current " flowed in one channel, alternately backwards and forwards, through the main stem and lateral branches of a plume, and through the root, as far as the opacity admitted of its being traced ; sometimes it was seen to continue into the cells. The stream was throughout in one direction at one time ; it might be compared to the running of sand in an hour-glass, and was sometimes so rapid in mid-tide that the particles were hardly distinguishable ; but it became much slower when near the change. Sometimes it returned almost without a pause ; but at other times it was quiet for awhile, or the particles took a confused whirling motion for a few seconds ; the current afterwards appearing to set the stronger for the suspension." " Five ebbs and five flows occupied fifteen minutes and a half; the same average time being spent in the ebb as in the flow." Lister states that the vibrating motion of the internal axial fluids were first observed by Cavolini, and are described in his Memorie per servire alia Storia de1 Polipi Marini, published at Naples, in 1785. 6 22 ZOOPHYTES. into the stomach. It appears then that this is the means by which the results of digestion, or the nutrient juices, are distributed through the zoophyte; and that the sides of the visceral cavity have through- out the power of appropriating these chyloid fluids, thus kept in cir- culation. There appears to be no system of circulation independent of this chyle distribution. In certain filiform species (the Tubularia3, fig. 1), Lister distin- guished a similar motion in the pulpy fluids of the axis, except that, instead of vibrating, it was circulatory, part of the fluids moving up and part descending by a simultaneous action. They often passed into the stomach, and were continuous in their motions with the movements of this organ. It appears therefore that the tubular axis of these species corresponds with the visceral cavity in the higher zoophytes. The visceral cavity in the Hydroidea differs widely from the same in the Actinoidea, in the absence of vertical fleshy lamellae around the sides. Rudiments of these lamellae appear however to have been detected by Lister in a Tubularia. It is due to this simplicity of structure that the Hydra will live and eat when turned inside out. The food of these animals consists of minute animalcules or worms, or whatever of animal life is sufficiently small to become their prey. The prey is secured usually by means of the tentacles, which entwine around it, or together enclose it, and convey it to the mouth. 14. Reproduction takes place either (1) by ovules proceeding out from the sides of the polyps ; (2) by lateral buds developing young, which, on arriving at maturity, separate from the parent; (3) by lateral buds which are persistent; (4) by artificial sections. The ovules appear either single or in naked branched clusters ; or, clustered and enveloped within a common receptacle or ovarian vesicle. The figure heading this chapter (\b) represents a branched cluster as they sometimes appear in the Tubularise. Single ovules also are presented by many species of this family : they characterize moreover the Hydra. The ovarian vesicles, in which a number of ovules are enclosed under a common envelope, belong to the Sertularia and Campanu- laria families. Some of these vesicles are represented in the following figures, and others in figure 2, or enlarged in figure 5. They gra- dually develope from the side of a branch, or at times from a creeping root-like shoot, which grows outward, like the creeper of a plant, sending up its buds and flowers at intervals (fig. 8). The ovules HYDROIDEA. 23 Fig. 7. Fig. 8. Plumularia. Sertularia. may be early distinguished within them, and are often arranged along a central axis, each communicating, according to Lister, with the common axis of the zoophyte.* My associate, Dr. Charles Pickering, first pointed out to me, while at sea, in 1838, that a close analogy subsists between the arrangement of the ovules in a vesicle and a contracted branchlet of the zoophyte.f The same subject has been thoroughly investigated by Professor E. Forbes, and the fact of this arrangement fully ascertained. J In consequence of the communication with the axial cavity of the zoophyte, the pulpy chyloid fluid of the main stem and branches is carried into the vesicle and to each ovule, and the developement of the whole pro- moted. On arriving at maturity, the ovules pass out in succession from the sac, which, now empty, falls off. They are carried about for awhile by means of their vibratile cilia, and then — perhaps in two or three days — they affix themselves. Each now grows and buds, till shortly "a whole grove of Corallines" is formed. According to Van Beneden, the Campanularidse, when first deve- loped from the ovule, are like minute Medusae in shape, and have eight eyes, which are lost as the animal attaches itself. In this state, it has no vibratile cilia. § This same author has very minutely in- vestigated the TubularidaB, and finds in them the same mode of developement, and eight eyes to the medusa-shaped young, at the base of the tentacles. Dalyell seems to have observed similar facts. He states that the ovules, which in this g'roup are collected about the bases of the tentacles, drop from their attachment for evolution below. Slight prominences soon denote incipient tentacles ; next the nascent animal reversing itself, enjoys the faculty of progression by means of the inverted tentacula, as on so many feet, apparently to select a site ; when again resuming the natural direction, with the extremities up- wards, the lower surface fixes itself below and roots there for ever.|| * J. J. Lister, Phil. Trans., 1834, pp. 365-389, pi. ix. and x. f Figures 7 and 8 are by Dr. Pickering ; they were drawn from gulf-weed species, in September of 1838, at the time the above-mentioned observation was made. $ Proceedings of the British Association, for 1844. § Van Beneden, Mem. sur les Campanulaires, &c. Brussels, 1844. || Rep. Brit. Assoc., for 1834, p. 600. 24 ZOOPHYTES. The vesicle of ovules in the SertularidsB may generally be traced to a particular polyp, from which it is developed ; in other instances, it so grows from the stem, that it seems rather to belong to the colony than to any distinct animal in it. The connexion between the polyps through the tubular cavity is such, that individuality cannot always be distinguished. 15. The pullulation of young from the sides of a parent is the usual mode of reproduction with the Hydra, though at certain seasons simple ovules are produced. A minute protuberance first begins to rise on the surface ; it lengthens and becomes a rudimentary branchlet, with a tubular axis connecting with the tubular cavity of the parent ; shortly one or more tentacles begin to appear at the summit of the forming branchlet, and soon the number is completed, and the young polyp is perfected. It remains for a while attached; but when matured, the young leaves the parent to swim at large and give birth to other young. They breed rapidly, and frequently new shoots commence before the animal is detached from the parent; and occasionally sprout on sprout is thus added, till a small compound group is formed. These animals also bud out tentacles without pre- vious tubercles, which finally become complete animals. 16. Very similar to the above, in general principle, is the formation of persistent buds, by the successive production of which the branch- ing zoophyte finally results. There is at first a protuberance in which the chyloid fluids gain access, and either move by vibration, or have a kind of circulation up along the sides and down the axis ; after a while the calicle forms, and the polyp extends its arms, and begins its contributions to the body-coralline. The first polyp with which the zoophyte commences thus gives out a bud, and this another; and so a succession is formed, and the little stem is gradually lengthened ; branchlets grow out, and the plume or miniature tree (fig. 2) is finally completed. The whole may be the work of a few weeks, or months, though they usually continue budding and growing for some years. Before the zoophyte has reached its limits in size, the number of polyps sometimes becomes immensely large. In a single specimen of Plumularia (P. angulosa), collected by the author in the East Indies, there are about twelve thousand polyps to each plumose branch ; and, as the whole zoophyte, three feet long, bears these plumes, on an ave- rage, every half inch, on opposite sides, the whole number of polyps is not short of eight millions ; all the offspring of a single germ, and produced by successive buddings. Fig. 9. Fig. 11. HYDROIDEA. But to understand better this process, we may refer to one or two enlarged figures of species. Figures 3, 3a, 9, 10, and II, represent the principal varieties among the Sertularidse. In figure 9, there is a single range of calicles on the stem, the polyps of which are con- nected with the tubular cavity within. The polyp c is a bud 'from B, and B from A. We perceive from the figure that the first step here in the budding process, is a length- ening upward of the tubular axis, from the polyp below: after elongating to a certain distance, the bud commences to form, and finally, from the side of the ascending shoot, the new polyp B starts out. The main trunk continues elongating, and, after a similar interval, another bud forms in like manner. The same process is illustrated in figures 3 and 10; the only difference con- sists in the formation of two buds on oppo- site sides of the axis, almost simultaneously. Figure 3 represents the apex of a branch, with the two buds, developed at the extremity of the tubular axis, and, in figure 10, the tubular axis is elongated between the buds, preparatory to a continuation of the budding process. Although nearly opposite, the polyps often become alternate afterward, as is seen in figure 3a, which represents a lower part of a branchlet. More- over, the apparent jointing above, often becomes afterwards quite indistinct. In figure 11, we have an example of a periodicity in the budding process. The formation of the young Hydra seems at first to be a very diffe- rent process from the budding of a Sertularia, yet is closely analo- gous : the only essential peculiarity consists in the young polyp's detaching itself and becoming free instead of being persistent. The apparent discrepancies are owing to the absence of calicles or a coral- lum, and the erect mode of growth in the parent, instead of oblique; in the Hydra the buds form as lateral shoots from any part of the lateral surface; while in the species above explained, with oblique polyps, the upper part of one side of the visceral cavity gradually lengthens and buds. Some little variety in the budding process is exhibited in other groups among the Hydroidea ; but the above will suffice to explain 7 26 ZOOPHYTES. the general principles. The subject of reproduction will be discussed more at length under the Actinoidea. 17. Reproduction by artificial sections may require a few words in this place, as it is one of the most remarkable characters of polyps, and is strikingly exhibited in the Hydra, as was long since shown by Trembley in a series of investigations pursued with wonderful skill and perseverance.* They were cut into halves, and soon each was a perfect Hydra; one was divided into three parts, and in three or four days in summer, the tail had produced a head, the head a tail, and the middle part a head at one end and a tail at the other : and even before completion they sometimes gave out buds. From forty parts as many Hydras were soon formed. The body slit open soon reunites, even if previously laid out flat like a membrane; and new tentacles in a short time replace those that may be cut off. Two polyps may be made to change heads, for one may be engrafted on the body of another; and if the tail of a polyp is put into the mouth of another, they unite — heads and tails. It might be somewhat puzzling to decide the question of personal identity among such animals. Every portion of the animal, — unless we except the tentacles, which failed to reproduce a polyp in the hands of Trembley and Baker, — is capa- ble of forming a perfect Hydra. And this is a consequence of the fact that there is no general nervous centre, but each part contains a complete system in itself. No distinct nerves have hitherto been dis- tinguished. 18. Connected with the process of growth and reproduction, there is a corresponding process of dying often going on in the older parts of a zoophyte : the polyps disappear, and the lower branches often drop off, leaving the trunk in this part bare. These zoophytes are thus dying and budding in different parts at the same time. In the large species, the main stem or midrib of the zoophyte becomes lifeless, or a mere support for the numerous lateral plumes or branchlets. Besides this mode of limiting the existence of these polyps, some Hydroidea are said to be absorbed in their cells, and after a while to reappear again ; and this has been observed to take place at nearly regular intervals. All the polyp cells of a living group have been found, after a certain period, empty, or with only the remains of the * A. Trembley, on Freshwater Polyps, 1 vol. 4to., Leyden, 1744 ; and Phil. Trans., vol. viii. of the Abridgment, 1742.— See also Baker's Natural History of the Polype, 8vo. London, 1743. HYDROIDEA. 27 wasted polyps, the fluid of the trunk showing the only evidence of vitality by its continued vibration. And in the course of a few days other polyps have appeared in the vacated cells, with the same per- fection of form and the same activity and life as their predecessors. The polyp heads, as Dalyell states respecting a Tubularia, sometimes seem to drop off like a deciduous flower, and again, after ten days or more, are reproduced. Harvey observes, that after he had kept his specimens two days, they began to look unhealthy ; and on the third " the heads were all thrown off, and lay on the bottom of the vessel." After another three days, changing the water in the mean time, the polyps were entirely renewed, with no essential difference, except absence of colour. The cold of winter is said sometimes to strip a corallum of its polyps, which remains thus apparently dead till spring, when it is warmed anew to life, and the polyp-flowers once more appear.* In conclusion, the Hydroidea are animals with no external organs but tentacles and a mouth, and no internal, but a simple stomach cavity and its prolongation below in the form of a tube or tubular axis. Without any special glandular system, and but a single opening to the alimentary cavity, — the food is digested by the gastric fluid of the stomach, and the refuse matter ejected by the mouth. Without a special absorbent or a circulating system or branchice, — the digested material of the stomach passes downward into the tubular axis, where it has a vibratory or cyclosis movement; and here it is farther elabo- rated by the action of air from the admitted water, and becomes absorbed and assimilated by the surface of the cavity, or of the tubular organs, cavities, or pores, connected with it — these chyloid fluids acting in place of a proper circulating fluid ; aeration of the same also takes place through the tentacles and the exterior surface of the animal, which receive air from the waters about them. Without ovarian glands, almost any part of the polyp possesses the reproductive function, excepting the tentacles ; and buds or ovules are formed, and pass out directly from the sides of the animal. Without a distinct nervous system, in addition to the above negative characters, every part seems equally a centre of organic forces (unless we except the tentacles), and consequently sections made almost indefinitely still live and complete the entire polyp again. * J. G. Dalyell, Edinb. New Phil. Journ. xvii. 411 ; Harvey, Proceed. Zool. Soc. No. 41, p. 55; Lister, Phil. Trans. 1834, 374, 376. CHAPTER IV. ORDER ACTINOIDEA. 19. THE minute zoophytes, hitherto considered, constitute, along with corallines, the mosses of the coral landscape ; while the Acti- noidea are the larger plants and shrubs. Among the species of this group, the solitary Actinias, from their size, form, and frequently bril- liant colouring, may be called the Asters, Carnations, and Ane- monies,* of the sub-marine garden. The Tubipores and Alcyonia form literally its pink-beds. Here and there the scene is decorated with clusters of tinted twigs or rushes, sometimes, fancifully shaped into fans and coral network ; these are the Melitseas and Gorgonise. The Madrepores are crowded around in turfy clumps and miniature trees in bloom, or imitate spreading leaves and gracefully-shaped vases filled with flowers ; while Astreas build up, among the shrub- bery, large domes, embellished with green and purple blossoms stud- ding the surface like gems. Words, however extravagant they may appear, convey no exagge- rated impression; for Fancy's work could not be more strangely beau- tiful. While wondering at the grandeur of the results proceeding from means so small, the ocean-island reared by coral polyps, we are also led to contemplate and adore the wisdom and goodness of Him who createth, in mingling such beauty in all his works. Among the animals which produce these varied results, we find a great uniformity of structure, as already exhibited in the few gene- ral remarks on the Actinoidea ($ 3). The common Actinia is a type of a large class of them, and we may commence our observations on the Actinoid polyps by a concise account of the structure and habits of these animals. This will lead the way to a description of some * Sea-anemone is the common name applied to the Actinia. 8 30 ZOOPHYTES. related species, which are the types of other divisions of the order. The compound structure, the mode of growth, and the formation of the corallura, in the several groups, will come next under consi- deration. I. GENERAL STRUCTURE OF THE ACTINOIDEA. 20. The polyps of the Actinoidea correspond well with the cha- racter drawn on a preceding page. A circular disk, fringed with tentacles, — in shape much like an Aster with its petals, — and having a mouth at its centre, forms the upper part or extremity of the polyp. The mouth opens through a nearly cylindrical stomach into a large visceral cavity closed at bottom. The mouth receives the food and also gives exit to what remains after digestion. The Actinia. 21. The Actinia is commonly met with attached by its flat under surface to rocks along the sea-shores. When unexpanded, it looks like a rounded lump of animal matter, somewhat leathery in ap- pearance, plastered on the rock ; it shows nothing of the mouth, and none of the fringing tentacles, these being concealed by the involuted margin of the summit. As the animal expands, the central opening at the top gradually widens, — the margin slowly rolls Fig. 12. Actinia. back, and the tentacles it concealed now begin to show their tips. As the expansion goes on, the tentacles continue to enlarge, and the margin to spread outward, till finally the disk with the mouth at centre, is laid open, and the tentacles, like petals, fringe it around. Such is the general appearance of an Actinia, and such also are the greater part of coral polyps, which are nothing but Actinias, possess- ORDERACTINOIDEA. 31 ing the single additional function of secreting a Corallum. The preceding cut represents the closed and expanded condition of the Actinia. Their various and gorgeous hues are finely exhibited in the coloured engravings on plates 1 to 5. Although these animals are usually attached at bottom, many of them may detach themselves and float through the water to a new resting-place ; or, they will slide along slowly over the rocks, by the action of the base or foot ; and some are said to turn over and walk on the extremities of the tentacles, which affix themselves by a sucker- like action. There is a small group of ActiniaB (Actinectse), which are fitted expressly for an ocean life, by means of an air-cavity in the base, containing a vesicular or spongy disk, made up of air-cells, to serve as a float. The animal lies in the water with its base uppermost, and mouth and tentacles below, and is thus carried about by the winds and currents. 22. Structure.* The exterior of the Actinia is fleshy, or more or less coriaceous in texture. Though frequently smooth, the lateral surface is sometimes covered with minute warty prominences or tubercles ; occasionally it is furnished with small cup-vesicles, which adhere by suction like the cups of a cuttle-fish, and, by means of them, the animal fixes about it sand and fragments of shells, or aids itself in its progressive motions. The tubercles are sometimes dis- tinctly perforated, and Lesueur and others have seen the water, from within the animal, spurted out through these perforations. Dr. C. Pickering compares the ejections of one seen by him abroad, to a shower from a watering-pot. Whether these perforations are gene- ral in ActiniaB without vesicles, has not hitherto been determined. Evidence of their existence, however, has been distinctly observed in the A. rnarginata of the Boston Harbour, by Dr. Wyman, and this species has not the slightest trace of tubercles ; the skin is fleshy and smooth. They were detected by direct observation with the microscope, after having seen currents of water pass from them * Dissections and descriptions of Actiniae have been made and published by Spix, Delle Chiaje, Lesueur, Rathke, Teale, and Quatrefages. In the account here given, the facts have been mostly verified by the author's observations, or by the skilful dissections of Dr. Jeffries Wyman, of Boston. For views of the structure of the spermatic cords, and other interesting particulars respecting the Actinia marginata (Lesueur), of the harbour of Boston, he is indebted to Dr. Wyman's microscopic researches, many of which were made the past summer, during a short residence of the author in that city ; and wherever reference is made above to this species, the observations are those of Dr. Wyman. UNIVERSITY 32 ZOOPHYTES. during the animal's contraction. In a papillose species, from the Peruvian coast, examined by the author after preservation in alcohol, each papilla contained a dark oval cavity, which communicated with the interior by a distinct duct opening in a minute puncture between the fleshy lamellae of the visceral cavity. As in other animals, a proper epidermis may be distinguished over the exterior skin; and the colours, which are often brilliant and various, are distributed in patches, according to Teale, below the epidermis, and do not form a separate layer.* Different individuals of the same species are often very unlike in their tints. The only external organs in these animals are the mouth and tentacles. 23. The mouth, as in the preceding order, is a simple opening through the fleshy disk. It is usually oblong, and sometimes the inner surface is raised into vertical folds or lobes. While the animal is expanded, it remains open, and is usually much protruded, so as to be quite prominent. 24. The tentacles are slender organs, having generally a smooth or simply granulous exterior, and terminating in a minute punc- ture. They are tubular, and are inflated by water injected into them by the animal. The interior cavity opens into the visceral cavity between the visceral lamellse, and it is through this cavity and its compartments that the distending water reaches the tentacles. On contraction, the water passes out again through the puncture at the extremity of some or all of these organs. The tubular interior, as observed by Dr. Wyman, in the A. marginata, is constricted near the apex of the organ, and then undergoes a slight enlarge- * ' ment before it terminates in the apical puncture. In the upper *»^ portion, the tissues contain great numbers of microscopic spicules of the form represented in figure 13. They are pellucid, like the body of the spermatozoa, but are only one-third as large. The tentacles are seldom arranged in regular series, although usually forming together a circle around the disk. On close exami- nation, they are seen to differ in size and to be placed a little irregu- larly ; and in some species they are scattered over the surface of the disk nearly or quite to the mouth. They have some relation in * On the anatomy of the A. coriacea, by T. P. Teale, Trans. Leeds Phil, and Lit. Soc., vol. i. I have seen only the abstract given in Johnston's British Zoophytes. ORDERACTINOIDEA. 33 number to the intervals between the fleshy lamellae of the visceral cavity, and often equal them ; and when these lamellae, in the latter case, increase in number, as they do with the growth of the animal, the new interval has soon its new tentacle, with which it communi- cates. The tentacles are commonly described as prehensile, in their nature. In some species, they are long and flexible, and are well adapted to render aid in capturing the food of the polyp. They sometimes have the power of stinging the hand, and when without this power, they frequently stick closely to the fingers if handled ; and when their prey comes within reach, they close upon it, and force it into the mouth, usually open for its victim. In many species, the tentacles are quite short, or are reduced to mere tubercles ;* and it is, therefore, probable that the passage of the imbibed water, contributing to the aeration of the fluids within, is often their more important function : in some instances they appear to subserve this purpose alone, being well adapted by their texture both to act on the external waters and upon the internal that may find passage through them. The tentacle, as above described, is the most common variety. There are others, both simple and branched, that are furnished with suctorial vesicles, like the cup-suckers of the sides, which seem to aid them in clinging as well as sometimes in their movements. There are still others, which have a minutely divided or lobed surface, and look as if covered with delicate embroidery, as shown on plate 5. This peculiar structure seems intended to enlarge the surface of these organs, and fit them more perfectly to aid in aeration. The circle of them has much resemblance to the branchial rosettes of a Holo- thuria. 25. The stomach and visceral cavity occupy together the whole interior of the animal. The stomach is nearly cylindrical, and extends generally about three-fourths of the way to the base of the expanded animal. It has often a plaited or striated inner surface, and may be closed or opened by a muscular arrangement at bottom, where it communicates with the visceral cavity. Under the microscope, the surface in the A. marginata appeared smooth and covered with vibra- tile cilia; it was also invested with small slightly-projecting points, which become detached, on slight pressure, in the form of vesicles. * This is the case in the Actinia;, plate 2, fig. 16, and plate 4, fig. 32 ; and in many species of the genus Fungia, as shown on plates 18 and 19. 9 34 ZOOPHYTES. Fig. 14. Fig. 13 b. The coats of the stomach, in this species, contain the same rainute spicules as the tentacles; and, in the general integuments of the body, they are still more abundant. The visceral cavity is divided vertically by numerous lamellae attached to its walls, the larger of which are united by their inner margin to the exterior of the stomach, and serve to fix it in its place, and at the same time to vary its shape by their muscular action. This structure is exhibited in the annexed cut of an ideal transverse section through the centre of an Ac- tinia. The central ring is a section of the sto- mach, exterior to which the radiating lamellae are shown of various sizes. All the lamellae, large and small, extend along the under surface of the disk to the stomach ; but only certain lamellae at intervals retain this width and continue con- nected with the stomach to its lower extremity ; the greater part narrow at once, and are of va- rious widths, as in the figure annexed. Below the stomach, the larger lamellae also are abruptly narrowed, so as to leave here an open space or chamber ; the lamellae afterwards extend inward again along the base of the polyp, and coalesce at centre, or are lost in the general structure of the base. The cavity or visceral chamber below the stomach is sometimes nearly bisected by the union of opposite lamellae. In the Actinia marginata, the lamellae, as seen through the skin, have the arrangement in figure 15, two stouter lamellae with a broader interval alternating with two thinner lamellae and three narrower intervals. The same fact is indicated by the vertical linings on the Actinia, figure 22, plate 3 ; and, from some facts hereafter to be stated, it will be shown to be a very common arrangement in these animals. The vertical markings of Actiniae, as well as the radiations of the disk, are all connected with the position of the fleshy lamellae within. The above figure also shows that these lamellae are very numerous, — six or seven being included in a breadth of a quarter of an inch. They are not as distant as in figure 14, which is drawn for general illustra- tion, and is not strictly accurate. The number of lamellae in a certain breadth of interval is the same in different individuals of the same species. As a polyp enlarges by growth, new lamellae form between the others, in the widening inter- Fig, is. ORDERACTINO1DEA. 35 vals, and thus a degree of uniformity obtains between the young and adult individuals, which is indicated in their coralla. 26. The process of digestion appears to be extremely simple. The food is retained for a while in the stomach, and there acted upon by the gastric juice supplied from its walls, after which the refuse matter is ejected by the mouth. The farther change to chyle probably takes place below in the visceral cavity, where a part of the nutrient fluid is absorbed, while another portion is distributed for assimilation throughout the various cavities, lacunes, or pores in the tissues of the animal. Thus the processes of aeration and assimilation go on toge- ther throughout the whole structure of the Actinia, and there is a water-and-chyle circulation, nearly in the same manner as we have described with regard to the Hydroidea. No proper circulating fluid independent of this, and no branchia?, have been observed in these animals. Whether there are any excrementary secretions attending this assimilating process, as in other animals, has not been directly proved. Yet it is probable that the tissues about the visceral cavity, among their many functions, include the means of performing this part in the economy of the animal ; and the waters expelled, in different ways, by the polyp, may carry off such secretions. It is remarkable, that while the biliary glands are of unusual size in the lower animals generally, in the Actiniae they are wanting; and this is no doubt connected with the fact that these animals are bathed so freely inside and out by the sea-water, which renders special organs unnecessary. If the above supposition be true, it is not proper to consider the mouth of a polyp as alone the only passage for the ex- crements. It ejects the refuse indigestible matters from the stomach, but only in part the proper excrements of the animal. The Actiniae receive almost any animal food that falls in their way. Crabs, molluscs, the smaller fish, and other marine animals, are their common prey. They have been seen with a large bivalve in their stomachs, from which the animal had been removed by their powerful gastric solvents. 27. The function of reproduction belongs to the visceral lamella? (!) 25), part of which are spermatic and part ovarian. The spermatic lamella? are distinguished by being margined by a white capillary cord. This cord is much convoluted, and is at- tached to the lamella? by a thin and extensile membrane, which has a mesentery-like appearance.* The quantity of these cords in an * Similar to figures 36, 3 c, 3/, plate 30. 36 ZOOPHYTES. Actinia is very large. When the animal is contracting, they are often protruded in folds from the mouth, having come up from the visceral chamber, through the stomach (plate 2, figs. 12, 15, 16) ; and if the skin be fractured in any part, they escape in large bunches. These cords are sometimes seen to pass out through the perforations in the sides of the animal (§ 22), as was long since ascertained by Dicquemare.* The same fact was observed in the species examined by Dr. Wyman. The white spermatic cords are semitransparent or nearly opaque, and are furnished with vibratile cilia. On subjecting them to slight pressure between plates of glass, slender filaments extrude, in length a little exceeding half the diameter of the cord ; and, with a high magnifying power, a fragment of the cord thus under pressure pre- sents the appearance in figure 16, exhibiting pellucid spicula, like Fig. 16. Fig. 17. Fig. 18. 'I', Fig. 1 ravoma 1 Hernctolithus \ .• ( Meandrma ^ Manicina, Tndacophylha ( / . J Zoopilus, Antrsea ? ( Merulina > •" ( Polyphyllia. ( A. orbicellie — Echinopora, Phyllastrsea ... ) CLASSIFICATION OF ZOOPHYTES. 2. Transitions of the Astrceidce to the Caryophyllidce and Madreporacea. Caulastrsea Astrtea 1 [A. orbicellce Cyathophyllidse . . S Mussa I Fungia \ Stephanoph. \ Euphyllia J Cydolites ^ Desmoph. f A. rotulosa .... Cyathina A. pleiades .... Stylina | A. 'tnicrophthalma . ^Echinopora . . . Anthoph. ) Oculina Turbinolia, Caryophyllia, Dendrophyllia, T „. . ,-, r .' Madrepora, Gemmipora I „ . •t-lm > Goniopora, Porites, Heliopora. Astroiti8 Astrteopora 3. Transitions of the Madreporidce to the Caryophyllidce. Madrepora . f x 1 Siderop. Manopora JAIre°P-| [_ Porites Mad. labrosa [ Caryophyllia, Turbinolia. IPocillop., Seriatop. ) Cyathina, Millepora ^ Oculina. Favosites, Heliopora "J Stylina, Catenipora Anthophyllum, [ Astroitis, . . Goniopora j Astreeopora, Zoanthidte. It is impossible in tables, or in any manner on a plane, to give a correct and complete idea of all the interlinkings of genera ; circles give a regularity to the reticulations, which is not found in nature. The passage of the Madrepores into the Manoporee (table 3), and from these into the Alveoporse, is almost a direct line ; from the last, the line branches either way into the Porites and the Sideroporae, and the Sideroporse pass into a network of species of the family Favositidse, the Seriatoporse of which appear to lead the way to the Oculinse. The Porites, through the Gonioporse, graduate into the Astrseoporae, and thence to the Astroites on one side and the Gemmi- porse on the other. The Madreporse also pass into the Gemmiporse, and likewise into the Dendrophyllige, which two groups are closely allied though distant in the table ; the four lines thus meet in the Caryophyllia family, the genera of which have their principal grada- tions, as shown above. By a study of the other tables, the relations of the groups will be made out without particular explanation. The Actinaria graduate towards the Alcyonaria, through certain Actiniae, with four or eight lobed disks. The following table contains a general view of the Classification of Zoophytes, to which the principles discussed appear to lead, together with the characteristics of the several subdivisions. CONSPECTUS DISTRIBUTIONS ZOOPHYTORUM. ZOOPHYTA. ANIMALIA RADIATA ssepius basi affixa, superne tentaculis coronata cum ore central! edentate, et intus, tubo cibario uniforo : androgyna ; ovipara et gemmipara : nervis inconspicuis (?) : circulatione excorde laxissima : sensus organis specialibus nullis. ORDO I.— ACTINOIDEA. Ventriculo stomachum includente lamellis radiatis generativis sep- tato ; ovulis ore ejectis. SUB-ORDO L— ACTINARIA. Tentaculis 6, 12, aut pluribus, ssepissime non papillosis et apice perforatis: ssepe coralligena; corallis calcareis, (rarissime cornels,) cellis radiatis. TRIBUS I.— ASTR^EACEA. Multitentaculata, tentaculis subseriatis aut sparsis; ssepe gemmi- para, gemmatione superiore, polypis superne lateraliter prolatantibus : ssepe coralligena, corallis calcareis, cellis multi-radiatis, lamellis ultra cellas productis, itaque superficie corallorum aggregatorum lamello- striata. FAMILIA I. ACTINID.E. Animalia non coralligena, ssopius affixa. Genera. Actinia, Anthea, Adamsia, Edwardsia, Ilyanthus, Capnea, Actinecta, Epi- cystis, Actinodendrum, Lucernaria, Metridium, Actineria, Heterodactyla, Epicladia. FAMILIA II. ASTR.SID*:. Calcareo-coralligena ; tentaculis margine disci dispositis, discis interdum seriatim tantummodo confluentibus : corallorum cellis excavatis, stellis cir- cumscriptis, interdum lobatis aut lineatis ; lamellis corallorum aggregatorum in medio septo saepius interruptis. TABULAR VIEW OF THE CLASSIFICATION OF ZOOPHYTES. ZOOPHYTES. ANIMALS of the class Radiata : usually attached at base : having a coronet of tentacles above, and an edentate mouth at the centre : within, an alimentary cavity, to which the mouth is the only opening: androgynous; gemmiparous and oviparous : nerves indistinct (?) : cir- culation very imperfect : no special organs of sense. ORDER I.— ACTINOIDEA. Visceral cavity enclosing the stomach, and divided into compart- ments by radiated lamellaB, having reproductive functions; ovules ejected through the mouth. SUBORDER I.— ACTINARIA. Tentacles 6, 12, or more, in number, not papillose, (with few ex- ceptions,) and perforate at apex : often coral! igenous ; coralla calca- reous, very rarely corneous, cells radiate with lamellae. TRIBE I.— ASTILEACEA. Tentacles many, in imperfect series or scattered ; when gemmi- parous, gemmation superior, the polyps widening above: often coral- ligenous ; coralla calcareous, cells multiradiate, lamellae prolonged outward beyond the cells, and hence the surface in aggregate coralla is lamello-striate. FAMILY I. ACTINIDJS. Not coralligcnous, usually attached. Genera. Actinia, Anthca, Adamsia, Edwardsia, Ilyanthus, Capnea, Actinecta, Epi- cystis, Actinodendrum, Luccrnaria, Metridium, Actineria, Heterodactyla, Epicladia. FAMILY II. ASTH^EID^E. Calcarco-coral I igenous ; tentacles arranged along the mar- gin of the disks; disks sometimes confluent in simple series; coralla, with excavate cells, stars circumscribed, sometimes lobed or linear; lamella1, in aggregate coralla, interrupted usually along the middle of the septa. 29 ZOOPHYTES. Genera. Euphyllia, Ctenophyllia, Mussa, Manicina, Caulastrsea, Tridacophyllia, Astrrca, Meandrina, Monticularia, Phyllastraca, Merulina, Echinopora. FAMILIA III. FUNOIDJE. Coralligena ; discis non circumscriptis, tentaculis sparsis, brevibus et ssepe obsoletis: simplicissiina et aggregato-gemmata ; aggregatis, discis, un- dique conflucntibus, interstitiis nullis: corallis superficie larnello-striatis et ssepius stel- latis, cellis veris nullis; lamellis, aggregatis, ex uno ad alium centrum productis. Genera. Fungia, Cyclolites, Herpetolithus, Halomitra, Polyphyllia, Zoopilus, Pavonin, Agnricia, Psammocora. TRIBUS II.— CARYOPHYLLACEA. Multitentaculata; saepissime gemmipara, gemmatione inferiore, gemmis lateralibus, raro (sicut in quibusdam Cyathophyllidis) sur- sum crescentibus, polypis superne non prolatantibus : ssepe coralli- gena, corallis calcareis, cellis multiradiatis, superficie interstitial! non latnello-striata. FAMILIA I. CYATIIOPHYLLID^E. Coralligena ; polyporum singulorum corallo interne ad medium ssepius transversfe obliqu&ve septato et ccllul s >. Genera. Cyathophyllum, Calophyllum, Amplexus, Caninia, Arachninulosum tcgentia. SCBORDO II.— ALCYONARIA. Animalia 8-tentaculata, tentaculis papillosis, papillis apice perfo- ratis : ssepe coralligena, corallis calcareis aut cornels, raro siliceis, cellis nunquam radiatis. FAMILIA I. PEXNATFLID^E. Nunquam afFixa, aut libera, aut basi dcfossa. Genera. Renilla, Pennatula, Veretillum, Funiculina, Virgularia (Pennatulina:) ; Pa- vonaria, Umbellularia (Pavonarinee). FAMILIA II. ALCYONID.E. Carnosa, penitus saepe calcarco-spiculigera. Genera. Rhizoxcnia, Anthclia, Xenia (Xeninee); Ammothea, Sympodium, Nephthya, Alcyonium {Alcyonince) ; Spoggodia (Spoggodinfe). FAMILIA III. CORNTJLARID^E. Corallis tubulatis, corneis. Genus. Cornularia. FAMILIA IV. TUBIPORID.E. Corallis tubulatis, calcareis. Genera. Aulopora, Telesto, Tubipora, Syringopora. FAMILIA V. GORGONIDJE. Secretiones epidermicas basi elaborantia, et ssepissime alias quoque calcareas internas. Genera. Corallium (Coralliince) ; Hyalonema, Briareum, Gorgonia, Primnoa, Be- bryce ( Gorgonince) ; Isis, Mopsea, Melitasa [Isince). ORDO II.— HYDROIDEA. Ventriculo tubulifortni, simplicissimo ; ovulis e lateribus externe enascentibus. FAMILIA I. HYDBIDJE. Ovulis singulis ; gemmis lateralibus, et pullis maturis dc- ciduis : corallis nullis. Genus. Hydra. CLASSIFICATION OF ZOOPHYTES. FAMILY II. FAVOSITIDJ?. Polyps with 1'2 tentacles, secreting lime periodically at base, and hence the cells have a calcareous bottom and in the interior of the corallum are transversely septate, rarely solid. Genera. Alveopora (Alveoporinee) ; Sideropora, Seriatopora, Pocillopora, Stenopora, Constellaria, Favosites, Catenipora (Favositines) ; Heliopora, Heliolites, Millepora, ( Helioporince) . FAMILY III. PORITID.E: Polyps with rarely more than 12 tentacles, forming porous calcareous secretions continuously at base ; coralla every where equally fine-porous, cells shallow or superficial and scarcely traceable within the corallum, rays indistinct. Genera. Porites, Goniopora. TRIBE IV.— ANTIPATHACEA. Animals with 6 tentacles, forming at base corneous secretions. FAMILY I. ANTIPATHID.E. Animals fleshy, enveloping a corneous spinulous axis. SUBORDER II.— ALCYONARIA. Animals with 8 tentacles; tentacles papillose, papillae perforate at apex: often coralligenous; coralla calcareous or corneous, rarely siliceous, cells never radiate within. FAMILY I. PEN:VATULID,E. Never attached, but either free or with the base buried in the mud. Genera. Renilla, Pennatula, Vcretillum, Funiculina, Virgularia (PennatuZinee) ; Pavonaria, Umbellularia (Pavonarince). FAMILY II. ALCYO.VID.*:. Fleshy, usually containing disseminated calcareous granules. Genera. Rhizoxenia, Anthelia, Xenia (Xeninee) ; Ammothea, Sympodium, Nephthya, Alcyonium (Akyonince) ; Spoggodia (Spoggoditiee). FAMILY III. CORNULARID.E. Forming corneous tubular coralla. Genus. Cornularia. FAMILY IV. TUBIPORID.B. Forming calcareous tubular coralla. Genera. Aulopora, Telesto, Tubipora, Syringopora (?). FAMILY V. GORGONID.E. Forming basal epidermic secretions, and often, also, other tissue secretions, the latter separable from the former. Genera. Corallium (Coralliime) ; Hyaloncma, Briareum, Gorgonia, Primnoa, Bebryce (Gorgonince) ; Isis, Mopsea, MelitDea (Isimc}. ORDER II.— HYDROIDEA. Animals with the internal cavity tubular and quite simple : ovules growing outward from the sides. FAMILY I. HYDRID.E. Ovules single ; buds lateral, young falling off when full grown : not coralligenous. Gcmis. Hydra. 30 11§ ZOOPHYTES. FAMILIA II. SERTVLARID.E. Ovulis in vesiculo inclusis, gcmmis latcralibus persis- tcntibus : corallis corncis, caliculis sessilibus. Genera. Antcnnularia, Plumularia, Sertularia, Thuiaria, Thoa, Pasythca. FAMILIA III. CAMPANULARID^E. Ovulis in vesiculo inclusis, gcmmis lateralibus per- sistentibus ; corallis corneis, caliculis pedicellatis. Genera. Laomcdea, Campanularia. FAMILIA IV. TUBULARIDJJ. Gcmmulis nudis caduceis, juxta tentaculos enasccntibus ; animalia ssepe coralligcna, corallis corneis, tubulatis. Genera. Pennaria, Tubularia, Syncoryna, Corydendrium, Eudendrium, Coryna, Hydractinia. A BRIEF REVIEW OF THE PRINCIPAL SYSTEMS OF CLASSIFICATION OF FORMER AUTHORS. — The principal systems of classification in this department of Zoology, arc those of Lamarck, Lamouroux, Schweiggcr, Blainville, Ehrenbcrg, and Milne Edwards. LAMARCK. — This author included under the head of Polyps, the Infusoria and Rotifera, together with the Corallina3 (Algae) and Sponges. The following are his subdivisions, as given in the second edition of his work on Invertebrate Animals, with their equiva- lents, where there are such, in the system adopted. ORDO I. POLYPI CILIATI. Includes the Infusoria and Rotifera. OHDO II. POLYPI DENUDATI, or naked polyps. A group of unrelated genera, compris- ing the Hydrse, part of the Zoanthidae, and part of the Tubularidae. ORDO III. POLYPI VAGINATI, or coralligenous polyps, subdivided as follows : 1. " Polypiers fluviatiles," somefresh-u-ater Bryozoa with the Spongillro. 2. " Polypiers vaginiformcs." The Hydroidea, excepting the Hydrce, together with some Bryozoa and Coralline Algae. 3. " Polypiers d reseau." Mostly Bryozoa. 4. " Polypiers foramines /" compact calcareous corals with small cells, without rays. The Tubiporae of the Alcyonaria, and the Favosites, Catenipora: and Milleporae of the Madrepore tribe, with some others. 5. " Polyjners lamelliftres." Calcareous with rayed cells. The coralligenous As- trasacea, Caryophyllacea, and the Madreporacea, excepting the Favosites, Catenipora?, and Milleporas. 6. " Polypiers corticiftres." The Antipathi and Gorgonidas, with many of the Coralline Algas. 7. " Polypiers empates." The Sponges, with some of the Coralline Alga?. ORDO IV. POLYPI TUBIFERI. The family Alcyonidie. ORDO V. POLYPI NATANTES. The Pcnnatulidaj from among the Alcyonaria, together with the family of Encrinites, which belong with Echinodcrms. LAMOUROUX. — Lamouroux, excluding the first order of Lamarck, arranges Zoophytes in three groups. 1. Those tJuit arc flexible or not entirely stony ; 2. Those that are stony and not Jlexibk; and 3. Those that arc Jleshy (sarcoid) wit/tout a central axis. He included in the first division, the Hydroidea, part of the Bryozoa, the Corallin:r, Sponges, and Gorgonidae ; in the 2d. The remainder of the Bryozoa, the Caryophyllia, Astnca, and Madrepore trites, together with the " Foramines" of Lamarck ; and in the 3d. The Alcyonia, Zoanthidsc, and other unallied species. SCHWEIGGER. — Schweiggcr divides Zoophytes into Z. MONOIIYLA, and Z. HETERO- CLASSIFICATION OF ZOOPHYTES. [ ] 9 FAMILY II. SERTULARIU.E. Ovules enclosed in ovarian vesicles ; buds lateral, per- sistent : coralla corneous, calicles sessile. Genera. Antennularia, Plumularia, Sertularia, Thuiaria, Thoa, Pasythea. FAMILY III. CAMPANULARID.E. Ovules enclosed in ovarian vesicles ; buds lateral, persistent ; coralla corneous, calicles pedicellate. Genera. Laomedea, Campanularia. FAMILY IV. TL-BI-L.AIRID^E. Caducous gcmmules growing from near the base of the tentacles, and naked ; often coralligenous, coralla corneous, tubular. Genera. Pennaria, Tubularia, Syncoryna, Corydendrium, Eudendrium, Coryna, Hy- dractinia. HVLA, separating thus the fleshy species from the others ; the former including Lamarck's orders, I., II., IV., and the latter, the remainder of his orders. The Zoophyta Heterohyla are subdivided as follows : 1. Lithoplii/ta nullipora. Nullipores, lately shown to be of vegetable nature, secre- ting lime. 2. Lithophyta porosa. The Madrepore tribe, excluding the Favosites and Catcnipora?. 3. Lithophyta lamellosa. The coralligenous Astrceacea and Caryophyllacea. 4. Lithophyta jbtuhua. Lamarck's "Polypiers foramines." 5. Ceratophyta sjjo/igiosa. Sponges, and some Alcyonida?. 6. Ceratophyta tubulosa. The Hydroidea (excluding the Hydridre), the Tubularidse in part, and some of the Bryozoa. 7. Ceratopliyt.a foliacca. Bryozoa. 8. Ceratophyta corticosa. The Antipathi and Gorgonidcc. 9. Pennce marina;. The Pennatulidffi. BLAINVILLE. — Blainville includes under the name Zoophytes, the fleshy Aclinice as well as the coralligenous species, and also the Echinoderms, Acalephce, and Sponges. The Sponges constitute his " Amorphozoaires" and the other species, the " Aclinozo- aires." The " Actinozoaires" are distributed as follows : CLASS I. " CIRRHODKRMAIRES," including the Echinoderms. CLASS II. " AHACIINODERMAIHES." The Acalcphir. CLASS III. " ZOANTIIAIHES." The Actinidoc, Zoanthidas, together with the coralligenous Astra?acca, Caryophyllacea, and Madreporacea, excluding from the last the Antipathi, Milleporse, and Favosites, nearly as was done by Lamarck. CLASS IV. " POLYPIAIRES." Includes the Milleporm, under which name Blainville follows Lamouroux in comprising various unallied genera, characterized by the small non-radiate cells of the corallum ; and in other divisions, the Bryozoa and Hydroidea. CLASS V. " Zooi'iiYTAiREs." Corresponding to the Alcyonaria. We perceive in this classification a great advance beyond those preceding it. The Alcyonaria, before widely distributed, are here united in a single group : the Actinidoc are arranged with the coral polyps ; the Bryozoa are mostly grouped together, and the Hydroidea arc brought into close association, although still the Hydra forms a sub-class next to the Sertularidaj, instead of being united with them. EHRENBKHC. — Khrcnberg divides Zoophytes — his Anthozoa — into the two orders, Zoocorallia and Phytocorallia. The former, " Animal Zoophytes" contains the fleshy 120 ZOOPHYTES. species and unattached coralligenous species ; and the latter, " Plant Zoophytes" the attached coralligenous species.* The order ZOOCORALLIA includes the following subdivisions : THIBE I. ZOOCOHALLIA POLYACTITSTA. Comprises his families Actinina, Zoanthina, and Fungina, corresponding respectively to the families Actinidae, Zoantlwkc, and the free Fungidae, along with the genus Turbinalia of the Caryophyllia tribe. TRIBE II. ZOOCORALLIA OCTACTINIA, or species with 8 rays to the polyps. Com- prises his families Xenina, Tubiporina, Halcyonina, and Pennatulina, or all the Alcyo- naria but the Gorgonidos, which fall into his second order. TRIBE III. ZOOCOKALLIA OLIGACTINIA, corresponding to Hydroidea, and including his families Hydrina, Tubularina, and Sertularina. The order PHYTOCORALLIA, is subdivided as follows : TRIBE IV. PIIYTOCOHALLIA POLYACTINIA. Includes the families Ocellina, and De- dalina ; the former corresponding to the Caryophyllidte. and Cyathophyllida:, except (hat the Turbinalise are excluded by Ehrenberg, and some Astrajas are introduced under the genus Explanaria ; and the latter corresponding nearly to the -Astrccidos and Fungida!, except that the free Fungidx are separated. TRIBE V. PHYTOCORALLIA DODECACTINIA. Comprises the families Madreporina and Milleporina, the first including the Poritidte and part of the Madreporida3, and the second, the remainder of the Madreporidos of the system adopted. TRIBE VI. PHYTOCORALLIA OCTACTINIA, including the families Isidea and Gorgonina, corresponding to the Gorgonidoe. TRIBE VII. PHYTOCORALLIA OLIGACTINIA, including the single genus Allopora. This system removes the free Fungidse far from the attached species, and the same principle carried out should place in different families the free and attached Cyathophylla, Euphylliac, and others. The natural group Alcyonaria is divided, and the parts arc widely separated. Notwithstanding these singularities arising from the undue importance allowed to the characters of his Orders, the system exhibits throughout the comprehensive acumen of its distinguished author, and was the first that rested its distinctions solely on the structure of the animals, or the living zoophytes. MILNE EDWARDS. — In the philosophical system of Milne Edwards, the Bryozoa con- stitute the order Polypes tuniciens ; and other Zoophytes (our Zoophyta), his Polypes parcnchymates. This second order he subdivides as follows : 1. " Sertulariens." Corresponding to the Hydroidcn. 2. " Zoantliaires." Corresponding to the Actinaria. 3. " Alcyoniens." Corresponding to the Alcyonaria. The Alcyonia group, which is bound together by important characters, is thus kept united; and the other groups are equally well defined in their limits and characteristics. The " Zoanthaires" and " Alcyoniens," constitute together our Actinoidea, a group which is equivalent, as a whole, rather than ils parts, to the " Sertulariens" (Hydroidea), ' These orders are characterized by Elircnbcrg as follows (op. cit., pp. 255, and 299) : ZOOCORALLIA. Corpore aut omnino molli, aut Cephalupodum more intus lapidem generante (seeernente ncc excernente) hinc soepe omnino Hbr.ra ct, prater formam, animalium charactercs omncs pcrlcctius scrvantia. PIIVTOCORALLIA, Corpore aut lapideam aut corneam matcriam agglutinantcm seeernente ac dorso (solca) exccrnentn ejusque ope semper adnato (Ostrearum more). ZOOPHYTA, ORDER I.— ACTINOIDEA. SUB-ORDER I.— ACTINARIA. TRIBE I.— ASTR^EACEA. Zoophyta aut omnino carnosa, aut coralligena ; tentaculis numerosis, multiseriatis, aut sparsis. S basis margine crenulato et monilifero, prope marginem quoque supernum superficie pariter monilifera ; tentaculis exiguis,fere 1" longis, 3-seriatis ; ore prominente. Animal, with the exterior smooth, an inch in diameter, below and above dilated (to l£ inches), margin of base crenulate, and the sur- face adjoining appearing beaded ; the surface near the upper margin also beaded ; tentacles quite slender, nearly an inch long, in 3 series ; mouth prominent. Plate 3, fig. 19, expanded animal, natural size. Obtained at low tide, at upper extremity of Bay of Islands, New Zealand. The colour of the body is pale dull brown, with lines or irregular cross markings of a deeper colour. The bead-like structure gives it TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 137 the appearance of a beautifully ornamented pedestal. The tentacles are coloured with eight or ten bands alternately white and brown. The disk is dull yellow, and mouth dark flesh colour. — J. DRAYTON. • ACTINIA PRETIOSA. (Dana.} A. cylindrica, oblonga, l£-2'" crassa, tentaculis 2-seriatis, exiguis, 2'" longis, subcequis ; extus kvis, sed maculis minutis,floriformibus, quin- quelobatis, remote sparsis, aliis punctiformibus ; ore prominulo, oblongo. Cylindrical, oblong, 1 J to 2 lines in diameter ; tentacles in 2 series, slender, 2 lines long, subequal ; exterior surface smooth, but here and there a minute prominent spot looking like a flower with a simple 5-lobed corolla, besides other scattered dots. Plate 3, fig. 20, animal enlarged ; a, natural size. The Feejee Islands, Pacific Ocean. Exp. Exp. This small species was found attached to a fragment of coral in Sandalwood Bay, in the Feejee Group, island of Vanua-levu. It may possibly be a young individual. It was nearly two-thirds of an inch long when fully expanded, and part of the slender tentacles were turned inward and part outward. The exterior is peculiar in having distantly distributed over the surface minute rosette-like spots, as exhibited in the figure. The general colour is faint flesh-tint; the rosettes are rich carmine, with a white border, and look like gems over the surface ; the tentacles are yellowish, with orange bases, and a bright red spot within, just above the point of attachment. Figure 21, represents a young animal of some species of Actinia, found swimming free at the Feejees. ACTINIA LINEOLATA. (Couthouy.) A. hemispherico-conica, valde depressa, \\" lata; latere kvis, verticaliter brunneo-lineata ; tentaculis 24, biseriatis, 6-8'" longis, subvalidis ; disco parvulo, lineis pallidis radiato ; ore parvulo, orbiculato, non prominulo. 35 138 ZOOPHYTES. Animal a low depressed rounded cone, 1| inches broad, sides smooth, vertically lined with brown; tentacles 24, in 2 series, 6 to 8 lines long, rather stout ; disk small, radiated with whitish lines ; mouth small, circular, not prominent. Plate 3, fig. 22, animal natural size ; a, view of disk and tentacles. On small stones just below low water mark, Forge Cove, near Orange Harbour, Terra del Fuego. Exp. Exp. The diameter of this species is sometimes one and a half inches, though rarely found over half an inch. The body becomes nearly flat on contraction. Colour a pale ochre, on which are disposed a number of longitudinal lines of an amber colour, and arranged in regular order, a broader one alternating with two narrower, so as to leave between each of the broader lines, three ochreous ones of the same width. Near the inferior margin, the colours are fainter, giving it the aspect of being surrounded by an indistinct zone. The tentacles have a pale flesh colour. The disk is purplish-brown, with flesh-coloured lines extending from base of tentacles to near the centre, of a pale ochre colour. Mouth retaining a circular form, even in con- traction, with convex ridges on its margin, which correspond to the tentacles. The tentacles of this species were constantly and very actively in motion, and it shifted its position much more frequently than usual, gliding readily over the smooth surface of the jar in which it was kept, by the contractions and expansions of its base. The young were observed in several instances to be ejected from the mouth. They were at first attached to the parent by a white filiform pedicel, about a quarter of an inch long, which appeared like an extension of the base. In about five minutes after the expulsion, they separated with the pedicel still attached : shortly after, it gradu- ally contracted, disappeared, and in a quarter of an hour they attached themselves to the bottom, and fully expanded. They resembled the parent, but were paler and more transparent. — J. P. COUTHOUY. ACTINIA. CRUENTATA. ( Couthouy ) A. conico-subhemispherica, basi parce dilatata, latere concentrice corru- gata et tuberculata, tuberculis parvulis, suctoriis, verticaliter seriatis, TRIBE I. — ASTRjEACEA. 139 infra obsoletis ; tentaculis numerosis, fere 1" longis, subfsquis, validis ; ore promincnte, intus k-partito ; disco lineis pallidis radiato. Conico-subhemispherical, sparingly dilated at base, sides concentri- cally wrinkled and tuberculate, tubercles small, suctorial, vertically seriate, obsolete .below ; tentacles numerous, nearly an inch long, subequal, stout ; mouth prominent, four-cleft within ; disk radiated with whitish lines. Plate 3, fig. 23, natural size; a, disk with the tentacles. Saddle Island, entrance of Orange Bay, Terra del Fuego. Exp. Exp. This brilliant species, which for its colour may vie with any of its tropical congeners, was obtained at low water among the rocks, where it was buried in the sand, with its tentacles barely visible. When expanded, its form is subconical, the base being consider- ably more dilated than the disk. In contraction, it resembles in form the upper half of a fig. The ground colour is a faint purplish red, on which are numerous longitudinal lines of darker red, which toward the disk deepen into crimson, with a tinge of purple. Be- tween these lines are a series of small perforate sucker-tubercles of a rose-white colour, most apparent near the disk, and disappearing wholly at the basal margin. To these suckers, the sand and small gravel adhered with considerable tenacity. They had a yellow colour when fully expanded, and were -jV of an inch in diameter. The ten- tacles are numerous, long, subulate, (about forty-six were counted,) of an intense blood-red. From their base to the mouth, the colour is a brownish purple, alternating with narrow pale ochreous lines. The mouth is orange-red at base, deepening towards the summit into the colour of the tentacles. When fully expanded, the mouth ex- hibits four distinct protuberances. — J. P. COUTHOUY. ACTINIA DECORATA. (Couthouy.) A. subcylindrica, medio 1J" crassa, basi late dilatata et sinuose lobata, lateribus supra nudis, infra tuber culiferis, tuberculis perforatis ; margine superno non tuberculato ; tentaculis f " longis, filiformibus, (vix £'" crassis), 3-seriatis, confertis, externis brevioribus : contractd, conico-rotundata. 140 ZOOPHYTES. Subcylindrical, at middle 1J inches in diameter, base broadly dilated and sinuously lobed ; sides naked above, below tuberculiferous and tubercles perforate ; upper margin not tuberculate ; tentacles f of an inch long, filiform (scarcely J of a line thick), in 3 series, crowded, the external a little shorter : when contracted, shape rounded-conical. Plate 3, fig. 24, three individuals, one of them contracted and the other expanded, natural size. Lagoon of Honden Island, attached to a dead Natica. Exp. Exp. The body has a rich blood-red and orange colour, which is darkest at the middle, and is surrounded about one third up from the basal margin by an irregular zone of small white perforate tubercles, from which it occasionally protrudes a slender flesh-coloured vermiform organ to an inch in length [spermatic cords?]. From these tubercles to the margin of the spreading base, the body is veined longitudinally with purplish-brown lines, having dull blue broader ones between. The margin itself is reddish-brown. The tentacles are long and slender, with the outer shortest, which are finely maculated with purplish-brown and white. The margin of the disk is of an umber colour, inside of which there is a zone of white, then one of purplish- brown, then a second of white, then another of paler brown, and a third white zone around the prominent mouth. The edge of the mouth is rich orange ; the aperture is linear. The white zones of the disk are crossed and interrupted by bands radiating from the mouth, and deepening from a light brown at middle, to purple at the margin and at the mouth. When fully expanded, the disk is cyathiform and not flat, as usual ; and the tentacles lie spread out flat, so that it resembles a beautiful aster. It contracts very rapidly, but is slow in expansion. It is very sensitive to light. The body colour presents a streaky appearance, and has a downy look, difficult to represent in a drawing. — J. P. COUTHOUY. The fact that the exterior tentacles are the shortest, might remove the species from this division; but the difference in length is small. TRIBE I. — ASTRjEACEA. c. Tentaculis disci dimidio brevioribus. — (Tentacles shorter than half the disk.) ACTINIA PAUMOTENSIS. (Couthouy.) A. depressa, extusdevis, medio 6" crassa, supra latissime dilatata (12"), margine superno sublobata aut plicato-undulata, non tuberculata; tentaculis numerosis, subcequis, fere 1J" longis, validis, subulatis, portionem disci majorem tegentibus; disco radiato, et subtus kviter tuberculato ; ore prominulo. Depressed, exterior smooth, 6 inches thick at middle, above very widely dilated (12 inches), upper margin sublobate or plicato- undulate, riot tuberculate ; tentacles numerous, subequal, nearly 1J inches long, stout, subulate, covering the larger part of the disk ; disk rather strongly marked with radiating lines, and below faintly tuberculate ; mouth but little prominent. Plate 3, fig. 25, animal half the natural size. From the coral reefs, island of Raraka, Paumotu Archipelago. The colour of the body is light brown; disk, yellowish flesh colour; mouth flesh colour, and not very prominent. The tentacles are faint yellowish-white, tipt with lake, and marked with eight or nine trans- verse lines. — J. DRAYTON. This species was truly magnificent when seen spread out in the water, the disk expanding at least a foot in diameter, and densely covered with large tentacles, tipt with bright lake ; the margin undu- lating, so as to form numerous lobes, each of which had the appear- ance of being a separate Actinia, and the whole resembling a beautiful bouquet, — J. P. COUTHOUY. ACTINIA MOLLIS. (Couthouy.} A. medio 1" crassa, basi parce dilatata, disco valde dilatata et incequa- liter 5-lobata, margine crenulato, tentaculis numerosis, brevissimis, clavatis, in triangula radiata 20 dispositis ; ore k-lobato. Body 1 inch in diameter at middle, at base sparingly dilated ; disk much dilated, and unequally 5-lobed ; margin crenulate, tentacles 36 142 ZOOPHYTES. numerous, very short, clavate, arranged in about 20 radiating trian- gular groups ; mouth 4-lobed. Plate 3, fig. 26, the expanded animal, natural size ; 27, the same in one of its positions ; b, outline of the mouth showing its form. Lagoon of Clermont Tonnerre. Exp. Exp. The body is very soft and easily injured. The colours sloughed off in forty-eight hours, but the specimen lived about six days, and in that time diminished its size full two-thirds. The sides of the fresh specimen were streaked with interrupted lines of a delicate lake, except near the margin of the base, which is colourless, and a zone of dark ochre above, where it is marked vertically by short dark brown lines. The margin of the disk forms five irregular lobes ; it has a faint ochreous colour as far as the innermost tentacles, but thence to the mouth the colour is pale rose, with numerous radiating lines of lake like those on the body. The tentacles are colourless, except at their tips, which are opaque white. They are short, clavate, and, when contracted, resemble little pimples; they are not in concentric series, but constitute about twenty groups of a triangular form, the apex towards the centre. This zoophyte was continually shifting its position by means of its foot or base, which it used almost precisely like the gasteropod mol- luscs. It also altered its form greatly, sometimes stretching into a long cylinder, or curving and contracting in every way, and some- times it was almost flat. — J. P. COUTHOUY. ACTINIA ACHATES. (Dray ton.) A. subcylindrica, medio 1" crassa, supra dilatata (l£") et profunde sinuoso-lobata, lobis quinque aut sex ; extus levis ; tentaculis 3-seriatis, brevibus (viz 2'") et exiguis (£"'), submarginalibus, ore prominuk 6-partito. Subcylindrical, about an inch through at middle, above dilated and profoundly sinuoso-lobate ; lobes 5 or 6 ; exterior smooth ; tentacles in 3 series, quite short (2 lines) and slender (£ of a line), submar- giual ; mouth a little prominent, 6-partite. Plate 3, fig. 28, expanded animal, natural size ; a, the disk showing its lobed form. TRIBE!. — ASTR^ACEA. 143 Dredged up in thirty fathoms, off the east coast of Patagonia. The general colour of the exterior is a light ochre. The disk has a brownish salmon tint, and the tentacles are a pale shade of the same, or slightly purplish. ACTINIA PAPAVER. (Drayton.) A. extus levis; depressa, medio 2J" crassa, infra supraque valde dilatata (3"); basis margine leviter crenulato, margine superno non tuber cu- lato, vix undulato ; tentaculis numerosis, fere |" longis, validis, subu- latis, 3-seriatis; ore f" oblongo, prominente. Animal, with the exterior smooth ; body depressed, 2J inches thick at middle, much dilated above and below (3 inches in breadth); margin of base faintly crenulate, upper margin not tuberculate, scarcely undulate; tentacles numerous, nearly | of an inch long, stout, subulate, in 3 series ; mouth | of an inch long, prominent. Plate 4, fig. 29, animal natural size. From the rocks exposed to the surf, Wollongong, Illawarra, New South Wales. Exp. Exp. This species is found most abundant on rocks exposed to the surf, a little above low-water mark ; they are, therefore, for a short time exposed out of water, at the receding of the waves, until the tide covers them again. The colour of the body is a rich brownish- purple, with regular longitudinal lines of a darker purple, crossed by finer transverse lines ; tentacles red, the inner darkest ; disk and sides of mouth a deep brownish-purple ; mouth within, dark orange. Another variety of this species was seen with a brownish-green body and disk, and tentacles of the same colour, but paler. — J. DRAYTON. ACTINIA PLUVIA. (Dray ton.) A. minute tuberculata, medio (2J") crassa, infra supraque valde dila- tata (3J"), basis margine undulata, margine superno non tuberculata; tentaculis subconfertis, 3-seriatis, 6'" longis, validis, subulatis; disco valde radiato; ore prominulo, 6-8'" oblongo. 144 ZOOPHYTES. Minutely tuberculate or papillose, at middle 2£ inches in diameter ; upper and lower extremities much dilated (3| inches in breadth), margin of base undulate, upper margin not tuberculate ; tentacles somewhat crowded, in 3 series, 6 lines long, stout, subulate ; disk strongly marked with radiated lines; mouth a little prominent, 6 to 8 lines long. Plate 4, fig. 30, animal natural size ; a, part of the surface of one of the varieties. From rocks, island of San Lorenzo, Callao, Peru. This Actinia varies much in colour. Some are bright orange throughout, with the tentacles a little darker, and the disk paler. In others, the tentacles are of a dull red : others, a very pale red, with the mouth a very deep red. In others, the ground colour of the body is a dark brownish-green, papillae bright orange, tipped with small white beads or dots (fig. 30 b). The tentacles are over a line thick at base. The orange or salrnon-coloured species, on an attempt being made to detach it from the rocks, ejected the water from all its ten- tacles to a distance of 2 or 3 feet. — J. P. CDUTHOUY. ACTINIA KETICULATA. (Couthouy.) A. extus kvis et reticulate corrugata, subcylindrica, li" alta et 2J" crassa, cum disco valde dilatato (3£"), margine kviter 5-lobato, non tuber culato ; tentaculis numerosis, brevibus (3'"), non turgidis, por- tionemque disci majorem tegentibus, internis paululo majoribus, ore prominulo, 6-8'" oblongo. Exterior smooth and reticulately corrugate, subcylindrical, one and a half inches high, and two and a half thick, with the disk very much dilated (3J inches in breadth), and margin somewhat five-lobed, not tuberculate ; tentacles very numerous, quite short (3 lines), not turgid, and covering the larger part of the disk, the inner a little the largest; mouth somewhat prominent, 6 to 8 lines long. Plate 4, fig. 31, the expanded animal, natural size ; a, the same contracted, of nearly a hemispherical form. Orange Harbour, Terra del Fuego. Exp. Exp. TRIBE I. — ASTR^ACEA. 145 This Actinia was found near the watering cove, Orange Har- bour, adhering to stones and shells. The body is of a fulvous orange (sometimes olive-brown), with an indistinct zone of black surrounding the superior margin, and covered with a sort of raised network, pro- duced by the corrugations of the external envelope. This reticulation is most apparent and very regular, when the animal is fully expanded ; but in a state of contraction (fig. 31, a) it disappears, and assumes a simple rugose appearance. The disk is broadly dilated, and the five lobes, or folds, are never effaced so as to leave the disk circular. Tentacles short, subulate, and disposed in nine or ten close alternate series; colour olivaceous; the inner ones largest, decreasing to mar- ginal ones, which are mere papillse. The prominent mouth is of a velvet purplish-black, coloured with olive at the margin of the opening. The disk from base of tentacles to the mouth, is of a bright ochreous colour, with strong radiating lines, crossed by others of a pale olive-green. The protuberant mouth is oblong and rigid. In detaching the specimen from the rock, the base was lacerated so as to expose the ovaries. It was placed directly in a jar of water, and the next morning there were about fifty small ones adhering to the bottom of the jar, from the size of a pin's head to three-eighths of an inch in diameter. These little ones were observed to have the body proportionally much longer than the parent, with fewer series of ten- tacles— the smallest had but two, and the largest five. They seemed to be in full enjoyment of all the functions of life, attaching them- selves quickly to the jar, shells, or even living animals, ten of them having crawled upon a Sigaretus, and fixed themselves on his back. This Actinia is remarkable for the opacity of all its parts; the colours are all soft and rich, but even in the young they lack that transparency usually met with in these zoophytes. A number of small Crustacea (Spheroma and Gammaridse) were found in the stomach, captured probably by means of the tentacles, to which every thing sticks that comes in contact with them. — J. P. COUTIIOUY. ACTINIA FUEGIENSIS. (Couthouy.} A. subcylindrica, 2" crassa, extus levis, supra infraque parce dilatata, basis margine paulum undulata; tentaculis undique r emote que spar sis, turgidis, 3'" longis ; ore parvulo, orbiculato, 5-partito: contracta, valde depressa, convexa. 37 146 ZOOPHYTES. Subcylindrical, 2 inches in diameter, exterior smooth, upper and lower extremities sparingly dilated, margin of base slightly undu- late; tentacles throughout remotely scattered, turgid, 3 lines long; mouth small, circular, 5-cleft : form of animal when contracted very much depressed, convex. Plate 4, fig. 32, expanded animal, natural size ; a, upper view of the disk ; b, animal contracted. From rocks, on the shores of Orange Harbour, Terra del Fuego. The tentacles in this species have nearly ' the form of a grain of wheat," and are of a grass-green colour ; they are scattered over the disk about a line or a line and a half apart, and nearly in five series. The disk is of a bright orange colour, and the body externally a darker orange, with transverse parallel lines or markings of dark brown ; the mouth is but little elevated, 5-lobed, and of a pale orange colour, with quite a small opening. — J. P. COUTHOUY. ACTINIA NYMPH^EA. (Drayton.} A pumila, 8'" alta, extus kvis, infra supraque dilatata (1"), basi bene crenata, crenaturis 1J'" latis, lateribusque pariter lineis verticalibus notata ; tentaculis brevibus (2-2£"'), 3-seriatis, exiguis, ore promi- nulo, i" oblongo : contractd, truncato-conicd valde depressd. Small, 8 lines high, exterior smooth; upper and lower extremities dilated (1 inch in breadth); margin of base regularly crenate, cre- natures a line and a half broad, sides correspondingly marked with vertical lines ; tentacles short (2-2£ lines in length), in 3 series, slender; mouth a little prominent, and one-sixth of an inch long : the form of the contracted animal a very low depressed truncated cone. Plate 4, fig. 33, expanded animal, natural size ; a, the same con- tracted. Valparaiso, Chili. Exp. Exp. This species has a whitish exterior, marked vertically with pale ochreous lines, about a line and a half apart. The disk is of a pale TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 147 purplish tint, and the tentacles are yellow. It is near the primula, but the vertical lines are more distant, and the margin of the disk is not tuberculate. — J. DRAYTON. , ACTINIA RUBUS. (Dray ton.) A. pumila, 9'" alta, extus levis; infra, supraque dilatata (fere 1" lata), basi crenata, crenaturis 1'" lata, lateribusque lineis verticalibus scepe interruptis notata ; tentaculis brevibus (2J'"), 2-seriatis; ore promi- nulo,fere *" oblong o. Small. | of an inch high, exterior smooth ; upper and lower extre- mities dilated (nearly an inch broad), base crenated, and crenatures a line broad, sides marked with vertical interrupted lines ; tentacles short (2£ lines in length), in 2 series ; mouth a little prominent, nearly a sixth of an inch long. Plate 4, fig. 34, animal natural size ; a, same, contracted. Valparaiso, Chili. Exp. Exp. The colour of the body is ash-brown, marked vertically with slate-coloured dotted lines. The tentacles are white; disk rich purple ; mouth the same, except at the opening, which is whitish. — J. DRAYTON. ACTINIA GEMMA. (Dray ton.) A. pumila, subcylindrica, %" crassa, extus tuberculata, tuberculis con- tiguis ; disco vix dilatato ; tentaculis brevibus (2J'"), 2-seriatis, sub- exiguis : contractd, pyriformi. Small, nearly cylindrical, £ an inch thick, exterior with contiguous tubercles ; disk scarcely at all dilated ; tentacles short (2£ lines long), in 2 series, rather slender ; animal, when contracted, pyri- form. Plate 4, fig. 35, the expanded animal, natural size; a, the same contracted. False Bay, Porto Praya, Cape de Verdes. Exp. Exp. 148 ZOOPHYTES. The body, when contracted, is pyriform. The general colour of the exterior is a dusky gray or ash, with small tubercles of a pale blue, arranged in a regular series, with undulating longitudinal lines or wrinkles between. The disk scarcely extends beyond the body, and is irregularly indented. The two ranges of adhering tentacles have a pale yellow colour, faintly tipped with light carmine or rose, and wholly disappear on contraction. Only three individuals of this species were found, and these were adhering to a Buccinum. — J. P. COUTHOUY. ACTINIA CURTA. (Dray ton] A. pumila, valde depressa, 6-8'" lata et viz l£'" alta, basi dilatata et lobata, sed disco vix dilatato; tentaculis subcequis,3'" longis,2-seriatis, subvalidis. Small, very much depressed, 6 to 8 lines broad, and scarcely l£ lines high, dilated at base and lobed, but disk scarcely at all spreading ; tentacles subequal, 3 lines long, in 2 series, rather stout. Plate 4, fig. 36, animal natural size ; a, upper view of the same. False Bay, Porto Praya, Cape de Verdes. Exp. Exp. Only two specimens of this curious Actinia were found. One in a dead shell of Cyprsea Leonida, and the other, inside of an empty shell of Purpura neritoidea. The colour of the body is green, clouded with dark brown ; the dilated part of the base is rich blue; the tentacles yellowish-green, darker at base, and the disk ochreous yellow. The mouth is a little prominent and elliptical. — J. P. COUTHOUY. II. TENTACCLIS EXTERNIS VALDE MINOHIBUS. ACTINIA RHODORA. (Couthouy.) A. subhemispherica, l£" crassa, extus levis, basi dilatata et parce lobata; tentaculis subulatis, 3-seriatis, internis 1" longis, externis vix £", sub- validis, ore turgido valdegue eminente, 6-partito. TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 149 Subhemispherical, 1 J inches thick, exterior smooth, base dilated and sparingly lobed ; tentacles subulate, rather stout, in 3 series, the internal 1 inch long, the external a third of an inch ; mouth very turgidly prominent, 6-cleft within. Plate 4, fig. 37, expanded animal, natural size ; a, upper view of the disk and tentacles. Hospital Island, Rio de Janeiro. Exp. Exp. The unequal tentacles and the almost globular projecting mouth, 6-cleft within, are striking characters of this species. The general colour of the body is a bright lake, with paler vertical lines ; the ten- tacles have a reddish ochre tint, becoming bluish at base ; and the disk, which is of a bright lake, is strongly marked with lines running from the base of the tentacles to the rnouth prominence. The mouth is of a bright rose-red colour, deeper within. When expanded, the species presents a flat disk, having the appearance of a beautiful aster. — J. P. COUTHOUY. III. TENTACULIS INTEHNIS VALDE MINOKIBUS. ACTINIA ARTEMISIA. (Pickering.) A. suburceolata, medio 2J" crassa et valde turgida, disco paulum dilatata, lateribus per tubercula seriata verticaliter notatis, tuberculis promi- nentibus, infra obsoletis ; tentaculis 3-seriatis, subulatis, validis, internis semipollicaribus, externis potticaribus ; disco kviter radiato ; ore par- vulo, lobato. Suburceolate, at middle very turgid and 2J inches through, disk somewhat dilated ; sides studded with vertical series of prominent tubercles, which become obsolete below ; tentacles in 3 series, stout, subulate, the inner half an inch, the exterior an inch, in length ; disk faintly radiate ; mouth small, lobate. Plate 4, fig. 38, animal natural size ; a, a view of the disk and tentacles. Abundant in Discovery Harbour, Puget's Sound, Northwest Coast of America. 38 150 ZOOPHYTES. The general colour of the exterior of the body is a yellowish-green. The tubercles have a dark sap-green colour; they become obsolete below, yet the green line continues to the base of the animal. The colours of the tentacles are various and shaded like those of the prism ; the disk is dull greenish, becoming darker towards the base of the ten- tacles, and the mouth is flesh-coloured. — J. DRAYTON. This species occurs, buried in the sand, and also attached to pebbles or shells, two or three inches below the surface. When left by the tide, it is easy to mistake the hole in the sand which covers them, for the water-tubes of a Mya. On contracting, water spurts from various small lateral orifices, as from a watering-pot. — C. PICKERING. GENUS II.— METRIDIUM.— OKEN. Actinidce basi affixes, aliis tentaculis simplicissimis, nudis, et aliis tenta- culis vel appendidbus frondescentibus, aut marginalibus, aut spar sis. Actinida? attached at base, having some simple naked tentacles and other frondescent tentacles or appendages, either marginal or scat- tered over the disk. METRIDIUM PRETEXT™. (Couthouy.) M. cylindricum, maximum, 2J" crassum et scspe 6" elongatum, extus leve, basi vix dilatatum et margine bene crenatum, crenaturis 2'" latis ; ten- taculis internis, 2-seriatis, longis (1^") et flagelliformibus, subvalidis ; externis paulo brevioribus, 3'" latis, frondescenter ladniatis aut subti- liter bbatis, latere coalitis et apice tantum liberis, superfaie ports tubulatis paudbus instructd. Very large cylindrical, 2£ inches in diameter, and often 6 inches long, exterior smooth, base scarcely dilated and neatly crenate at margin, with the crenatures a sixth of an inch broad ; inner tenta- cles long (1J inches) and flagelliform, rather stout; external a little shorter, 3 lines wide, frondescently laciniate or delicately lobed, TRIBE!. — ASTR^ACEA. 151 coalescing by their sides with only the apex free ; a few tubulate pores over the surface. Plate 5, fig. 39, animal natural size ; a, under surface of exterior tentacular appendages; b, upper view of disk. Harbour of Rio> de Janeiro. Exp. Exp. This splendid species has a flesh-red exterior, shading into orange above, and finally into a rich purple directly beneath the disk. The inner tentacles resemble those of the common Actinise. The ex- ternal tentacular appendage extends around the summit of the animal like a ruffle or fringe, and consists of about fifty spatulate divisions, the margins of which are ornamented with numerous short frondes- cent lobes and tufts. These divisions adhere to one another to within rather more than a fourth of an inch from the extremity, and here, between each, there is an irregular indentation. Small tubular orifices are irregularly scattered over the surface of these lobes, which are for the most part surrounded by short mossy foliations. While the upper surface is nearly flat, the under surface of each division is convex, and over it are scattered small tubercle-like projections, apparently corresponding to the orifices above. This tentacular fringe is capable of great dilatation and contraction, the diameter varying at different times from two to four inches. Sometimes it is elevated nearly per- pendicularly, and the summit has the shape of a cup or goblet; again it curves inward and nearly conceals the disk ; again the fringe like the richest embroidery hangs gracefully drooping from the margin. The foot or base of the animal is a bright vermilion, and the same colour is diffused in fine dots over the body on a light yellow ground, besides forming vertical lines or stripes of rather indistinct outline. These lines are continued into the crenatures or small prominences that margin the base, and the bottom of the base itself is radiately striated to correspond with the same. The upper surface of the ten- tacular fringe has the lobes alternately dark olive-green and brownish, clouded with a light ash tint. The disk is marked with alternate stripes of orange and brown radiating from the mouth to the tentacles, where these colours pass into a pale dull red : this shade charac- terizes the tentacles, which are also marked with ashy ocellations near their base, and sometimes near half way to their tips. This species adheres to stones like other Actinids, but is found covered with sand, with its disk expanded just level with the surface. 152 ZOOPHYTES. The specimens affording this description were obtained in two fathoms water, off Santa Cruz. Smaller specimens were seen in sandy pools left by the tide among the rocks, on the north side of the harbour near Praya Grande. When molested, they conceal themselves entirely beneath the sand. While kept confined, the form was constantly varying ; at one moment, becoming a flat disk, and the next extended to a length of six inches. It moved about upon the sides of the glass with consider- able ease, by means of its exterior tentacular fringe, crawling up the sides of the jar, a length of sixteen inches, in about five hours. No stinging sensation was perceptible while handling it; but when the disk was touched to the tongue or lips, it was very apparent, and the irritation lasted from twenty minutes to an hour. Another allied species was observed by Dr. Pickering in the sand among the rocks outside of the harbour. — J. P. COUTHOUY. METRIDIUM CONCINNATUM. (Dray ton.} M. depressum, medio 2" crassum, infra supraque' dilatatum, disco 3" lato, valde radiato, margine plicato-lobato ; lateribus tuberculosis, tuber- culis suctoriis ; tentaculis internis subulatis, validis, sparsis, J" longis, canaliculatis, et fere triangulatis ; fimbrio-tentaculis externis,fere %" longis et l-l£"' latis, frondescenter laciniatis. Depressed, 2 inches in diameter at middle ; upper and lower extremi- ties dilated ; disk 3 inches broad, strongly radiate, margin plicato- lobate; sides tuberculous, tubercles suctorial; inner tentacles half an inch long, stout, subulate, scattered, channelled and almost tri- angular ; fringe-tentacles external, nearly J an inch long, and 1 to 1J lines broad, frondescently laciniate. Plate 5, fig. 40, animal natural size ; a, one of the tentacles ; b, a transverse section of the same. 41. The animal as it occurs half- concealed in the sand. San Lorenzo, Callao, Peru. Ezp. Exp. The ground colour of the body is ochreous-olive, while the vesicles are olive-green. The inner tentacles have nearly the colour of the body, though paler, and are faintly striped with pale purple. The TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 153 disk is purple, with strong radiating lines ; another variety has a green ground with ochreous tubercles. — J. DRAYTON. This species resembles the prcetextum, and was found, like that, bur- rowing in the sand. The body is covered with large tuberculiform suckers, to which fragments of shells and pebbles adhere; the delicate foliated appendage's look like embroidery, and one of a brown tint alternates with three white ones. The tentacles are subtriangular, the outside being slightly concave. Specimens were seen extending to more than three inches in diameter. — J. P. COUTHOUY. METRIDIUM MUSCOSUM. (Dray ton.) M. valde depressum, 1" altum, et 2£" crassum, lateribus per vesicula suctoria armatis; disco margine vixplicato, leviter radiato; tentaculis subulatis fere |" tongis, validis, 3-seriatis, appendidbusfrondescentibus undique sparsis, vix 3'" superantibus. Much depressed, an inch high, and 2£ inches in diameter; sides fur- nished with suctorial vesicles; disk faintly radiated, scarcely plicate at the margin ; tentacles subulate, in three series, nearly | of an inch long, stout, and scattered among them are numerous fron- descent appendages, not over three lines in length. Plate 5, fig. 42, the expanded animal of the natural size ; 43, the same, as it lies embedded in the sand. From sandy pools among the rocks, left by the tide, Wollongong, Illawarra, New South Wales. Exp. Exp. The animal becomes quite thin when much dilated, and the base spreads to about two and a half inches in diameter. The body has a yellowish sage-green colour, with longitudinal and transverse markings of brown, and it is covered, not very thickly, with suckers, to which fragments of shells, pebbles, &c., adhere; the suckers project consi- derably, and are of a purplish-brown colour. There are three ranges of subulate tentacles, of the same colour as the body, and about three- fourths of an inch long ; the middle range is opaque, and is marked by four white and four umber-coloured bands. Near the base of each tentacle, the animal is furnished with short leafy appendages, more 39 154 ZOOPHYTES. simple in form than those of the preceding species. The disk has a rich purplish-brown colour, and the mouth is bright green, with the interior vermilion. FAMILY II.— A Animalia multitentaculata. Tentacula margine discorum disposita. Disci aut simplices, aut seriatim gemmantes et lineis confluentes. Coralla calcarea, cellis radiatis excavatis, lamellis, corallis aggregatis, ex uno ad alium centrum non productis, sed media septi scepius inter- ruptis, itaque stellis circumscriptis. Animals with numerous tentacles arranged along the margin of the disks, and covered by the same on contraction. The disks either simple, or budding in lines and long-confluent. Coralla calcareous, with concave radiate cells ; lamellae, in aggregate species, not con- tinuous from one centre to another, but generally interrupted half- way; the stars, therefore, circumscribed. The Astraeidae are various in their forms and modes of growth. The massive species assume hemispherical shapes, rarely nodular, with the surface of the coralla, in some cases, pitted with concave stellate cells (Astraeae), and, in others, marked with meandering chan- nels and ridges (Meandrinse, some Mussae, Ctenophylliae, and some Manicinse) ; in the former, each cell is covered, when alive, with a polyp-flower ; and, in the latter, the confluent disks and tentacles of a series of polyps occupy the channels. In a few species, the cells are confluent also across the ridges (Monticulariae), and, consequently, instead of ridges, conical prominences cover the surface, which have a stellated structure from the lamellae that meet and constitute them 0 77). In many of the Astraeidaa, the several calicles form distinct branches ($ 79) (Euphylliae, Mussae, Manicinse, Caulastreeae); and in these, the TRIBE I. — ASTR^ACEA. 155 cells may be simple, belonging to a single polyp, — or a long line or series may be united, so as to form a meandering trench. There are thus the simple and meandrine forms of the calicularly branched species, as well as of the aggregate. Like the latter, these segregate zoophytes are usually hemispherical, remarkably perfect in sym- metry, and often many feet in diameter. Besides these, there are also foliated species. The folia are some- times clustered in convex clumps (Merulinae), and each leaf is grace- fully and delicately modelled, the ridges of the surface constituting its nervures. The cells are indistinct, and lie in furrows between the ridges, and the species, therefore, are properly foliaceous Meandrinse ; the lamellae of the ridges are a little oblique, owing to the mode of grow th. Branching forms also occur of the same general character. A few of the foliaceous Astrseidse (Echinoporse) have the surface simply striated and spinulous, and the cells are circular and some- what prominent (§ 76). A branching species of this genus is a con- necting link between these corals and the Oculinse. Other foliate species (Tridacophyllise) have large expanded cells, partially enclosed by ascending folia, which are striated with narrow and nearly entire lamellae. The folia correspond to the septa of other species, which are here thin and leaf-like. Other cells often occur on the surfaces of the folia, in which case, they resemble the Pavonise. Besides the instance of the branching Echinopora uniting this family to the Caryophyllidse, through the Oculinae, there are also cer- tain tubular AstrseaB, which approximate in their coralla closely to other CaryophyllidaB, and especially to the genus Astreopora and Astroitis, in which, as the species are massive, the mode of budding cannot always be easily determined. The many transverse dissepi- ments, uniting the lamellse by their lateral surfaces, will seldom fail, however, to distinguish the Astrseas. The characters separating them from the Cyathophyllidoe, will be stated in the remarks upon that family. The corals of this family are confined, with rare exceptions, to the coral-reef seas. The annexed table gives a view of the genera of Astraeidae, as used by different authors since Lamarck. 156 ZOOPHYTES. Hi O 00 O5 f- •£• d § o 1 I o "I S O 00 d _g •o c ca . "^^ OD r< S - 2 1 I o S •1 •« i 1 Pa I a o - J I -I *5 RJ 03 JS 'E I o o o I S I CO .S 1 -8 I - » .2 8, ^ .S •g. 1 I g g a QO M ^ I 1 ? - 5 "8 S n «J -3 £ > "3- a S ! a I J - ^ £' •s * 5 ^ o a 3 'C d .2 •§ ;§ o S s S S S .BZ II •§. 8 § -§ 3 g Echinopora, TRIBE I. — ASTRJEACEA. 157 The genera of Aslrseidse may be arranged and characterized from the coralla as follows : I. Lamcllce of /lie cells large, and entire or nearly so; coralla caliciilarly branched, or stipitate (cxplanato-glomerate). GENUS I. EUPIIYLLIA. Coralla calicularly branched, calicles subturbinate, lamellae thin, bottom of the cell' very narrow and often concealed by the large lamellae. GENUS II. CTENOPHYLHA. Coralla explanato-glomerate, meandrine ; lamellae vory stout and remote. II. Lamella of the cells dentate or denticulate, rarely entire and then minute ; coralla calicularly branched or glomerate, the septa rarely foliaccous. GENUS III. MUSSA. Calicularly branched or explanato-glomerate ; calicles subturbi- nate, cells large and concave, sometimes meandrine ; lamellae coarse and dentate, very- unequal and unequally exsert (6 or 7 in a breadth of a fourth of an inch, and half of these smaller). GENUS IV. MANICINA. Calicularly branched or explanato-glomerate; cells large, meandrine ; lamellae very even and numerous, and neatly denticulate, rounded above. GENUS V. CAULASTH.EA. Calicularly branched ; cells small (hardly exceeding half an inch), concave, lamellae unequally exsert, nearly entire; branches nearly cylindrical, calicles not turbinate. GENUS VI. THIDACOPHYLLIA. Cells large, septa thin foliaceous, prominent, cristate. GENUS VII. ASTR^EA. Glomerate ; cell nearly or quite circular, rarely lobed. GENUS VIII. MEANDRINA. Glomerate, not stipitate ; cell a narrow meandering trench (trench not exceeding a fourth of an inch in breadth). GENUS IX. MONTICULARIA. Glomerate; no distinct cells ; surface of coralla covered with small lamello-radiate cones; internal texture very cellular. III. Coralla explanate or foliaceous. GENUS X. PHYLLASTR.EA. Erect, calicles large and distinct, affixed laterally to the foliaceous corallum. GENUS XI. MERULINA. Spreading-foliaceous or ramose ; surface covered with ob- lique lamellar ridges or lamello-radiate prominences, with shallow trenches or celts Ix-twccn ; internal texture very compact. GENUS XII. ECHINOPORA. Foliaceous or ramose; surface finely echinulato-striate, calicles small, nearly hemispherical and cchinulate. GENUS I.— EUPHYLLIA.*— DANA. Astrceidce simplicissimce, ant segregato-gemmata, raro liberce ; zoophylis hemisphe.rids. Tentacula oblonga, subcequalia. Coralla calicttlato- ramosa, caliculis subturbinatis, aut rotundatis aut valde compress's, interdum meandrinis ; lamellisfere integris ; cettd fundo angustissimd. * From EU, ueU or handsome, and (puXXov, leaf, alluding to the neat entire lamellae of the cells. 40 158 ZOOPHYTES. Quite simple or segregato-gemmate, rarely free; zoophytes hemi- spherical. Tentacles oblong, subequal. Coralla having the calicles stibturbinate, either circular or much compressed, sometimes mean- dering ; Iamella3 nearly or quite entire ; cell very narrow at bottom. The Euphyllia? grow either solitary or in large convex cespitose clumps, consisting of segregate polyps; and there is a gradual transi- tion from the simple species to others with long sinuous cells (some- times six inches in length), containing several confluent polyp-disks. No species are known in which the cells are much less than half an inch in their longest diameter, and their texture is generally firm, breaking with difficulty, except at the margin. The lamella? are usually large and evenly thin, and either have a straight or convex margin ; and when the latter, they often so fill the cell that the bottom is concealed from view : if the former, the bottom is still very narrow. The exterior of the calicles, although sometimes spinuloso-striate, is generally nearly or quite smooth. Even the free species are at- tached when quite young, and often the scar of the fracture by which they became free may be distinguished. Some of the species resem- ble the Mussse and Caulastrsea3, but they are distinguished from the former by their entire lamella?, and from the latter by their firmer texture, and from both, by the large and broad lamellae nearly filling the cell. These zoophytes have a wider range than the other Astraeidse, some species occurring in different parts of the temperate zone. The compound Euphylliee have been united hitherto, since the dismemberment of Lamarck's genus Caryophyllia, with the genus Mussa — the Lobophyllia of Blainville; and the simple species have constituted a part of the bid genus Turbinalia. If a comparison be made of the animals of these zoophytes (plate .6) with those of the Mussa (plate 7), sufficient reason will be seen for the separation pro- posed, which is farther strengthened by the characters of the coralla. The genus Flabellum was instituted by Lesson for a recent free compressed species (E. pavonina,) with a lunate outline. But the rotund shapes pass into the compressed by gradual transitions, both in this genus, and the genera Mussa and Manicina. The genus Diploctenium, of Goldfuss, has been referred by Blainville to this division of the genus. The descriptions beyond, are preceded by an enumeration of the species, to show their arrangement, arid also to indicate, by an aster- isk, those that have been examined by the author. TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 159 Arrangement of the Species. I. Solitary or non-budding. *1. E. pavonina. 4. E. rubra. 2. E. anthophyllum. *5. E. spinulosa. *3. E. sphenjscus. II. Compound; cells simple or lobed. 6. E. glabrescens. *9. E. aperta. *7. E. gracilis. *10. E. rugosa. *8. E. aspera. *11. E. turgida. III. Compound ; cells mostly long meandering. *12. E. meandrina. *14. E. cultrifera. *13. E. sinuosa. I. Euphyllise simplicissimse. 1. EUPHVLLIA PAVONINA. (Lesson.) Dana. E. solitaria, libera, cuneiformis, superne semicircularis ; tentaculis numerosis, validis, f" longis, subcequis. Corallum inferne acute carinatum, aut rectum aut obtuso-angulatum, medio leviter peduncu- lalum ; eztus leve, vix plicatum, radiate substriatum ; cella 2" longd, et ad aperturam 1" fata, profundissimd ; lamellis non ezsertis, sub- denticulatis. Solitary, free, cuneiform, semicircular above in outline; tentacles numerous, stout, three-quarters of an inch long, subequal. Coral- lum below acutely carinate, edge either straight or forming an obtuse angle at centre, at middle a small pedicel; exterior smooth, scarcely plicate, radiately substriate ; cell two inches long, and one broad at the aperture, very deep, lamella? not exsert, subdenticulate. Plate 6, fig. 5, corallurn, natural size ; 5 a, the animal expanded ; fig. 6, the corallurn of another variety ; 6 a, profile of same. Sandwich Islands, according to Lesson, who states that a large number of specimens were brought to England by the Blonde. The Expedition did not meet with it. This species is one of the free cuneiform Euphyllise. Its flabellate 160 ZOOPHYTES. or fan-shaped form suggested to Lesson his generic name Flabellum, which was proposed for this species. The inferior edge is quite sharp, and forms, according to Lesson's figures, a very low obtuse angle (about 150°) at the centre, where there is a small prominence, which is the remains of the pedicel. In some of the specimens examined by the author, the edge was often quite straight, and in others formed a re-entering angle at centre. The sides are flat or a little concave, and the exterior has a little the appearance of tortoise-shell. The lamellae are regular, subdenticulate or finely plaited on each surface, and a little undulate near the bottom of the cell, which is very narrow- linear. The animal, as represented by Lesson, closely resembles in general characters our E. rugosa, evincing the propriety of uniting his genus Flabellurn with Euphyllia. An outline is given from Lesson's plate, in order to show this resemblance. Flabellum pavoninum, Lesson, Illust. do Flabellum pavoninum, Lamarck, 2d ,ed., Zool., plate 14. ii. 365. 2. EUPHYLLIA ANTHOPHYLLUM. (Ehrenberg.) Dana. E. erecta, compressa, affixa ; 4^'" lata et alia. Corallum margine in- tegrum ; aperturd oUongci ; Jamellis inclusis, denticulatis latere granu- losis : extus obsolete striatum. Erect compressed, attached, 4£ lines high and broad. Corallum with the margin entire; aperture oblong ; lamellce included, denticulate, with the lateral surface granulous : exterior obsoletely striate. This species is arranged by Ehrenberg in his genus Monomyces, a notice of which is appended at the close of the Astrseacea. The de- scription is brief, but appears sufficient to warrant our referring the zoophyte to the genus Euphyllia, among the non-budding species. The specimen described belonged to the Royal Museum at Berlin. Monomyces anlhophyllum, Ehrenberg, Gen. xlvii., sp. 2. 3. EUPHYLLIA SPHENISCUS. (Dana.) E. simplicissima, libera, cuneiformis, inverso-deltoidea, superne arcwtta basi truncata ; carnea et luteo-viridescens, ore valde elongato, disco TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 161 transverse rubro-vittato ; tentaculis numerosis, attenuatis, diaphanis, apice carneis. CoraUum extus leve, concentrice subplicatum; cella pro- funda, oblongo-eUiptica, apertura ad eztremitates bene rotundatd ; lamettis integris, regularibus, inczqualibus, truncatis, non exsertis. Not budding, free, cuneiform, in outline inverted deltoid, with the summit arcuate, and truncate at base ; flesh-coloured and greenish- yellow ; mouth very long, disk transversely banded with red, ten- tacles numerous, attenuate, diaphanous, with flesh-coloured tips. Corallum smooth without, very faintly concentrically plicate; cell deep, oblong-elliptic, with the aperture regularly rounded at each end ; lamellae entire and regular, unequal, truncate, not exsert. Plate 6, fig. 1 o, animal unexpanded, showing the partly-opened oblong mouth, with the vertically-plaited inner surface of the lips ; — 1 b, animal expanded ; — 1 c, one of the tentacles; — 1 d, profile section of corallum ; — 1 e, a small specimen, with side processes. Coral reefs, Singapore, East Indies, in two to three fathoms water. Exp. Exp. This species is distinguished from the rubra by its very symmetri- cal outline ; it is about one and a quarter inches by five lines in breadth at top, and the sides converge downward evenly to an edge at bottom half an inch long, this edge having been produced by a fracture of the pedicel when young. The lamellaB have a straight margin, and three smaller lamella alternate with a larger. The exterior is smooth without vertical striaB. At bottom, the cell is a mere line. This very common species has evidently been confounded with the Turbinolia rubra of Quoy and Gaymard, which was named Caryophyllia compressa, by Blainville ; also, with the Turbinolia compressa of Lamarck, which is a fossil species, more oblong-trian- gular, and tapering below nearly to a point. (See Lamouroux, Exp. Meth. des Polyp. 51, pi. 74, figs. 22, 23.) The Turbinolia cuneata is distinguished from this species by nearly the same characters as the compressa. (See Turlrinolia cuneata,, Gold fuss, Petref. 53, pi. 15, fig. 9, a, b, and Flabellum cuneatum, Michelin, Icon. Zooph., 45, pi. 9, fig. 13.) 4. EUPHYLLIA RUBRA. (Q. $ G.) Dana. E. simplicissima, affixa, subcuneiformis, infra paulo distorta, superne 41 162 ZOOPHYTES. paulo arcuata, 1" longa, basi £" et scepe dilatata; disco subluteo, 4- rubro-vittato, oblongo-elliptico, ore valde elongato, roseo; tentaculis longis, albidis, diaphanis. CoraUum extus viz striatum, lamellis non exsertis, regularibus, incequalibus. Not budding, attached, subcuneiform, below somewhat distorted, above a little arcuate, 1 inch in greatest breadth, base £ inch broad and often dilated ; disk yellowish, with 4 transverse red bands, oblong-elliptic, mouth very long and rose-coloured ; tentacles long, whitish, diaphanous. Corallum having the exterior faintly striate ; lamellae not exsert, regular, unequal. Cook's Straits, New Zealand, in twenty -four fathoms. — Quoy and Gaymard. This species resembles the preceding ; but the corallum is attached and less regular in outline below, often being distorted and curved a little to one side, instead of evenly symmetrical. The lamellae are described as alternately large and small. The figure of the animal, by Quoy and Gaymard, must be incorrect, as it represents but a single row of tentacles. Turbinolia rubra, Q. & G., Voy. de 1'As- , Cuvier, Reg. Anim., Paris, 1837, pi. trolabe, iv. 188, pi. 14, figs. 5-9. 82, fig. 5 ; copy from the Astrolabe. Caryophyttia compressa, Blain. Man. 344. 5. EUPHYLLIA SPINULOSA. (Dana.) E. simplicissima, affixa, compresso-subturbinata, paulo distorta, apice viz convexa (10'" et 5'" lata), infra attenuata et basi I" crassa. Corallum aperturd subellipticum, latere verticaliter subtiliter lamello- striatum et spinuloso-denticulatum ; lamellis apice rotundatis, 1'" ex- sertis, subintegris. Not budding, attached, compressed subturbinate, a little distorted, scarcely convex at summit where it is 10 lines by 5 in breadth, below attenuate, and i of an inch thick at base. Corallum having a subelliptical aperture, sides fine lamello-striate vertically and spinuloso-denticulate ; lamellse rounded above, a line exsert, sub- entire. TRIBE I. — ASTR^ACEA. 163 Plate 6, fig. 2, corallum, natural size ; a, profile of transverse section. Cape Frio, entrance to the harbour of Rio de Janeiro. Exp. Exp. The spinulous exterior of this species is characteristic. The cell has a linear bottom, and is about a fourth of an inch deep. NOTE. — The Turbinolia amicorum, of Blainville, probably belongs near the above, but no description of it has yet been published. It is from the Friendly Islands, Pacific Ocean. (Man. d'Actin. 341.) 2. Euphyllise segregato-gemmatse, non meandrinse. 6. EUPHYLLIA GLABRESCENS. ( Chamisso an d Eysenhardt. ) E. furcate ramosa, 2" alta ; discis simplicibus, tentaculis plurimis, 1" longis, clavatis, Jlavis. Corallum ramis £" crassis, extus glabriusculis, ca.lie.ulis angulosis, pollicaribus, centra profundissimo, margine integris vel obsolete denticulatis. Segregato-gemmate, furcately ramose, 2 inches in height; colour yellow ; tentacles many, an inch long, clavate. Corallum with the branches \ an inch thick, exterior nearly smooth ; calicles angular, an inch wide, very deep at centre, margin entire or obsoletely denticulate. The Radack Archipelago, Pacific Ocean. — Chamisso. Caryophylliaglabrescens,Cha.m\ssoandEy- Lobophyllia glabrescens, Blainville, Man. senhardt, Nov. Act. Nat. Curios., vol. x. d'Actin. 355. The reference by Blainville , Lamarck, 2d edit. ii. 356, No. 13 a. to plate liii. fig. 3, of his Atlas, is wrong; , Ehrenberg, op. cit. Gen. Iviii. sp. 4. the figure represents the L. angulosa. 7. EUPHYLLIA GRACILIS. (Dana.} E. furcate ramosa, convexa, discis scepius simplicibus. Corallum caliculis subturbinatis, vix 2'" remotis, extus kviter striatulis, cella scepius $" latd, inter dum 1" ekngata ; hmellis latissimis, tenuissimis, paululum exsertis. 164 ZOOPHYTES. Convex, furcato-ramose ; disks mostly simple. Corallum having the calicles subturbinate, scarcely 2 lines distant, the exterior minutely striate; cell usually £ an inch broad, sometimes 1 inch long ; lamellae very broad, extremely thin, a very little exsert. Caribbean Sea. Esper. — West Indies, Bost. Nat. Hist. Soc. The small size of this species readily distinguishes it. The lamellae meet or overlap at the middle of the cell, and are very fragile. The exterior is finely striate, but not spinulous or properly denticulate. Madrepora fastigiata (?), Esper Pflanz. i. Caryophyllia fastigiata (?), Ehren., op. cit. 95, tab. 8. Esper's figure represents the Gen. Iviii. sp. 5. branches a little too cylindrical, and the Esper's tab. 8, A, which he gives as a striae somewhat denticulate. variety of the above, has the cells of the Caryophyllia angulosa, in part, Lamarck, same breadth, but two inches long. 2d ed. ii. 355, No. 13. 8. EUPHYLLIA ASPERA. (Dana.) E.furcato-ramosa, hemispherica ; discis scepius simpKcibus et suborbi- culatis. Corallum ramis subdivaricatis, J-f " crassis, caliculis sub- turbinatis, crasse costato-striatis et spinulosis, infra fere kvibus ; fameUis in&qualibus, latis, exsertis, oblique truncatis, majoribus iV remotis et 3 minoribus intermediis. Furcato-ramose, hemispherical ; disks usually simple and nearly cir- cular. Corallum with the branches subdivaricate, ^ to | of an inch thick, calicles subturbinate ; coarsely ribbed-striate and spinulous, below nearly smooth; lamella? unequal, very broad, exsert, ob- liquely truncate, the larger TO of an inch apart, and with about 3 smaller intermediate. Plate 9, fig. 7, part of corallum, natural size; 7 a, profile section showing the form of the lamellae. West Indies ? This species is remarkable for the strongly ribbed spinulous exte- rior of the calicles (allying it to the Mussae), and the decided line of division between this live portion, and the smoother dead part below. The lamellae are broad with the inner margin vertical ; and the oppo- TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 165 site approach at the centre of a cell to within a sixteenth of an inch. The cells when simple but little exceed half an inch in breadth; but they often widen in one direction to nearly an inch. The branches are about an inch and a quarter long before furcation. The Madrepora capitata of Esper, (Pfianz. Fortsetz., i. 102, tab. 81, fig. 1,) may be identical with the above. The branches are represented as longer (about one and a half inches) before furcating, and less divaricate ; but in the size of the calicles and their ribbed and spinulous exterior, they are quite similar. Lamarck refers to Esper's figure and species as a variety of the " Caryophyllia fastigiata," a species of Mussa. 9. EUPHYLLIA APERTA. (Dana.) E. furcato-ramosa, hemispherica, discis scepius simplicibus. Corallum ramis %" crassis, subdivaricatis, brevibus, caliculis subturbinatis, %" longis et latis, remote costatis, cum costis leviter denticulatis et infra obsokscentibus ; lamellis paucis, tenuibus, 1'" exsertis, majoribus valde latis |" remotis apice oblique truncatis, et scepius und angustissimd intermedia. Furcato-ramose, hemispherical, with the disks mostly simple. Coral- lurn having the branches | of an inch thick, subdivaricate, short, calicles subturbinate, | of an inch long and broad, remotely costate, with the ridges somewhat denticulate and below becoming obsoles- cent; lamellae few, thin, about 1 line exsert, the larger quite broad and obliquely truncate at top, £ of an inch apart, and usually with one quite small intermediate lamella. West Indies ? This species resembles much the aspera, but the lamella of the calicles, and the ridges of the exterior, are fewer and more distant ; the appearance of the cell is much more open, and the internal texture consists of large open cellules. NOTE. — The Madrepora fastigiata of Pallas (Elench. Zooph. No. 175), thus described, "M. dichotoma, fastigiata, stellis terminalibus, subturbinatis, lamellis integerrimis," Seba, tab. 109, fig. 1, is near the above, yet appears to be a distinct species. The lamellae in Seba's figure are a little exsert, and the calicles are two-thirds of an inch in diameter, with the exterior striate, and the line between the live extremity and the part below, strongly marked. Seba says that the lamella; are very thin " nequaquam serratte sint, sed cuspidntoe et equabilem veluti cultri aciem abeant." Seba states that his specimen came from the shores of Curafoa, in the Caribbean Sea. 42 166 ZOOPHYTES. 10. EUPHYLLIA RUGOSA. (Dana.} E. furcato-ramosa, hemispherica ; polypis griseo-rubidis, discis scepius simplicibus, tentaculis numerosis, validis, §" longis, apicefiavis. Co- rallum caliculis ^-1" latis, interdum lobatis, 3-4'" remotis, extus sape transverse rugosis et tenuiter carinato-striatis : lamettis latis, integris, vix minime exsertis. Furcato-ramose, hemispherical ; polyps pale grayish red, disks usu- ally simple ; tentacles numerous, stout, § of an inch long, with yellow tips. Corallum with the calicles § to 1 inch broad, some- times lobed, 3 to 4 lines apart ; exterior often transversely wrinkled and finely carinato-striate ; lamellae broad, entire, scarcely at all exsert. Plate 6, fig. 3, a clump of the natural size, with most of the polyps fully expanded, a few partly so or closed ; 3 a, a tentacle enlarged ; 3 b, a separate calicle ; 3 c, part of a transverse section of a branch ; 3 d, one of the lamellae ; 3 e, corallum of a young individual, found growing from the side of one of the calicles. The Feejee Islands, in shallow water about the reefs. Exp. Exp. The character of the polyps and the larger size of the branches, separate this species from the glabrescens, to which it is in many points similar. The margin of the calicle is thin and fragile. The clump examined was five inches in diameter, and three high. Fungus marinus, &c., " lamellis tenuibus, ereciis, non dentatis." Seba,.fig. 4, tab. 116. The figure, though rude, appears to belong to this species. The Lobophyllia angulosa of Quoy and Gaymard (Voy. de I'Ast. iv. 193, pi. 15, figs. 1, 2), has some relations to the above, but if the forms of the lamellae and cell are correctly represented, it belongs to the genus Manicina. The representation of the ani- mals is wholly unsatisfactory. 11. EUPHYLLIA TURGIDA. (Dana.) E. hemispherica, furcato-ramosa, discis interdum parce compositis. Corallum caliculis sapius 1J-2" latis, interdum 3" dilatatis et lobatis, TRIBE I. — ASTR.EACEA. 167 extus undulatis et subremote leniter carinato-striatis ; lameUis latis- simis numerosisque, integris, tenuibus, paululum exsertis. Hemispherical, furcato-ramose, disks sometimes sparingly compound. Corallum with the calicles mostly 1J to 2 inches broad, at times 3 inches long, and'lobed; exterior undulate and rather remotely faint carinato-striate ; larnellee very broad and numerous, entire, thin, a little exsert. Plate 9, figs. 9 a, 9b, outline of lamellae. Malacca, East Indies. This species has much larger polyps than the last, and the carinaB of the exterior are more remote, and less distinct. The distance between adjacent calicles is moreover about half an inch. It is still nearer the meandrina, which, however, has narrower cells, generally much more sinuous and meandering. The specimen described be- longs to the collections of the Academy of Natural Sciences at Phila- delphia, and was deposited there by Dr. Burroughs. Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Uranie, pi. 96, fig. 11. This figure may be the above species imperfectly represented. Caryophyllia angulosa, in part, Lamarck, 2d ed. ii. 355, No. 13. 3. Euphyllise meandrinae. 12. EUPHYLLIA MEANDRINA. (Dana.) E. maxima, hemispherica, discis scepius compositis, lineatis et meandrinis. Corallum ramis raro cylindricis et$" crassis, scepissime compressis in- ter dum 6" latis, 5-9'" crassis; extus kvibus seupartim subtiliter stria- tulis et interdumpauk undulatis, margine fragilibus ; lamellis confer- tis, latis, integris, non exsertis. Very large, hemispherical, disks mostly compound, linear, and mean- dering. Corallum, with the branches rarely cylindrical, and ^ of an inch thick, generally laminato-cornpressed, sometimes 6 inches broad and 5 to 9 lines thick; exterior smooth or in some parts finely striate and sometimes surface a little undulate, margin fra- gile ; lamella? crowded, very broad, entire, not exsert. 168 ZOOPHYTES. Plate 6, figure 4, part of a corallum, natural size ; 4 a, vertical sec- tion, showing the narrow bottom ; 4 b, transverse section, showing the cellular texture of the interior. East Indies. Exp. Exp. The branches of this species are often broad sinuous plates, half to three-fourths of an inch thick; and again there are occasionally others, which are cylindrical, and belong to a single polyp. The last have often much resemblance to a single calicle in the E. rugosa, but are less strongly striated. The lamellae are crowded and so fill the cell that its bottom is seldom apparent. Caryophyttia angulosa, in part, Lamarck, 2d ed. ii. 355, No. 13. Madrepora fastigiata, Esper, i. 95, tab. viii. A. This figure may have been made from a specimen of this species; yet is much too small, and the striae are too decided. It is possibly a distinct species. He gives the Caribbean Sea as the probable locality. The calicles are one-third to half an inch thick, and half to two and a half wide, with the exterior striate. See E. gracilis. 13. EUPHYLLIA SINUOSA. (Dana.) E. maxima, hemispherica ; discis compositis, Kneatis, et elongate mean- drinis. Corallum meandrinse affim, sed cettis sinuosis longioribus, £" latis, et lamellis paucis, scepius fa" remotis, integris, non exsertis. Very large, hemispherical ; disks compound, linear, and long mean- dering. Corallum similar to that of the meandrina, but the sinuous cells longer, J an inch broad, and the lamellae few and mostly fa of an inch distant, entire, not exsert. The few and remote lamellae, and the very open cellular texture, distinguish this species readily from the preceding, with which it agrees in general habit. The intervals between the calicles, or the lobes of the same, are often an inch broad, A single meandering trench, with all its sinuous lobes, is sometimes two feet long. The specimen affording the description belongs to the collections of the Academy of Natural Sciences at Philadelphia, arid there is another in the collections of the Boston Natural History Society. The locality is not known ; it is probably from the East Indies. TRIBE I. — ASTRjEACEA. 169 14. EUPHYLLIA CULTRIFERA. (Dana.) E grandis, convexa, discis compositis, lineatis, meandrinis. Corattum cettd §" lata, interdum 5" elongata; extus subleve, vel parce plicatum et kviter striatulum; lamellis longe exsertis (interdum f") et scepe %" latis. Large, convex, disks compound, linear, meandering. Corallum, with the cell § of an inch broad, sometimes 5 inches long ; exterior nearly smooth or sparingly plicate, and faintly striate; lamellae long exsert (sometimes | of an inch), and often J an inch broad. Plate 9, figure 8 a, 8 b, showing the form of the Iamella3. East Indies. Dr. A. A. Gould. The large projecting cultriform lamellae give this species a very peculiar appearance. The specimen examined was placed in my hands for description by Dr. Gould, of Boston. APPENDIX. — Euphyllia Hemprichii. The Strombodes Hemprichii, of Ehrenberg, from the Red Sea (op. cit. Gen. liii. sp. 1), appears to pertain to the genus Euphyllia, though, from the concise description, this opinion is expressed with hesitation. It is thus described : — " Pollicaris, solitaria, turbinata, disco semipollicari, parum excavate, stipite tereti curvo, annulis distantibus, membranaceis, concavis alato." Owing to the rings of the exterior, it resembles some Cyathophylla, in appearing to consist of a series of cones inverted in one another. GENUS II.— CTENOPHYLLIA.— DANA. Astrceidce explanato-glomerata, discis seriatim gemmantibus, itaque sinuose linearibus. Coratta substipitata, convexa; cellis, fossiformi- bus, meandrinis; lamellis crassimis, paucis, sub -shaped, and in others they are polygonal and in two series. Occa- sionally they are entirely wanting, from the compactness of the coral- lum : yet even in these cases the lamellse composing the septum may be usually distinguished. The greater part of Astrseas increase by disk buds, and sponta- neous subdivision; the disk of the polyp, and the cell of the corallum, gradually widening by growth, and finally separating into two por- tions, which become independent (§ 79). A few widen only exterior to the disk or in the interstices, instead of the cells, and buds in this case open in the interstitial spaces between three or four cells (& 76 d) Those species which increase in the latter way, are in general dis- . tinguished by having 'the calicles more distant and prominent than the others, or with wider and more concave interstices. The process as it goes on in the Astrcea argus, may be easily studied. The lamella? which intersect the septum, extending from either side half way across it, become separated a little at the middle of the septum, in conse- quence of this widening ; and thus, in the medial point between three cells, these lamellse actually begin to radiate around an open space. This is the commencement of a new star, and a new polyp ; the bud soon after opens. There are some species, the A. stellulata, stettigera, intersepta, in which increase takes place both by these interstitial buds and by the dichastic process. Though the cells of Astrseas are usually simple, and contain only a single polyp mouth, except during the process of subdivision, yet in a few species they become elongated, so as to contain three or four mouths, and thus approach the Meandrinas ; and in the same speci- men, simple and oblong linear cells are intermingled. The A. defor- mis is an example, and were it not that the simple cells are the most numerous, it should be placed near the Meandrina dedalea, and M. spongiosa. The M. spongiosa appears to be often a true Astraea in its characters, and the A. varia closely resembles some of its varieties. These corals are confined, with rare exceptions, to the coral-reef seas, and contribute largely to the construction of reefs, both in the Pacific and in the East and West Indies. TRIBE I. — ASTR^ACEA. 203 The mode of budding separates the Astraeae from the Caryophyllia and Cyathophyllum families. Yet in some massive species the distinc- tion is not readily observed, especially between the Astrseas and cer- tain Cyathophylla, which agree in the general character of the cells. When treating of the Cyathophyllidae, the distinguishing character- istics will be more particularly dwelt upon. The lamello-striate surface of the Astrsese will afford an almost invariable character for distinguishing them from the recent species of the Caryophyllia tribe ; and adding to this the many transverse dissepiments between the lamellae, which are remote, if at all existing in the latter, and there will be little chance for confounding them. The Astraeae, however, graduate into the Caryophyllia) through the small Orbicellce, the A. ocellina and A. myriophthalma, closely resembling Oculinee, and hardly distinguishable, except by their glomerate or incrusting forms and general habit. (See farther under Oculina.) The same transition also takes place through the A. pleiades and the Astroites. These last species exhibit their Caryophyllia character, however, in the fact that the aggregated polyps are united only by the lower parts of the animals, as is evinced by their becoming long exsert when expanded : moreover, we perceive in their coralla that the new cells open in the interstices, although but a fraction of a line in breadth ; while all Astraeas, with similarly narrow interstices, bud in the disks. They are thus similar to the Porites among the Madreporacea. The genus Astraa was so named by Lamarck, in allusion to the stellate cells, and was instituted with nearly the same limits as here adopted.* The Astrceoporce were separated from it by Blainville, and the A. palifera was arranged by the same author with his genus Gemmipora; and these changes have been here adopted. A few other species, having the stars of the Pavoniss, have been placed in this work with that genus : these are in part the Siderastraeae of Blainville, and are characterized by the absence of proper cells, and the lamellae being uninterruptedly continuous between the polyp centres or oririmes. * Astrcea, the goddess Justice in ancient mythology, " lived upon the earth, as the poets mention, during the golden age, which is often called the age of Astrsea ; but the wickedness and impiety of mankind, drove her to heaven in the brazen and iron ages, and she was placed among the constellations of the Zodiac under the name of Virgo." " Virgo csede madentes Ultima crelestum terras Astreea rcliquit." — Ovid, Met. i. 150. 204 ZOOPHYTES. The distinction alluded to, of species with short calicles or dupli- cate ridges, and those with the cells separated only by simple ridges, was first made the ground for a subdivision of this genus by Oken, who instituted for the former the genus Favia. Ehrenberg afterwards adopted the same subdivision, but with more accurately defined cha- racters. But the two groups pass by gradual transitions into one another. Moreover, in the Manicinse, the same specimen often shows both the simple and deeply sulcate ridge, according as the coalescence is more or less complete, evincing the little importance of this character as a generic distinction. A more important subdivision is suggested by Blainville, who places the species with regular circular cells (a regularity arising from their not increasing by disk buds), in his genus Tubastrcea. Ehren- berg, who first pointed out the source of their peculiarities, separates the same species under the generic name Explanaria, one of La- marck's genera, but much changed in its application. This author, moreover, separates his Explanariae from the Astrrea tribe, and places - them with the Caryophyllacea. While we fail to see the propriety of so wide a separation from the Astraeidae (§& 67, 80), there is still some reason for a subdivision of the genus. As the two modes of increase by disk buds and interstitial buds, are sometimes presented by the same species, the groups are introduced only as subgenera. The sub- genus including the Tubastraeae of Blainville, may be called Orbi- cella. The other Astraea simply; or Fissicella, alluding to the mode of growth and budding by subdivision, if a significant name be re- quired. The name Tubastrcea of Blainville, is rejected on account of its formation from words of different languages; as it has not been gene- rally adopted, no inconvenience can result from this course, required as it is by usage and law. The Orbicellae have fixed limits to the size of the adult cells, and number of lamella? and tentacles; the cells are circular or ellip- tical, and quite regular. The Fissicellse increase constantly in the breadth of their disks and cells, and the number of lamellae ; the cells therefore are often oblong, and some may be seen in the progress of subdivision ; occasionally they are a little flexuous and lobed, and thus pass into the Meandrinae. The passage also into the Echinoporss, may be distinguished in the erect-lobed species — the tesserifera and others allied — in which the young appear near the upper margin in the ascending cell. Among the Astreeoid corals increasing interstitially, there are some TRIBE I. — ASTR^ACEA. OQ5 species that have the interstices between the cells quite flat, and the lamellae minute, closely crowded, and slightly prominent; they much resemble some of the aggregate species of the Fungia family, and are near the Psammocorse. They may possibly be shown to have the essential characters of the Fungidae, but are for the present arranged here, in the subgenus Siderina. They form part of the group Sideras- trrea of Blainville. Arrangement of the Species. SUBGENUS 1. ORBICELLA. Cells nearly circular, more or less prominent, not sub- dividing by growth, or rarely so ; stars with distinct limits formed by the coalescence laterally of the lamellae, and therefore cells appearing tubular and separated by inter- stices. I. Calicles prominent, cells more than 2 lines broad, lamellce in adult cell, 36 or 48. 1. A. Orb. radiata. *5. A. Orb. curta. *2. A. Orb. argus. 6. A. Orb. rotulosa. *3. A. Orb. glaucopis. *7. A. Orb. coronata. *4. A. Orb. patula. II. Calicles more or less prominent, cells less than 2 lines broad, lamettce in adult cell, 18 or 24. *8. A. Orb. hyadcs. *13. A. Orb. stelligera. *9. A. Orb. excelsa. 14. A. Orb. crispata. *10. A. Orb. pleiades. *15. A. Orb. microphthalma. *11. A. Orb. annularis. *16. A. Orb. ocellina. *12. A. Orb. stellulata. SUBGENUS 2. SIDERINA. Cells not subdividing by growth, interstices flat, stars with limits along the middle of the interstices, and cells not appearing tubular; lamella? minute and crowded. *17. A. Sid. galaxea. SUBGENUS 3. FISSICELLA. Cells subdividing by growth and budding. A. CONVEX OR ROUNDED. a. Cellules of the stars in a transverse section decompound, lamellae even. I. Calicles prominent. *18. A. speciosa. *21. A. pandanus. 19. A. uva. *22. A. puteolina. 20. A. ananas. *23. A. pallida. II. Calicles immersed, ridges someu-hat sukate or entire. *24. A. dipsacea. *27. A. fusco-viridis. *25. A. porcata. *28. A. virens. *26. A. flexuosa. *29. A. echinata. 52 OQ6 ZOOPHYTES. *30. A. fragilis (cellules sparingly decomp.) *32. A. magnifica. *31. A. tenella. *33. A. filicosa. b. Cellules of the stars in a transverse section scarcely decompound or not at all so. I. Ridges sulcate or entire, lamellce unequally exsert. *34. A. versipora. *37. A. dcformis. *35. A. denticulata. *38. A. varia. *36. A. pectinata. II. Ridges narrow, entire, nearly naked at summit, lamellie unequal, but hardly at all exsert, cellules of stars sometimes sparingly decompound. *39. A. rigida. III. Ridges entire or sulcate, lamella even; cells not coronate within, cellules of stars not decompound or scarcely so. 40. A. reticularis. *42. A purpurea. *41. A. pctrosa. *43. A. pulchra. IV. Ridges entire, lamellce even, cells coronate within; cellules of stars simple (cells often very regularly polygonal). 44. A. pentagona. *45. A. favistella. *46. A. eximia. *47. A. sinuosa. 48. A. melicerum. *53. A. abdita. *54. A. tesscrifera. 56. A. complanata. 57. A. hcliopora. 58. A. Hemprichii. *49. A. parvistella. *50. A. favulus. *51. A. cerium. *52. A. intersepta (hardly coronate). B. ERECT LOBED. *55. A. robusta. C. UNARRAKGED SPECIES. 59. A. halicora. *60. A. cyclastra. 61. A. favosa. SUBGENUS I.— ORBICELLA. I. Caliculis prominentibus, cellis 2'" latioribus. 1. A. ORBICELLA RADIATA. (Ellis.) A. convexa. Corallum caliculis 1-1 V" remotis, cyttndricis, 5-6'" latis, TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. OQ7 margine rotundatis ; interstitiis concavis, radiato-striatis ; cellis pro- fundis aut subprofundis ; lamellis angustis. Convex. Corallam with the calicles 1 to H lines distant, cylindrical, 5 to 6 lines broad, rounded at the margin ; interstices concave, ra- diately striate ; cells deep ; lamellae narrow. West Indies. Ellis and Solander. Lamarck. The very prominent calicles with wide concave interstices separate this species from its congeners. It resembles the A. speciosa ; but dif- fers in its more remote calicles, and also its interstitial mode of bud- ding. The internal texture, as figured by Ellis, is quite coarsely cellular. Mad. radiuta, Ellis and Solander, 169, tab. , Lamour., Exp. 57, tab. 47, fig. 8 ; 47, fig. 8. Encyc., 132. Mad. astroitis, var. Pallas Zooph., 320. A. Tubaslrcearadiata, Blainville, Man. 368. Astrcea racliata, Lamarck, ii. 404, No. 1. Explanaria radiata, Ehrenberg, G. 1. sp. 6. 2. A. ORBICELLA ARGUS. (Lamarck.) A. subhemispherica ; polypis 5'" latis,prom.inulis ; lamellis 48.* Corallum subsolidum, caliculis brevissime conicis, polygonis, et 1'" allis, extus confer tim regulariterque striatis et denticulatis; cellis orbiculatis, 3'" latis, paulo profundis, fundo latis ; lamellis tenuibus, denticulatis: transverse secto, stellis multiradiatis, cellulis simplicibus; septis fere solidis, paucis cellulis lineatis vel > -formibus. Subhemispherical, polyps mostly 5 lines broad, a little prominent, with 48 internal lamellse. Corallum nearly solid; calicles very short, conical, polygonal, 1 line high, exterior crowdedly and very evenly striate arid denticulate; cells circular, 3 lines broad, rather shallow, broad at bottom; lamellaB thin, denticulate, in a transverse section, stars multiradiate, with the cellules simple; septa nearly solid, with a few linear or > - form cellules. Plate 10, fig. 1 a, transverse section; 1 b, vertical section; also, p. 75. * The number here given includes all the lamella;, large and small, in the adult calicle, or what is equivalent, the number of strice on the exterior of the calicle. 208 ZOOPHYTES. West Indies. The argus is a neat species, distinguished by its low conical ca- licles, rather less than half an inch across, finely striate, with forty- eight minutely denticulate lamello-striaB, when of adult size ; the cells are nearly circular, and a fourth of an inch broad ; the lamellae are thin and about ten of them extend to the fundus, which is about one- third the breadth of the star. The septa present only occasional cel- lules, either in a vertical or transverse view. In a vertical section, the dissepiments on the surface of the lamella? are seen to be numerous, quite fine, and nearly horizontal, a little oblique downward. Mad. cavernosa, Esper, Fortsetz. i. 18, tab. Aslrea argus, Lamour., Encyc., 131. 37. A. Tubastrcea cavernosa, Blainville, Man., Astrea argus, Lamarck, ii. 404, No. 2. 368. 3. A. ORBICELLA G-LAUCOPIS. (Dana.) A. maxima, hemispherica ; poli/pis prominulis ; lamellis 48. Corallum subcettulosum : transverse secto, stellis suborbiculatis, 4-5'" latis, ten- uiter 24:—26-radiatis, cellulis simplicibus ; septis subcellulosis, cettulis lineatis et > -formibus, numerosis. Very large, hemispherical ; polyps a little prominent, with 48 la- mellse. Corallum subcellular : stars in a transverse section, subor- biculate, 4 to 5 lines broad, finely 24 to 26-rayed, with the cellules simple ; septa subcellular ; the cellules linear and > - shape, nume- rous. Plate 10, figure 2 a, a vertical section; 2b, transverse section; both natural size. The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This coral, of which the author has seen only a worn speci- men, grows in large hemispheres. The specimen measures fifteen inches in length, and is but a section of a larger mass, which, from the angle of divergence between the sides, must have been at least three feet in diameter. There is some resemblance in a transverse sec- tional view to the argus, but the stars are much larger, with a greater number of rays, and the septa have more numerous cellules, the la- TRIBE I. — ASTUTE A C E A. 209 mellae not being so completely united together. In a vertical section, the centre of the cell is subfilameritous, and the dissepiments on the sur- faces of the lamellae are few, minutely delicate, almost horizontal and nearly parallel. 4. A. ORBICELLA PATULA. (Dana.) A. maxima, hemispherica, fusco-umbrina ; poly-pis 6-8'" latis, discispalr lide radiateque griseis. Corallum cellulosum ; caliculis polygonis, patulissime conicis aut subplanis, bene confertimque striatis et denticu- latis ; cettis paululum excavatis, non coronatis, lamdlis incrassatis, spi- noso-denticulatis : transverse secto, stellis multiradiatis, radiis crassis, fere contiguis ; septis subcellulosis, cum paucis ceUulis angustis. Very large, hemispherical, dark-umber coloured ; polyps 6 to 8 lines broad, with the disks radiated with pale gray. Corallum cellular; calicles polygonal, flat conical, or nearly flat, evenly and crowdedly striate without, and denticulate ; cells very shallow, not coronate ; lamellae incrassate, spinoso-denticulate : in a transverse section, stars many-rayed, rays thick and nearly contiguous; septa with a few narrow cellules. Plate 10, fig. 14, part of a corallum with the animals unexpanded; a, section showing outline of cells and ridges, and the dentation of the lamellae ; b, an enlarged view of the same; c, d, vertical sections, natu- ral size ; e, transverse section. The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. 5. A. ORBICELLA CURTA. (Dana.) A. convexa ; poly pis prominulis, 3-4'" latis, lamellis 48. Corattum mi- nutissime cellulosum; caliculis breviter conico-rotundatis, extus con- fertim regulariterque striatis et subtiliter denticulatis ; cellis orbicu- latis, 2$'" latis, subprofundis, intus subcoronatis ; lamellis fere ceque exsertis, denticulatis : transverse secto, stellis fere multiradiatis, cellulis parce subdivisis ; septis sapius minute cettulosis, cellulis lineatis vel > -formibus. Convex ; polyps a little prominent, 3 to 4 lines broad, with 48 internal 53 210 ZOOPHYTES. lamellae. Corallum very minutely cellular ; calicles short, round, conical, crowdedly and evenly striate and finely denticulate with- out; cells orbicular, 2£ lines broad, rather deep, subcoronate within ; lamellae almost equally exsert, denticulate : in a transverse section, stars with many rays, and cellules sparingly subdivided ; septa usually minutely cellular, with the cellules linear or > - shape. Plate 10, fig. 3, a, enlarged profile view of cell and larnellee ; b, enlarged transverse section ; c, vertical section, natural size. The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is smaller than the preceding, and the corallum is more minutely cellular within. The lamellae are a little unequally promi- nent, approaching thus the coronata ; but the much less inequality, and the cross partitions in the stars are distinguishing characters, as well as the more conical shape of the calicles and their more evenly- striated exterior. The striae are forty-eight in number in adult cali- cles. The lamellae are mostly hollow; and in a vertical section, they are often deeply pectinato-erose, or penetrated by oblong cellules, the pectinations and cellules being directed obliquely, a little upward and inward. 6. A. ORBICELLA ROTULOSA. (Ellis.) A. subglobosa ; polypis prominulis, lamellis 36 (?). Corallum, caliculis brevissime cylindricis ; lamellis incequalibus et valde incequaliterque exsertis, paucis ; cettis 2— 2£'" latis, per 6-8 denticulos coronatis. Subglobose, polyps a little prominent, with 36 (?) internal lamellae Corallum with the calicles very short cylindrical; lamellae un- equal and very unequally exsert ; cells 2 to 2£ lines broad, with a corona of 6 to 8 teeth. West Indies. Ellis, Lamarck. This is a handsome coral, with neat circular calicles, hardly a quarter of an inch in diameter, having the margin set around with unequally prominent lamellae, the larger projecting about half a line. This character gives a bristly aspect to the surface. It differs from TRIBE I.— ASTR^ACEA. 211 the coronata in the fewer rays, rather larger cells, and more finely striate exterior to the calicles. Ellis represents the points of the corona within the cell as but six to eight in number, and the interme- diate lamellae between the larger, as obsolescent. Mad. rolulosa, Ellis and Sol., 166, tab. 55. Favia rotulosa, Ehrenberg, G. lix. sp. 7. Astrcea rotulosa, Lamarck, ij. 405, No. 4. Esper's Madrepora aeropora, (Pflanz. Fort- , Lamouroux, Exp. Meth. 58, tab. 55; setz. i. tab. 38) may be this species Encyc., 129. badly represented. 7. A. ORBICELLA CORONATA. (Dana.) A. convexa, subglobosa ; polypis prominulis, 2£-3'" latis, lamettis 36. Corallum subcellulosum, caliculis breviter cylindricis ; lamettis in- cequalibus et in&qualiter ezsertis, numerosis ; cellis 2'" latis, orbicu- latis, subprofundis, intus per 10-12 denticulos coronatis: transverse secto, septisfere solidis, sceperaris cettulis, inter dum numerosis ; stellis multiradiatis, cellulis simplicibus. Convex, subglobose ; polyps a little prominent, 2£ to 3 lines broad, with 36 internal lamellae. Corallum subcellular ; calicles very short cylindrical with the lamellae unequal and unequally exsert, numerous; cells 2 lines broad, circular, rather shallow, coronate within with 10 to 12 minute points: in a transverse section, septa nearly solid, often with delicate cellules, which are sometimes nu- merous ; stars many-rayed, cellules simple. Plate 10, fig. 4 a, part of corallum, natural size; b, calicle enlarged; c, outline of cell and lamellae ; d, vertical section natural size ; e, trans- verse section, enlarged ; f, the same, showing natural size. Tahiti, and also the Feejee Islands, and Wake's Island, Pacific Ocean. Exp. Exp. This species resembles the preceding ; but the rays to the cells and the points of the corona are more numerous and crowded. The cali- cles are placed obliquely in the specimen examined, so that one side is often nearly a line higher than the other, which is sometimes almost lost in the sides of the next cell. In a vertical section the part below the cell is very fine cellular, while the septa, unless broad, are quite solid ; when broad, there is a row of cellules along the middle. ftnbvBi V /». of USIVEESITT] 212 ZOOPHYTES. II. Caliculis parvulis, 2'" angustioribus. 8. A. ORBICELLA HYADES. (Dana.} A. convexa, arrecto-glomerata ; polypis vix 2'" latis, lamellis 24. Co- rallum percellulosum ; cettis orbiculatis, 1J'" latis, margine annulato (sicut in pleiades) ; lamellis tenuissimis ; inter stitiis angustis, sapius concavis : transverse secto, stellis 24,-radiatis ; septis valde cellulosis. Convex, erect glomerate and gibbous ; polyps scarcely 2 lines broad, with 24 internal lamellae. Corallum light cellular ; cells circular, 1J lines broad, with the margin annulate as in the pleiades ; lamellae very thin ; interstices narrow, mostly concave : in a transverse sec- tion, stars with 24 rays, septa spongy cellular. Plate 10, fig. 15, transverse view, natural size. West Indies. Boston Nat. Hist. Soc. This species resembles the pleiades, but the stars of the worn sur- face are larger, and have twenty-four nearly equal rays, the interme- diate not being obsolete. The interstices in a vertical section are very delicately cellular and irregularly so, as the rays of the stars seem to be interrupted. In the transverse section, the septum contains gene- rally a single imperfect series of delicate cellules which are seldom angular. In these last characters the species approaches the Caryo- phyllacea. The cellules of the stars are deep and never decompound. The rays meet in a very narrow fund us which is scarcely convoluted. The specimen affording this description is a subturbinate mass six inches high, four and a half wide at top, with the summit nearly flat. 9. A. ORBICELLA EXCELSA. (Dana.) A. arrecto-glomerata, 5" alta et 2" lata ; polypis parvulis, (vix 2'" latis} lamellis 24. Corallum robustum ; cettis orbiculatis, vix l£'" latis, margine prominulo, 24 lamellis sub&qualibus, denticulatis ; inter stitiis sfepius £'" latis : transverse secto, stellis fere 1<±-radialis ; septis par ce cellulosis, interdum cellulis uniseriatis. TRIBE I. — ASTR-iEACEA. 213 Erect glomerate and gibbous, 5 inches high and 2 broad; polyps small (scarcely 2 lines broad), with 24 internal lamellae. Corallum firm ; cells circular, scarcely 1 J lines broad ; margin a little promi- nent, with 24 subequal denticulate lamellae ; interstices usually £ a line broad : in a transverse section, stars about 24-rayed ; septa sparingly cellular, pellules sometimes uniseriate. Plate 10, fig. 16, transverse view, natural size. West Indies. Bost. Nat. Hist. Soc. The erect mode of growth of this species is somewhat like the last, but the texture is more solid and the rays of the star less delicate and even. Only a worn specimen has been seen by the author. In this the interstices are flat or slightly concave, and have very faint radiated strise. The lamellae of the cells barely meet in the centre. This species differs from the stellulata and annularis in having the twelve intermediate lamellae of the star nearly as prominent as the others; hence in a transverse section, about twenty-four rays may be distinguished in the larger cells. In a vertical section the transverse dissepiments are quite oblique, and occasionally the cellules of the stars in a transverse section are subdivided by them. 10. A. ORBICELLA PLEIADES. (Ellis.) A. convexa, polypis lj'" latis, lamellis 24. Corallum percelluhsum, debile ; cellis orbiculatis,fere !£"' latis, margine annulate, tenuissimo ; interstitiis concavis, laxe cellulosis, angustis (£"') : transverse secto, lamellis duodecim tenuissimis, aliis intermediis obsoletis. Convex ; polyps 1 J lines broad, with 24 internal lamellae. Corallum very light and delicately cellular; cells orbiculate, nearly l£ lines broad, margin annular and very thin ; interstices concave, loose cellular, narrow (about J of a line) : in a transverse section, lamella? 12, very thin, the intermediate obsolete. Plate 10, fig. 5 a, transverse section, natural size; 5 b, same en- larged ; 5 c, vertical section, natural size. East Indies. Ellis, Lamarck. — Wake's Island, Pacific Ocean. Exp. Exp. 54 214 ZOOPHYTES. This species is remarkable for its very light, almost spongy texture, and its regularly circular cells, with a neat and extremely thin border, as seen on a worn surface. The rays are delicate and about twelve in number. The porous centre of the star is about a third the whole diameter. Only a worn specimen has been seen by the author, and Ellis's figure was made from a similar one. Mad. pleiades, Ellis and Sol., 169, tab. 53, -* — , Latnour., Exp. Meth. 58, tab. 53, figs. 7, 8. figs. 7, 8 ; Encyc. 131, pi. 486, figs. 7, 8. Astrcea pleiades, Lamk. ii. 408, No. 11. A. Tubastrcea pleiades, Blainv., Man. 368. 11. A. OEBICELLA ANNULARIS. (Lamarck.) A. polypis parvulis (1J'"), lamellis 24. CoraUum cellulosum ; cellis orbiculatis, 1'" vix superantibus, 10-12 radiis tenuibus et aliis inter- mediis obsoktis ; interstitiis plano-concavis : transverse secto, septis cellulosis cum cettulis minutis in media scepissime uniseriatis, raro biseriatis. Polyps small (l£ lines broad), with 24 internal lamellae. Corallum cellular ; cells orbiculate, scarcely over a line broad, 10 to 12 slender rays, and others intermediate obsolete ; interstices plano-concave : in a transverse section, septa cellular, with the cellules minute, usually in a single medial series, rarely in two series. Plate 10, fig. 6, transverse section of corallum, natural size. West Indies. Ellis, Lamarck. This species has circular cells nearly of the size in the pleiades, but the texture is much heavier, and the cellules of the septa in a trans- verse section are mostly in a single series along the middle of the same, leaving a solid ring around the star nearly a quarter of a line thick. The porous centre of the star rather exceeds one-third the breadth of the same. The author has seen a worn specimen from the Barbadoes ; it was three inches in diameter, and had a convex surface. Mad. annidaris, Ellis and Solander, 169, A. Tubastrcea annularis, Blainville, Man. tab. 53, figs. 1, 2 ; a good figure of a 368. worn specimen. Explanaria annulata, Ehrenb., G. 1., sp. 7. Astrcea annularis, Lamk., ii. 405, No. 3. The A. annularis, of Quoy and Gaymard, - , Lamouroux, Exp. Meth. 58, tab. 53, (Voy. de 1'Ast. iv. 209, pi. 17, figs. 17, figs. 1,2; Encyc. 131, pi. 486, figs. 1, 2. 18,) is another species (see A. speciosa). [UIUVBB.5ITT] TRIBE I. — ASTRjEACEA. 215 12. A. ORBICELLA STELLULATA. (Ellis.} A. convexa et scepe undulata; polypis 1^'" latis, discis raro gemmatis et dichasticis ; lamellis 24. Corallum subcellulosum ; cellis orbiculatis, I'" latis, raro oblongis, vix profundis ; lamellis tenuibus, supra septum regulariter prominulis ; inter st^tiis scepius concavis: transverse secto, septis subsolidis, interdum cdlulis interrupt^ uniseriatis, et rarissime biseriatis; stettis 10-12 r adits et aliis intermediis obsoktis. Convex and often undulate ; polyps l£ lines broad, disks sometimes budding and dichastic; 24 internal lamellae. Corallum subcellular; cells orbiculate, 1 line broad, rarely oblong ; lamellae thin, a little prominent above the septum, and evenly so ; interstices usually concave, yet often entire: in a transverse section, septa solid or nearly so, sometimes with cellules interruptedly uniseriate, and oc- casionally biseriate; stars 10 to 12-rayed, other intermediate rays obsolete. Plate 10, figure 7 a, transverse section, natural size; b, vertical section, do. West Indies. In a transverse sectional view, the stellulata has considerable resem- blance to the annularis, but the septum is much more solid, and cel- lules are only occasionally observed. It resembles also the stettigera; but the lamellae of the surface are alternately smaller, and the stars, in a transverse section, have more rays, and a less solid centre. From the intersepta, it differs in its even entire lamellae, not truncate, and in its more solid texture. This species grows to a breadth of five inches or more. Mad. stellulata, Ellis and Solander, 165, , Lamouroux, Exp. Meth. 58, pi. 53, tab. 53, figs. 3, 4, this figure is nearly figs. 3 and 4; Encyc. 131, pi. 486, figs, correct. The texture is well shown in 3 and 4. fig. 3, and the unequal lamelte, with The Astrea stellulata of Lamarck (p. 408, about ten larger, and a distinct, rather No. 12), under which this author refers, prominent bottom, in fig. 4. The cells with a query to Ellis's figure, is a diffe- are more distant in figure 3 than in the rent species, placed in the genus Astraeo- specimens met with. Ellis's specimen pora by Blainville, and so described in appears to have been partly worn. this work. 216 ZOOPHYTES. 13. A. ORBICELLA STELLIGERA. (Dana.} A. convexa et subgibbosa ; polypis 1J'" latis, discis raro gemmatis et dichasticis ; lamellis 18. Corattum subcellulosum ; cellis parvulis (|"; latis), bene orbiculatis, interdum oblongis, vix profundis, intus minute coronatis ; inter stitiis concavis; lamellis parce prominulis, supra sep- tum eleganter radiatis, intus abruptis : transverse secto, septis fere solidis, stettis pauciradiatis (6-8 radiis majoribus). Convex and subgibbous ; polyps 1 J lines broad, disks rarely budding and dichastic; 18 internal lamellae. Corallura subcellular; cells quite small (| of a line broad), neatly orbiculate, sometimes oblong and dichastic, rather shallow, within minutely coronate; interstices concave; lamella slightly prominent, neatly radiating upon the septum around the cell, abrupt within : in a transverse section, the septa nearly solid, stars few-rayed (6 to 8 larger). Plate 10, fig. 9, surface of corallum, natural size; 9 a, profile of cell and lamellae ; b, lamella enlarged ; c, vertical section, natural size ; d, transverse do. ; 9 e, transverse section enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The neatly radiate lamellae that form a border to each star, upon the septum, together with the very compact texture and the shallow coronate cell, abrupt within, form good characters for distinguishing this species. The circle of radiating lamellae consists of fifteen to eighteen ; they are quite even and have a gradual outward slope. The interstices are generally more than half the breadth of the cell. 14. A. ORBICELLA (?) cRispATA. (Lamarck.) C. incrustans, cellis suborbiculatis, infundibuliformibus, margine sepa- ratis, multilamellosis, lamellis denticulatis. Corallum incrusting; cells nearly circular, infundibuliform, separated along the ridge, multilamellate ; lamellae denticulate. Indian Ocean. Perm and Lesueur. TRIBE I. — ASTR^ACEA. 217 Lamarck, who gives the above description, states that the species is near the A. heliopora, and also resembles a little the Madrepora astroites of Esper (see A. galaxea). The stars are small and neat, a little unequal, and appear somewhat crispate. Astraa crispata, Lamarck* ii. 416, No. 25. Astrtza crispata, Blainville, Man. d'Actin., , Lamouroux, Encyc., 128. 370. 15. A. ORBICELLA MICROPHTHALMA. (Lamarck.} A. glomerata, fusco-virescens ; polypis prominulis, 1-1 J"' latis, tenta- culis albidis, minutis ; lamellisZk. Corattum subcettulosum ; caliculis breviter globoso-cylindrids, extus granulate striatis, scepe contiguis ; ceUis %'" latis, subprofundis ; lamellis minutis, scepius 12 paulum exsertis et 6 vix majoribus ; interstitiis subtilissime granuhsis : transverse secto, septis parce cettulosis, stellis irregulariter pauci- radiatis. Glomerate ; greenish fuscous ; tentacles whitish, minute ; polyps a little prominent, 1 to 1J lines broad ; lamellae 24. Corallum sub- cellular, having short globoso-cylindrical calicles, granulato-striate without, often contiguous ; cells j| of a line broad, rather deep ; lamellae minute, usually about 12 somewhat exsert, and 6 a little the most so ; interstices very finely granulous : in a transverse sec- tion, the septa with few cellules, stars irregularly few-rayed. Plate 10, fig. 11, surface of corallum, natural size; 11 o, animal enlarged; 11 b, calicle enlarged; 11 c, vertical section enlarged; 11 c', same, natural size ; 11 d, transverse section, natural size; 11 e, same, enlarged. New Holland Seas. Peron and Lesueur. — Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The small, unequally prominent, globoso-cylindrical calicles of this species, with six of its minute lamellae a little more exsert than the others, give the corallum a peculiar appearance. In a transverse sec- tion the septa are nearly compact, and often as broad as the stars. It is near the following species, but the calicles are a little larger, and besides, that has in general twelve of the lamellae equally prominent, and the interstices nearly smooth. 55 218 ZOOPHYTES. Astrcea microphtJudma, Lamarck, ii. 409, Astrcea microphihalma, Lamour., Encyc., No. 10. 130. , Blainville, Man., 370. Favia microphthcdma, Ehreub. G. lix. sp. 1 . 16. A. ORBICELLA OCELLINA. (Dana.) A. glomerata et lobata, scepe incrustans ; polypis vix 1'" superantibus, lamellis 24. Corallum caliculis globoso-cylindricis, minoribus, non lineam super antibus, et s&pius 12 lamellis minutis teque exsertis, inter- stitiisferenudis; celld profunda : transverse secto,s eptis subsolidis et stellis pauciradiatis. Glomerate and lobed, often incrusting ; polyps scarcely exceeding a line in breadth, lamellte 24. Corallum with the calicles globoso- cylindrical, as in the microphthalma, but smaller, with 12 minute lamellae equally exsert ; interstices nearly naked ; cell deep : in' a transverse section, septa nearly solid, and stars few-rayed. Plate 10, fig. 10. Sandwich Islands. This species forms lobed glomerate masses, having an ascending mode of growth. The calicles are unequal, and in the lower concave portions of the corallum, are almost wholly immersed, while in other parts they are sometimes nearly a line exsert. Like the preceding, the internal texture below the cells is very minutely cellular. It is sometimes found in thin incrusting plates, and thus forms a passage between the Astrseas and the Echinopores. This species and the preceding are also near the Oculinse ($ 80). SUBGENUS II.— SIDERINA. 17. A. SIDERINA GALAXEA. (Ellis.) A. incrustans et glomerata, inter dum subglobosa, polypis non prominulis. Corallum subcellulosum; cellis immersis subprofundis, scepius l£"' latis, TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 219 (raro 2'") ; lameUis angustissimis et subtilissime denticulatis, 6-12 pro- minulioribus ; collibus plants, viz lineam latis, minutissime et confertis- sime lamello-striatis : transverse secto, stellispolygonis, scepius 2'" latis, confertim multiradiatis, centra solidis. Incrusting and glomerate, sometimes subglobose. Corallum subcel- lular; cells immersed, rather deep, mostly 1J lines broad, lamellae very narrow, and very minutely denticulate, 6 to 10 a little more prominent than the others ; septa plane, scarcely a line broad, very closely and finely lamello-striate : in a transverse section, stars polygonal, mostly 2 lines broad, crowdedly multiradiate, with the centre solid. Plate 10, figure 12, surface of corallum natural size; 12 a, same, another variety; 12 b, transverse section of the variety fig. 12, natural size ; 12 c, same enlarged ; 12 d, transverse section of the variety fig. 12 a. West Indies, Martinique. Lamouroux. — East Indies, Lamarck, Acad. Nat. Sci., Philad. This species occurs in subglobose masses, and also as incrustations. Both varieties are common in the West Indies ; one specimen of the former (part of the surface of which is represented in fig. 12.), is 2£ inches in diameter and appears to have had no point of attachment. The incrusting specimens (figure 12 a) are convex, and sometimes nearly hemispherical. The two varieties may possibly be different species, but the characters observed do not appear to be sufficient to distinguish them. The lamellae of the cells are minute, and nearly in contact laterally, with about twelve a little prominent in the largest cells, and three smaller intermediate, making forty-eight in all. In the majority of the cells which are smaller, the number is less. The buds open in the interstices and the cells are never dichastic. The species has close relations to the Mycedia and Psammocorae. Mad. galaxea, Ellis and Sol., 168, tab. 47, Astrcea galaxea, Lamour., Exp. 60, tab. 47, fig. 7. fig. 7 ; Encyc., 126. Mad. Astroites, Esper, Pfianz. Fortsetz. i. , Lamarck, ii. 418, No. 31. 12, tab. 35, an incrusting specimen ; the A. Siderastrcea gcdaxea, Blainville, Man. cells are about the size above given ; 370. Esper states that 4 or 5 of the lamella Astrcea galaxea, Lesueur, Mem. du Mus. vi. are a little larger than the others. 285, pi. 16, fig. 13, Lesueur states that 220 ZOOPHYTES. Ellis's figure is very good, but gives quite a different one himself. Astrcea astroites, Ehrenberg, G. Ix. sp. 1. Ehrenberg's specimen was from the An- tillas; he describes it as follows, referring to Ellis's figure, with a query: "incrus- tans, effusa, parum pulvinata, 4-6'" alta, stellis contiguis, planis, radiatis, intcqua- libus, 5-6-gonis, sesquilinearibus, inter- stitiis nullis." It is probably a different species ; especially as he states that it increases by spontaneous fission. SUBGENUS III.— FISSICELLA. A. SlTBGLOBOSA, AUT CONVEXA. a. Stellarum cellulis, corallo transverse secto, decompositis ; (lamellis regularibus.) I. Caliculis prominulis. 18. A. SPECIOSA. (Dana.} A. hemispherica ; polypis prominulis, 4-6'" latis. Corallum percellulo- sum ; caliculis scepius subcylindricis et 1— 1 J'" prominulis, scepe paulum remotis, margine bene rotundatis ; cellis profundis, et abrupte dedivis, intus vix coranatis ; lamellis bene regularibus et denticulatis : trans- verse secto, stellis tenuissime multiradiatis ; cellulis decompositis, septis percellulosis. Hemispherical ; polyps a little prominent, 4 to 6 lines broad. Coral- lum light cellular; calicles usually subcylindrical, and 1 to 1J lines prominent, often somewhat remote, margin neatly rounded ; cells deep, abrupt within, and scarcely at all coronate ; lamellse neatly even and denticulate : in a transverse section, stars many- rayed ; rays very thin and cellules decompound ; septa very cellular. Plate 11, fig. 1, part of the corallum, natural size; 1 a, vertical sec- tion of cell, and profile of lamellae ; 1 b, lamellse enlarged ; 1 c, trans- verse section of corallum, natural size ; 1 d, vertical section, natural size. East Indies. Exp. Exp. TRIBE I. — ASTRJGACEA. 221 This is a neat species, with large prominent subcylindrical calicles often a little distant, and deep cells. The texture is light cellular ; the dissepiments within are extremely delicate, and on the lateral sur- face of the lamelke they are quite oblique. The species resembles the A. Orbicella radiata, but besides being more light and delicate in texture, it increases by disk buds. Madrepora radiata, Esper, Fortsetz. i. 74, near the speciosa, in having prominent, tab. 61. A characteristic figure, though nearly cylindrical, circular calicles, with coarse. Esper alludes to the lightness of plano-convex interstices ; but the figure the coral, and its very cellular texture. they give as representing it, has the in- The Astrcea annularis, of Quoy and Gay- terstices a simple ridge, perhaps a little mard (Voy. de 1'Ast. iv. 209, pi. 17, sulcate. The calicles are described as figs. 17, 18), as described by them, is three or four lines in diameter. 19. AsTRjEA UVA. (Esper.} A. polypis prominulis, scepe 9'" latis. Corallum caliculis l£-2'" promi- nulis, subangulatis, rotundato-conicis, contiguis (itaque sulcis inter- mediis subacutis), extus confertim lamello-striatis et denticulatis ; ce.ttis 4-5"' latis, s&pe elongatis. Polyps prominent and often 9 lines broad. Corallum with the calicles 1£ to 2 lines prominent, subangular and rounded conical, contiguous (and hence the intermediate sulcus subacute) ; exterior crowdedly lamello-striate and denticulate ; cells 4 to 5 lines broad, and often elongated. China Sea. Esper, from M. Chemnitz. — Red Sea, Ehrenberg. This coral resembles somewhat the A. Orb. argus, in its conti- guous conical cells and striated exterior, but has much larger calicles, which elongate and subdivide. Esper's figure represents a convex mass 4£ inches across, with some of the calicles nearly an inch long. He states that the lamellae within the cell are minutely appendiculate at base. Mad. uva, Esper, Fortsetz. i. 32, tab. 43. Favia uva, Ehrenberg, G. lix., sp. 5 ; Eh- Astnea uva, Schweig. Handb. 419. renberg states that the animal has a Ast/'cea ananas, /3 uva, Lamk. ii. 406. brown colour. No. 5. 56 222 ZOOPHYTES. 20. ASTRjEA ANANAS. (Ellis.} A. subhemispherica ; polypis 3-5'" latis. Corallum caliculis rotundatis, subangulatis, scepe oblongis, incequalibus, contiguis ; interstitiis con- cams ; cellis 2-3'" latis; lamellis denticulatis. Subhemispherical ; polyps 3 to 5 lines broad. Corallum with rounded or convex calicles, subangular, often oblong, unequal, contiguous ; interstices concave ; cells 2 to 3 lines broad ; lamellae denticulate. West Indies. Ellis, Lamarck. The calicles are much smaller than in the preceding, and are con- vexly rounded instead of conical. Lesueur describes a coral, which he refers to the species figured by Ellis, as having polyps without tentacles ; but it is probable that they were only unexpanded in the specimen under examination. His. figure agrees nearly with Ellis' s, and he states that the cells are some- times trilobed. Mad. ananas, Ellis and Solander, 168, calicles a little distant, as in the spe- tab. 47, fig. 6. ciosa, but more conical ; cells four to Astrcea ananas, Lamk. ii. 406, No. 5. five lines long, one and a half to two , Schweig. Handb., 419. lines broad, and many-rayed. Ehren- , Lamour., Exp. 59, tab. 47, fig. 6 ; berg refers this figure to his Explanaria Encyc. 127. (our Orbicella) ananas, which he makes , Lesueur, Mem. du Mus. vi. 285, pi. identical with the ananas of Linnaous. 16, fig. 12. From the very elongate calicles, the spe- -, Blainville, Man. 369. cies probably represents one of the Fissi- Favia ananas, Oken's Zool., i. 67. cellss. Favia porcata, var. Ehrenb., G. lix. No. 6. The Astrcea ananas of Quoy and Gay- Mad. ananas ? Linn. Syst. Nat., ed. xii. mard (Voy. de 1'Ast. iv. 207, pi. 16, 1275. figs. 6, 7) appears to be the porcata of Esper's M. ananas (i. tab. 19), has the Esper. (See A. porcata.} 21. ASTRJEA PANDANUS. (Dana.) A. subglobosa, brunneo-fuscescens ; polypis J" latis. Corallum cellulosum ; caliculis rotundatis, subangulatis, contiguis, subtequalibus ; cellis sub- orbiculatis, scepe oblongis, 3-4'" latis, subprofundis, intus obsolete coronatis ; lamellis cequalibus, utrinque subtiliter denticulatis : trans- TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 223 verse secto, septis biseriatim cellulosis; stellis multiradiatis cum cellulis valde decompositis. Subglobose, colour dark brown ; polyps J an inch broad. Corallum quite cellular, with rounded calicles (as in the ananas), subangular, contiguous, subequal ; cells nearly circular, often oblong, 3 to 4 lines broad, rather' shallow, obsoletely coronate within ; lamellae even, finely denticulate within and without : in a transverse sec- tion, septa biseriately cellular; stars many-rayed, with the cellules much decompound. Plate 11, fig. 2, the polyps unexpanded; 2 a, a few cells, natural size ; 2 b, vertical section of cell, with profile of the lamellae, enlarged ; 2 c, vertical section of corallum, natural size; 2d, transverse section. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This coral has the rounded prominent calicles of the ananas of Ellis, and is near that species. The specimen in the Expedition col- lections is nearly globular, and is about four inches in diameter. 22. ASTR^A PUTEOLINA. (Dana.) A. hemispherica; poly pis J" latis. Corallum percellulosum ; caliculis subpolygonis, parce prominulis; collibus 2£"' crassis, rotundatis et sukatis; cellis profundioribus, et fere perpendicularibus, viz coronatis ; lamellis regularibus, subtiliter denticulatis. Hemispherical ; polyps J an inch broad. Corallum light cellular ; calicles subpolygonal, a little prominent; ridges 2J lines thick, rounded and sulcate ; cells deeper than broad, nearly perpendicular, scarcely coronate within ; lamellae even, finely denticulate. Plate 11, fig. 3, cells of corallum, natural size; 3 a, section of cells, showing profile of lamellce ; 3 b, vertical section, natural size. East Indies. Exp. Exp. This is a light species, with very deep cells, rounded sulcate ridges, and even, finely denticulate, lamellae. It is near the fragilis, but 224 ZOOPHYTES. the calicles are larger and deeper, the ridges broader, and the texture more coarsely cellular within. As the calicles are but little distinct, it forms a connecting link between the preceding species and the next division. 23. A. PALLIDA. (Dana.) A. hemispherica; polypis 6-8'" latis, discis pallide ccesiis, tentaculis albidis, internis bursiformibus. Corallum aperte cellulosum, calicu- lis conico-cylindricis, l-l£'" altis, contiguis, extus remote lamello- striatis, et subtilissimc denticulatis ; cellis 5-6'" latis, subprofundis, intus coronatis ; lamellis tenuibus, apice angustis et paulo incequaliter exsertis, parce dentatis: transverse secto, septis l-2-seriatim cellulosis ; stellis vix multiradiatis cum cellulis parce decompositis. Hemispherical ; polyps 6 to 8 lines broad, disk pale bluish-gray, ten- tacles whitish, the interior bursiform. Corallum open cellular ; calicles conico-cylindrical, 1-1 J lines high, contiguous, exterior re- motely lamello-striate and finely denticulate; cells 5 to 6 lines broad, rather shallow, within coronate; lamellae thin, narrow above and somewhat unequally exsert, sparingly dentate : in a transverse sec- tion, septa with large cellules in 1 or 2 series; stars scarcely multi- radiate with the cellules sparingly decompound. Plate 10, fig. 13, natural size; 13 a, tentacles enlarged of the two series; 13 b, cells in outline; 13 c, vertical section of cell, with pro- file of lamellae and ridges; 13 c', same, natural size; 13 d, transverse section of corallum ; 13 e, vertical section of same. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This coral resembles the denticutata, but has a broader sulcus to the ridges, less unequal lamellae, which are also thinner, narrower at apex and not vertical within the cell. The calicles are nearly cylindrical, and in the specimen seen, were placed obliquely against one another, like those of the A. Orb. coronata. The lamellae over the exterior of the calicles are even, thin, nearly half a line apart, and almost as much prominent. It is possible that the species may be one of the Orbicellae. TRIBE I. — ASTRjEACEA. 225 II. Caliculis immersis ; collibus aut paulum sulcatis, aut integris. 24. ASTRJEA DIPSACEA. (Lamarck.} A. convexa, subhemispherica ; polypis sape 8'" latis. Corallum percelr lulosum, cellis 4-6'" latis, subangulatis et sape lobatis, vix profundis, intus non coronatis ; collibus subtruncatis, interdum sulcatulis ; la- mettis tenuibus, lacerato-dentatis, non confertis,fereregularibus: trans- verse secto, stellis multiradiatis, cum cettulis decompositis ; septis 1'" crassis, L-2-seriatim large cellulosis. Convex, subhemispherical ; polyps often 8 lines broad. Corallum light cellular; cells 4 to 6 lines broad, subangular and often lobed, rather deep, not coronate within; ridges subtruncate and sometimes slightly sulcate; lamellae thin, lacerato-dentate, not crowded, nearly even: in a transverse section, stars many-rayed with the cellules decompound; septa a line thick, cellular, cellules large and in one or two series. Plate 11, fig. 4 o, vertical section of cell and ridges, showing profile of the lamellae and internal cellules, natural size ; 4 b, the same through the longer diameter of an oblong cell ; 4 c, vertical section of corallum, natural size ; 4 d, transverse section, natural size. West Indies. This species is remarkable for the size and irregular form of its cells (which are sometimes lobed and an inch long), the fragile lace- rato-dentate lamellse, and its coarse cellular texture. It approaches the flexuosa; but the texture is much more cellular, and the lamellse more distant and more raggedly toothed. Mad.favosa, Ellis and Sol., 167, tab. 50, magnis, 4-5'" latis, angulatis, margine tig. 1, the cells are a little too regular. lato, echinato, lamellis serrato-dentatis, Astfcea dipsacea, Lamk., ii. 411, No. 16. dentibus majoribus intus cavis (nee per- , Lamour., Exp. Meth. 59, tab. 50, foratis)." fig. 1 ; Encyc., 129. The Astrcea abdita of Quoy and Gaymard, A. Dipsustrcea dipsacea, Blainv. Man. 373. as figured by them, comes near the dip- The A. dipsacea of Ehrenberg, from the sacea in internal texture and general size Red Sea (op. cit. G. lx., sp. 13), may be of the cells (Voy. de 1'Ast. iv. 205, pi. 16, a different species. It is described as figs. 4 and 5), which are described as follows :" Sesquipedalis et bipedalis, sub- sometimes confluent, 9 or 10 lines long, globosa, superficie soepius inccquali, stellis rounded or polygonal, rather shallow, 57 226 ZOOPHYTES. with large and uniform lamella? strongly error occurs generally in their drawings, denticulate. The animals are sulphur- The A. dipsacea of Quoy and Gaymard yellow. The form of the tentacles given, (ibid. 210, pi. 17, figs. 1,2) is a different flat and lanceolate, is altogether impro- species, too imperfectly figured to be re- bable, and their distant arrangement in a cognised, single series must be incorrect ; the same 25. ASTR^A PORCATA. (Esper.) A. convexa, subglobosa, fusco-castanea ; polypis 5-6'" latis. Corallum cellulosum, subrobustum ; cellis 3— 4'" latis, subprqfundis, intus breviter coronatis ; collibus fere planis, obsolete sulcatis, 1-2'" crassis ; la- mettis regularibus, incrassatis, denticulatis, denticulis ad apicem sub- tilissimis : transverse secto, stellis multiradiatis cum cettulis decom- positis ; septis subcettulosis, cellulis minutis, sparsis. Convex, subglobose ; dark chestnut-brown. Corallum cellular, rather firm ; cells 3 to 4 lines broad, rather shallow, short coronate within ; ridges nearly flat, obsoletely sulcate, 1 to 2 lines thick; lamellae even, incrassate, denticulate and very finely so at apex: in a trans- verse section, stars many-rayed, with the cellules decompound ; septa subcellular, cellules minute and scattered. Plate 11, fig. 5, polyps unexpanded, natural size; 5 a, profile of the lamellae and ridges, natural size ; 5 b, same, enlarged ; 5 c, verti- cal section of corallum, natural size ; 5 d, transverse section, natu- ral size. East Indies. Esper. — Tongatabu. Exp. Exp. The broad interstices nearly flat, and finely striated with an obso- lescent sulcus, easily distinguish this species. The cells are about half as deep as their breadth, and the lamellae which project a little unequally into the cell are short appendiculate at base, and a little thickened at the edges. Madrepora porcata, Esper, Pflanz. Fortsetz. i. 88, tab. 71, figs. 1-3. " Mad. com- posita, globosa, stellis insequalibus, immersis, interstitiis planis, porcis radiantibus granu- latis." Esper's figure represents well the specimen in the Expedition collections. Lamarck and Ehrenberg appear to have described other species under this name. Lamarck's description (No. 7.) is as follows : " A. subglobosa, stellis inajqualibus, irregu- laribus, oblongis, margine elevatis, interstitiis granulatis." Ehrenberg refers to Ellis's TRIBE I. — ASTR^EACEA. 227 ananas as the porcata, and also to Esper's cellufasa, tab. xl. (our A. favistella), besides the figure above referred to. His description is as follows : " Subglobosa, stellis insequa- libus, irregularibus, oblongis, ssepe dividuis, 2-3'" longis et latis, margine elevatis, inter- stitiis dilatatis, lamellosis, sulco depressis, denticulatisque, lamellis dentatis." (Op. cit. G. lix. sp. 6.) The A. ananas of Quoy and Gaymard (Voy. de 1'Ast. iv. pi. 16, fig. 6.), approaches this species in some of its characters, but is too imperfectly described and figured to be identified. 26. ASTR^EA FLEXUOSA. (Dana.} A. flexuoso-convexa ; poly pis 6-8'" latis, discis rubro-brunnescentibus, tentaculis pallidis apicemque flavis. CoraUum robustum, subcellulo- sum ; caliculis scepe contortis, cellis 4-7'" latis, profundis, intus nan coronatis ; collibus \%- 2'" crassis, undulatis, rotundatis, obsolete sukatis ; lamellis bene regularibus, confertis, crassioribus, denticulatis : transverse secto, stettis multiradiatis cum cellulis decompositis ; septis scepe !£"' super antibus, solidis, cellulis paucis. A. flexuoso-convex ; polyps 6 to 8 lines broad; disks brownish-red, tentacles pale, with the tips yellow. Corallum firm and subcellular ; calicles often contorted ; cells 4 to 7 lines broad, deep, not coro- nate within; ridges 1J to 2 lines thick, undulate, rounded, obso- letely truncate ; lamellae even, crowded, rather stout, denticulate : in a transverse section, stars multiradiate, with the cellules decom- pound ; septa often exceeding 1 J lines, solid, with few cellules. Plate 11, fig. 6, polyps partly expanded, natural size ; 6 a, tentacle, enlarged ; 6 b, another in outline ; 6 c, view of opening of mouth, enlarged ; 6 d, profile of cell, ridges and lamella? ; 6 e, vertical section of corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The firm subcellular corallum and even denticulate lamellae dis- tinguish this species from the dipsacea ; and the flexuous ridges, often slightly sulcate, larger cells and coarser texture, from i\\efusco-viridis. It forms convex masses, four to five inches in diameter, with an uneven or flexuous surface. 228 ZOOPHYTES. 27. ASTR^EA FUSCO-VIRIDIS. (Quoy y,MineralCcmchology,\.\65,i>].T2. ramosum, tubulosum ; superficie cellis Phillips, Palceozoic Fossils, p. 7, pi. 3, immersis; cellis sparsis, per diaphrag- fig. 8. mata transversa divisis, distinctis, obso- Michelin, /cow. Zoophyt., 104, pi. 26, fig. 1; lete stellatis ; lamellis subnullis." The Michelin's genus is thus characterized by species here referred to the genus is from him : " Fixum, glomerato-globosum vel the Oolite. GENUS IV.— CANINIA.— MICHELIN. Cyatlwphyllidtz simplicissimce aut aggregato-gemmata. Corallum peni- tus transverse septatum, cellis concavis ; stellce radiis uno velpluribus proximis obsoletis, et infra, septis transversis ad infundibulum de- pressis ; texturd Calophyllis affine. Quite simple or aggregato-gemmate. Corallum within transversely septate; cells concave; one or more rays of the star, on one side, obsolete, and the transverse septa beneath this part having a funnel- shaped depression ; general texture like that of the Calophylla. This genus, instituted by Michelin, includes a few species of Cyatho- phylla with a depression on one side of the star and some appearance like a siphuncle. The depression is apparent in all the transverse septa below. Koninck doubts the grounds on which the genus is founded ; but Michelin states that he has observed the characteristic in a large number of specimens. Good drawings of it are given in his Iconographie Zoophytologique, pi. 16. This peculiarity has not been observed in any massive species. (Icon., p. 81.) GENUS V.— ACERVULARIA.— SCHWEIGGER. Cyathophyllidce ramosce aut aggregates. Corallum vix transverse sep- tatum, cellis ad summitates acervate proliferis. Ramose or aggregate. Corallum imperfectly transverse-septate, or not at all so; cells at summit acervately proliferous. TRIBE II. — CARYOPH YLLACEA. 359 The Acervularise have a small cup-like cell, prominent within the summit, and forming its centre, and are very proliferous from the summits. The characters of the genus require more study before it can be considered as established on sufficient grounds. This genus was instituted by Schweigger for the species figured by Fougt in the Amaenitates Academic* (i., Corall. Bait., tab. 4, fig. 9, and No. 2), .and thus- described by him: " Madrepora composita, cor- poribus proliferis e centre pluribus, undique coadunatis; stella con- vexa, centro concava." The genus is characterized as follows by Schweigger (Handbuch, p. 418): " Stirps calcarea, e conis approxi- mates : coni e cellulis lamellosis acervati omnes cellula terminali medio protracta, e centro depresso prolifera ;" which may be translated : " Calcareous and made up of approximate cones ; cones acervate and proceeding from lamellate cells, which have a terminal cell at middle, and are proliferous from this depressed centre." He names the species A. baltica. The essential characters of Schweigger's genus are retained in the above generic description. The convexity of the summit exterior to the cup-like centre is not a universal character. The Astrsea ananas, figured by Lonsdale (Sil. System, pi. 16, fig. 6), belongs to this group as here characterized ; but his Acervularia baltica, which differs from Schweigger's, is the type of another genus. The Strombodes of Schweigger may also fall in part into this genus. The peculiar structure attributed to the species, the formation of successive layers of cells, appears not to be of generic importance. He thus characterizes the genus: "Stirps calcarea, e cellulis lamel- losis in conos acervatis, strata horizontalia constituentes. Coni paralleli, e cellula cyathiformi proliferi." — (Handbuch, p. 418; see also Gold- fuss, Petrefakten, 62, pi. 21.) The name is from gT^/Sos, a top, and refers to the peculiar structure above alluded to. Blainvilte changes the name to Strombastreea (Man. d'Actin. p. 376). The Strombodes of Ehrenberg includes those solitary Cyathophylla of Goldfuss, which from their peculiar interrupted mode of growth appear to consist of a series of inverted cones ("tanquam conis e centro proliferis"). These species, " Ringel-Coralle," pass so gradually into others with a nearly smooth exterior, that the character can hardly be considered as of sufficient importance for founding a genus. The same principle carried out would require a subdivision of the genus Cystiophyllum. Ehrenberg includes in his genus a recent species from the Red Sea, which is referred to under Euphyllia. Lonsdale and Phillips apply the name to species which have the 360 ZOOPHYTES. lamellae twisted about the centre, deriving the name from avjepu, to twist, thus departing widely from the original signification of the word and genus, as introduced by Schweigger (Pal. fossils, p. 10; Silur. System, 691, pi. 16 bis, fig. 4). If the genus, or its name, merits a place in the science, Schweigger's characteristics of it should be to some extent retained. GENUS VI.— ARACHNOPHYLLUM.— DANA. Cyathophy Hides aggregate, cellis kviter radiatis ; cor alii texturd cellu- losd, et lamellarum subtiliter cettulosd. Aggregate Cyathophyllidae, having the cells faintly radiate (the rays often obsolete towards the margin); texture of the corallum for the most part cellular; of the radiating lamellae,, very minutely cellular. This genus includes the Acervularia baltica, of Lonsdale. The faint rays and the general texture, seem to show a relation to the Cystiophylla. The rays under a microscope appear very delicately cellular (Plate 26, fig. 5, 5 a], like the finest lace-work, instead of being solid plates. The stars or several polyps of a zoophyte, are without circumscribed limits, in the interior of the corallum. (Silurian System, pi. 16. fig. 8 to 8 e; Schweigger, Handb. p. 418). It is possible that these species may prove to belong to the tribe Astraeacea. The absence on a polished transverse section of circum- scribed limits to the stars, which appears to be a general character- istic, shows some relation to the Fungidee. The texture below the centre of a cell, is very imperfectly, if at all, transversely septate. GENUS VII.— CYSTIOPHYLLUM.— LONSDALE. CyathophyUidce simplicissimce aut ramosce. Corolla non radiata, aut TRIBE II. — C ARYOPHYLLACE A. 361 raro radiis circum aream mediant conspicuis ; laterum, scepiusque toti coralli, texturd, spumoso-cellulosd. Quite simple or ramose Cyathophyllidse. Corallum not radiate, or rarely with distinct rays about the central area ; texture of the sides and usually of the whole corallum spumoso-cellular. The peculiar cellular structure of these species, may at once be detected in the character of the lateral surface, especially after polish- ing off the exterior, if not before, when the cellules will be found to differ strikingly from the rectangular cellules of the Cyathophylla. The species are usually without rays to the cells ; yet in some, faint lines may be perceived around the central area, and a transition may thus be traced to the Cyathophyllum structure. The absence of trans- verse septa along the middle of the corallum has been laid down as characteristic of the genus, yet it is not universal ; and we perceive here, also, progressive transitions towards the Cyathophylla. II. SEPTIS TRANSVERSIS SUKSUM OBLIQUIS ET IN AXEM COEUNTIBUS. GENUS VIII.— CLISIOPHYLLUM.— DANA. CyathophyllidcB simplicissimrB, ramosce, aut aggregato-glomeratcK. Co- rallum cellis radiatis, media interno septis sursum convergentibus ; axe nullo; lateribus omnino cettulosis. Quite simple, ramose or aggregato-glomerate. Corallum having the cells radiate, the middle within consisting of septa and cellules con- verging upward, but without a distinct axis; texture exterior to this middle portion cellular. This genus includes many of the so-called Cyathophylla, both simple arid massive species. In internal structure they resemble the Michelinise, but differ in having the structure minutely cellular exterior to the central convergent portion. The bottom of the cell has usually a conical prominence, proceeding from the character of the septa within, and about this centre the lamellae sometimes appear twisted. 91 362 ZOOPHYTES. These species with twisted lamellae constitute, in part, the genus Strombodes, as this name is used by Phillips and Lonsdale. The name is from the Greek xXitfiov, a tent, and alludes to the A -like figures which are made by the converging lamella? about the centre, as seen in a vertical section. Plate 26, figure 6, section of a simple turbinate species ; figures 7, 7 a, section of a cell in a massive species ; 7 a, represents the central portion of fig. 7, enlarged. GEJIUS IX.— MICHELINIA.— KONINCK. Cyathophyllidce aggregate. Corallum cellis excavatis ; septis olliquis irregularibus, e lateribus productis et sursum convergentibus, axe nullo. Aggregate Cyathophyllida?. Corallum with excavate cells; the whole interior with oblique irregular septa, converging towards an axial line ; axis none. This genus was instituted by Koninck. The species have the inter- nal texture of the Clisiophylla, except that there is no regularly cel- lular structure exterior to the central convergent portion. They differ from the Sarcinulse in having no axis. In the Michelinia tenuisepta, (Calamopora tenuisepta, of Phillips) the general structure of the coral- lum is columnar. Phillips, Geol. of Yorkshire, ii. 201, pi. 2, C. figs. 3a,b; Michelin, Icon. Zooph., fig. 30 ; Koninck, Desc. des Anim. foss. 83, pi. 16, fig. 3. des terrains houilkrs de Belgique, 31, pi. GENUS X.— COLUMNARIA.— GOLDFUSS. Cyathophyllidce segregate, glomerate, polypis contiguis, itaque pris- maticis. Corallum cellis radiatis, medio interno septis cellutisque sursum obliquis, axeque, composite ; texturd laterum celluhsa. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 363 Glomerate ; polyps laterally in contact, and consequently prismatic. Corallum having the cells radiate, the middle within consisting of oblique septa and cellules converging upward into an axis ; texture exterior to this middle portion, cellular. In a transverse section of the Columnarise, the outer portions are cel- lular, as in the Cyathophylla and Clisiophylla, while the inner consist of oblique septa converging upward into an axis ; and this axis ap- pears to be made by a convolution of the septa, or their partial coales- cence. Excepting the existence of an axis, the species are similar in their essential characters to the Clisiophylla. The columnar forms into which the coralla break, by a separation of the prismatic cells, are supposed to characterize all the species of the genus; yet as this is not necessarily of generic importance, it may prove otherwise. The genus Columnaria, as given in treatises, comprises, beside the species here included, some that have the internal structure of the Cyathophylla, an error which has arisen from allowing too much importance to mere aggregation and external form. The character of the axis in some species is noticed by Fleming, Parkinson, Blainville, and others. The Lithostrotion of Lhywd is synonymous with the Columnaria of authors. The name is of prior date ; but, besides its imperfect application — meaning a stone pavement — it was given pre- vious to the Linnsean period without reference to system, and is there- fore not entitled to authority. Plate 26, fig. 9, part of transverse section ; 9 a, lateral surface ; 9 b, and 10, vertical section through the middle of different species. Goldfuss, Petref. 72, pi. 24 ; Blainville, Man. strotion. Also Fleming's Brit. Animals, 350 ; Lhywd, Lithophylacii Brittannici 508, and Parkinson's Organic Remains, Iconographia, Epist. v., tab. 23, Litho- ii. pi. 5, figs. 3 and 6. GENUS Cyathophyllidce cespitosce aut fasciculatce ; caulibus cylindricis. Coral- lum cellis multiradiatis, septis internis simplicibus, sursum obliquis, conicis, e lateribus productis ; axe conspicuo. 364 ZOOPHYTES. Cespitose or fasciculate Cyathophyllidse ; stems cylindrical. Corallum having the cells multiradiate ; internal septa simple, oblique up- ward, conical, and extending quite from the sides ; axis distinct. The internal texture in this genus, as seen in a vertical section, is quite open, without dissepiments, excepting the oblique septa which occupy the whole interior, and appear like a series of inverted cones traversed by a central axis (plate 20, fig. 11). The species are closely related to the Columnarine : the principal difference consists in the extension of the septa quite across the interior to the sides, and the consequent absence of the exterior cellular texture; the septa more- over are more regular and sometimes constitute each a simple plate. The species have some resemblance to the Stylinse and Caryophyllise, but differ in internal structure. This genus was instituted by Lamarck for a few unlike species, characterized by consisting of parallel stems or tubes. The Madre- pora organum of Linnseus, is the best determined, and appears entitled to rank as the type of the genus, and has been so considered in this place. The characters have been drawn from Fougt's and Schweig- ger's figures, and from a specimen examined by the author. Other cylindrical fossil species, similar in external habit, belong to the genera Amplexus, Cyathophyllum, or some one of the preceding groups. Fougt, Amcen, Acad. i. tab. 4, fig. 6, and ii. 340; Blainville, Man., 348; Goldfuss, No. 1 ; Schweigger, Beobacht., pi. 7, fig. Petrefakten, p. 73. 66, and Handb., 419 ; Lamarck, 2d ed. FAMILY II.— CARYOPHYLLID^. CaryophyUacea coralligena ; polyporum oribus longe exsertis, tentaculis oUongis. Coratta penitus non transverse septata, et superfaie nun- quam lameUo-striatis ; cellarum margine acutis et tenuibus; lamellis fere integris. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 365 Coralligenous Caryophyllacea ; polyp-mouths long exsert, tentacles oblong. Coralla within not transversely septate, surface not lamello- striate ; cells with the margin acute and thin ; lamellae nearly or quite entire. Among the various forms of the Caryophyllida?, we observe trees occasionally five or six feet in height — shrubs and bushy clumps of various dimensions — convex masses covered with cylindrical calicles — clusters of large leaf-like expansions enrolled in one another — and tiny cups of goblet shape. Hemispherical domes like those of the Astrseas are not met with; and the folia are rather thick and cellular, with large curves and an obtuse polypiferous edge, instead of thin, sharp-edged, and compact, with the graceful arabesque forms of the Merulinse. The polyps of this group were first observed and figured, though incorrectly, by Donati. They have since been examined by Cavo- lini, Lesueur, Quoy and Gaymard, Ehrenberg, Broderip, Milne Edwards, and others. They are distinguished in most if not all in- stances, by having the mouth very much protruded when fully ex- panded, sometimes so as to form an inverted cone rising from the centre of the disk. The tentacles are clustered around the prominent mouth, in a crowded circlet. This family includes a part of Lamarck's genus Caryophyllia, along with his Oculinae, and TurbinaliaB, and some other fossil species. As the CaryophylliaB of this author have been variously distributed by different writers, a tabular view of the subdivisions proposed by the principal systematists in this department of science, is here given, with the genera adopted in this work. The genus Oculina, which has participated somewhat in the various changes, is also added, together with those genera of Astraacea which Lamarck's genus embraced. 92 366 ZOOPHYTES. g - 3 I o S i t s o 2 3 E Q O c» 00 S g T3 C O -a o S. •a •s I a ° s f f o co 00 - C .8- C. g 13 a .1 g CS CO .S i H « - S W OJ co 00 I f ! I 1 .S £ =3 3 •f. £ £ jf I I I M :i S C B w Q subramosa, coccineo-aurantiaca, polypis grandibus, 18-20-tentaculatis. Corallum striatulum, caliculis cylindrids, ince- qualibus, aperturd angulosd, fere £" laid. Low subramose (1 J inches high), yellowish-orange, polyps large, with 18 to 20 tentacles. Corallum finely striate, calicles cylindrical, unequal, aperture angular, nearly £ an inch broad. Plate 30, fig. 4, corallum of specimen from the Feejees, natural size. The Red Sea. Ehrenberg. Singapore and Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. TRIBE 1 1. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 3§9 The specimens in the Expedition collections, agree nearly with the above description by Ehrenberg. They are about an inch and a half high, and consist of a few calicles half an inch in diameter, and smaller. In those of large size there are ten to twelve large lamella?, with four to five narrower intermediate. The aperture is circular or elliptical instead of angular; the exterior is striate and a little sca- brous, with the stria? punctate. The specimen from the Feejees has the calicles about half an inch long, while in that from Singapore they are from an inch to an inch and a half in length, and are arcuate. Oculina coccinea, Ehrenberg, G. xlviii. sp. 6. 6. DENDROPHYLLIA DIAPHANA. (Dana.} D. humilis, subramosa, fusca, polypis 3-4'" latis. Corallum caliculis cylindricis, vix ellipticis, extus tenuissime striatis et scabriculis, parie- tibus tenuibus et diaphanis, margine integris ; celld profundiore (fere £") ; lamettis 6-10 majoribus et 2-3 intermediis valde minoribus. Low, subramose, fuscous, polyps 3 to 4 lines broad. Corallum a cluster of cylindrical or slightly elliptical calicles, very finely striate without, and somewhat scabrous, sides thin and diaphanous, margin entire; cell quite deep (nearly £ an inch); 6 to 10 larger lamelte, and 2 to 3 intermediate much smaller. Plate 30, fig. 3, corallurn, natural size. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. The thin diaphanous walls of the calicles are quite peculiar ; the specimen seen is a cluster of seven or eight polyps, each about half an inch long. The cell appears peculiarly open, the large lamellae being few in number, and the intermediate very much nar- rower. 7. DENDROPHYLLIA KUBEOLA. (Quoy 4- Gaymard.} D. cespitosa, vix ramosa ; polypis 2'" latis, subrubris, tentaculis tenuibus. Corallum caliculis cylindricis, 2— 3'" longis, substriatis, apice truncatis, margine integris; celld conica ; lamettis majoribus alternis. 98 390 ZOOPHYTES. Cespitose, scarcely ramose; polyps about 2 lines broad, reddish; ten- tacles slender. Corallum with cylindrical calicles, 2 to 3 lines long, somewhat striate, truncate at summit, margin entire; cell conical; the larger lamellae alternate with smaller. New Zealand. Quoy 4- Gaymard. According to the figure by Quoy and Gaymard, this species occurs in small groups of calicles. The exsert mouth when the animal is expanded is very prominent, and has the shape of a reversed cone. The edge of the calicle is described as very even and entire. Dendrophyllia rubeola, Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 197, pi. 15, figs. 12-15. APPENDIX. — Species, observed only as a simple polyp. D. scabrosa. {Dana.} Turbinato-cylindrical, half an inch high, and the same in breadth ; exterior finely striate and villoso-scabrous or spinulous, margin nearly entire; cell deep (nearly half an inch) la- mellae very unequal, about twelve larger, and mostly three smaller intermediate, the latter denticulate. Colour, when fresh, nearly black. The sides are much thicker than in the diaphana, and cellular. The adult cell probably contains forty-eight lamella. Singapore. Exp. Exp. Plate 30, fig. 2, calicle natural size. GENUS IX. — OCULINA. — LAMARCK. CaryophyUidce aggregato-gemmatce ; polypis uni-gemmatis, gemmis sin- gulis seriatim enascentibus et caules elongatas divaricate ramosas cumulantibus. Corolla persolida, super jide levi ; caliculis subcylin- dricis ; lamettis integris, plus minusve exsertis. Aggregato-gemmate, one bud proceeding from each polyp, the succes- sion forming elongating stems, divaricately ramose. Coralla solid with the exterior smooth ; calicles subcylindrical ; lamellae entire, more or less exsert. The Oculina3 are remarkable for the compactness of their coralla, there being scarcely a cellule within or without, excepting those of TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 391 the stars. The surface is smooth, or faintly striate about the calicles. The branches have not an axial star, like the Dendrophyllise ; each polyp starts as the apical one, and becomes afterwards oblique and lateral. The cells vary in size from one line to three-fourths of an inch. The lamellae, in some species, are slightly exsert, and very even, with the centre of the cell broad and convex; in others they are much exsert, and give the corallum a bristled aspect. These species pass into the Astraeas through the A. micropthalma, a glomerate and incrusting species, whose cells have nearly the cha- racters of those of this genus. They are also like the branching Echinopores among the Astrseidee, in their cumulate mode of budding and growth. The species with prominently exsert lamellae resemble in their cells the Anthophylla. The Oculina? have a wide range, being found both in the tropics and the cold regions of the north. Some species have been brought up from a depth of one hundred and fifty fathoms. The known species are mostly confined to the West India and European seas. The genus Oculina was made by Lamarck, from the Madrepora of early authors, for the species here included, and a few with minute polyps which are transferred to Ehrenberg's genus Allopora. It forms part of the Lithodendrum of Schweigger, and is the Matrepora of Oken. The Dentipora of Blainville belongs to this genus. The Allopora are compact species, like the Oculinae, but the cells are minute, and the lamella are marginal crenulations, not traceable to the bottom of the cell ; moreover, they grow in flabellate forms. Arrangement of the Species. I. Calicles with tlie lamellce much exsert. 1. O. hirtella. *2. O. horrescens. II. Calicles with the lamelke but little exsert and even. 3. O. prolifera. *7. O. pallens. 4. O. axillaris. *8. O. virginea. *5. O. varicosa. *9. O. diffusa. *6. O. oculata. 392 ZOOPHYTES. I. Lamellis valde exsertis et incequalibus. 1. OCULINA HIRTELLA. (Linn.} Lamarck. O. ramosa, crassa, ramis inferne inter dum coalitis et scepe 1" crassis, apice J". Corallum, caliculis fere 2'" latis, lamellis valde exsertis et incequalibus, apice truncatis. Ramose, stout, branches below sometimes coalescing and often an inch thick, above at apex a fourth of an inch. Corallum with the calicles nearly 2 lines thick, lamellae very much exsert and un- equal, truncate at apex. East Indies. Lamarck. The unequal exsert lamellae distinguish this species and the follow- ing from the other Oculinae. The calicles are about one-sixth of an inch long. Mad. hirtella, Pallas, Zooph., 313. Oculina hirtella, Deslongchamps, Encyc., , Ellis and Solander, 155, tab. 37. 574. Oculina hirtella, Lamk., ii. 455, No. 2. , Blainville, Man., 380. , Lamouroux, 63, tab. 37. , Ehrenberg, G. xlviii. sp. 5. 2. OCULINA HORRESCENS. (Dana.} O. cespitosa, ramosissima, ramis valde coalitis, ramulis brevibus, 2—3'" crassis. Corallum caliculis prominentibus, fere !£"' latis, lamellis incBqualibus, 10-12 majoribus valde exsertis. Cespitose, much branched, branches much coalescing, branchlets short, 2 to 3 lines thick. Corallum with prominent calicles, nearly i£ lines broad, lamella? unequal, 10 to 12 larger, much exsert. Plate 28, fig. 1, corallum, natural size; 1 a, section of stem and calicle, enlarged ; 1 b, calicle, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species, like the hirtella, has a bristled look, owing to the pro- TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 393 jecting lamellae. It forms a clump eight or ten inches high, and a foot or more across, crowdedly branched. The upper branchlets are seldom over an inch long. Near the apex the calicles are very oblique. The larger lamellae are cultriform, rounded at apex, and project over the outer surface of the calicle. The hirtella, which it resembles, is coarser, and the calicles are twice stouter. II. LameUis paululum ezsertis ei cequalifous. 3. OCULINA PROLIFERA. (Pallas.} Lamarck. O. ramosa, subdichotoma, reticulato-coalescens ; polypis maximis, axiUa- ribus vel terminalibus et scepe lateribus proliferis. Corallum caliculis turbinatis, scepe 6'" crassis; lamellis paulum exsertis, subcequalibus, revolutis. Ramose and subdichotomous, reticulato-coalescent ; polyps very large, axillary or terminal, and their sides often proliferous. Corallum with the calicles turbinate, often 6 lines thick ; lamellae a little exsert, subequal and somewhat revolute. Norwegian Sea. Pallas. A very coalescent species with large turbinate calicles, growing to a height of two feet or more. The species has some of the characters of the Gary ophy Ilia anthophyllum. Corallium album, lapidosum, fyc., Seba, iii., inch in diameter, and one-half to one inch tab. 116, No. 3 ; the branches are every in length. where coalescent, and the calicles one-half , Esper, Pflanz. i. 104, tab. 11. Esper to two-thirds of an inch in diameter, with states that the calicles are very various in a length of one to two inches. size, and sometimes an inch in diameter. Madrcpora prolifera, Linn. Pall. Zooph., p. Oculina prolifera, Lamarck, 456, No. 5. 307. , Blainville, Man. d'Act., 380. , Gmel. Syst. Nat., 3780. — , Lamouroux, Exp. 64, pi. 32, fig. 2. , Ellis and Solander, tab. 32, fig. 2; Matrepora prolifera, Oken, Lehrbuch der in this figure, which is a simple branch, Zoologie, i. 71. the calicles are one-third to one-half an Lith. proliferum, Schweig. Handb., 416. 99 394 ZOOPHYTES. 4. OCULINA AXILLARIS. (Ellis.) Lamarck. O. ramosa, dichotoma, ramis brevibus, divaricatis ; polypis remotis, grandibus, terminalibus et azillaribus. Corattum caliculis turbinatis, 3-4'" crassis, lamellis paulum exsertis, cequalibus. Ramose, dichotomous ; branches short, divaricate ; polyps distant, large, terminal and axillary. Corallum with turbinate calicles, 3 to 4 lines in diameter, lamellae a little exsert, even. East Indies. (Lamarck.) Mad. azittaris, Ellis and Sol., 153, tab. , Lamour., Exp. Meth., 64, pi. 13, 13, fig, 5. fig. 5. Oculina axittaris, Lamarck, ii. 456, No. 4. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 575. , Blainville, Man., 380. 5. OCULINA VARICOSA. (Lesueur.) O. arborescens, 1' alta, laxe ramosa, ramulis elongatis, scepe divaricatis. Corallum caliculis undique usque ad apicem divaricatis, brevibus, apice 1J'" latis, basi valde tumida seu hemispheric^ ; ferme 24 la- mellis subcequalibus, paulum exsertis. Arborescent, a foot high, loosely ramose ; branchlets long and often divaricate. Corallum with the calicles every where, quite to the apex, at right angles with the axis of the branch, short, l£ lines broad at top, the base much inflated or hemispherical; lamellae about 24 in number, subequal and even; a little exsert. Figure 28, page 67. West Indies, St. Thomas. Lesueur. The varicosa resembles the pattens in form, but is rather stouter, the branchlets being mostly a quarter of an inch in diameter; and the calicles are erect, even about the summits, instead of being very oblique. The swelling bases of the calicles, as seen on the larger TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 395 branches, also distinguish it. The cells are about a sixteenth of an inch deep. The branches are spreading, and seldom coalesce. Oculina varicosa, Lesueur, Mem. du Museum, vi. 291, pi. 17, fig. 19. 6. OCULINA OCTJLATA. O. ramosissima, ramis tortuosis, impkxis et valde coalitis, polypis par- vulis. Corallum caliculis sparsis, scepius obsolescentibus, sed prope apicem prominentibus et cylindrids, l-l^'" latis, lamellis vix exsertis. Very ramose, branches tortuous, implicate and much coalescing. Corallum with scattered calicles, mostly obsolescent, but towards the extremities of the branchlets prominent and cylindrical, 1 to \\ lines broad, lamellae slightly exsert, or not at all so. West Indies. The much-coalesced branches, and the very short calicles of the general surface, and oblong cylindrical calicles of the extremities (sometimes one-fourth of an inch long), are the distinguishing pecu- liarities of this common species. It grows at times to a height of a foot and a half, and branches nearly in a plane. This species is the virginea, in part, of Lamarck ; the virginea of the older authors is a Mediterranean species, and appears to be dis- tinct from the above. Corallium album, Seba, Thes. iii., tab. 116, , Lamour., Exp. Meth., p. 63, pi. 36. Nos. 1, 2; the calicles in No. 1 are a , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 574. little larger than in No. 2, but they ap- , Ehrenb., G. xlviii., sp. 1. pear to be the same species. Matrepora oculata, Oken. Zool., i. 72. Madiepora oculata (?), Pallas, Zooph., Lithodendrumvirgine>im,Sch-we\g,llandb. No. 179. 416. , Esper, i., tab. 12, 13; neither figure Dentipora virginea, Blainv., Man., 382, is characteristic. pi. 60, fig. 1 ; not a good figure ; also, Oculina virginea, in part, Lamarck, ii. 455, Dentipora anastamozans (?), 382. No. 1. 7. OCULINA FALLENS. (Ehrenberg.) O. arborescens (!£' aha], laxe ramosa, interdum coalita, caule 6-8'" crassd, ramis et ramulis gracilibus, attenuatis, scepe 2-4" longis, et 396 ZOOPHYTES. supernl £" crassis. Corallum caliculis prominentibus, 1J'" latis ; superne obliquis et aperturd ellipticis, et paulo prominulis, inferne erectis et rotundatis et ad basin super fide tumidd radiate striatuld cir- cumdatis ; lamettis paululum exsertis. Arborescent, (1J feet high,) loosely ramose, sometimes coalescing; stem 6 to 8 inches thick, branches and branchlets slender, attenuate, often 2 to 4 inches long, and above £ of an inch thick. Corallum with prominent calicles, about 1 \ lines broad ; towards the summits oblique, with an elliptical aperture, and but little prominent; below erect and circular, and surrounded at base with a tumid elevation, which is faintly radiate-striate. Figure 29, page 67. West Indies. — St. Thomas. Ehrenberg. A neat arborescent species, with rather distant branchings, flexuous branchlets, and shallow calicles. On the branches the calicles are surrounded at base by a depression, and outside of this, a low elevation, which is marked radiately with faint striae. This prominence some- times looks like a low rounded ridge between adjoining calicles. The species is much larger than the dijfusa, with the branchlets much longer. The oblique calicles at summit and more slender branchlets, distinguish it from the varicosa. The above description was taken from specimens examined by the author. Oculina pollens, var. /3. Ehrenberg, G. xlviii. sp. 4. 8. OCULINA VIRGINEA. (Linnceus.) Blainvilk. O. ramosa, ramis gracilibus (1-3'"), divaricatis et tortuosis. Coral- lum caliculis 1-1^'" latis, paucis, scepe alternatim dispositis, undique usque ad apicem, prominulis et erectis ; lamellis subcequalibus, pau- lulum exsertis. Ramose, branches slender ( 1 to 3 lines in diameter), divaricate and tortuous. Corallum with the calicles 1 to 1J lines broad, often alternately arranged, every where even to the summits of the branches, prominent and erect; lamellse nearly equal, a little exsert. TRIBE II. — C ARYOPHYLLACEA. 397 The Mediterranean Sea. Esper. — Off Marseilles, at a depth of 150 fathoms. Marsilli. This slender branching species differs from the diffusa and pattens, in having the calicles towards the summit of the branchlets erect instead of oblique, and the alternate arrangement often gives the slender branches a zigzag form. The upper branchlets are about an eighth of an inch in' diameter, and an inch to an inch and a half in length. It grows to a height of eight inches or more. Madrepore avec des rameaux a calices et very similar to that by Marsilli, presenting blanc comme du corail, Marsilli, Hist. slender, divaricate, flexuous branches, Phys. de la Mer., 139, tab. 30, fig. 140, with short erect calicles, faintly striate with enlarged details in figs. 141, 142, without, containing about twenty-four 143. equal lamellae, a little exsert. Mad. virginea, Linn., Syst. Nat., ed. xii. Acroporaalha,&,c.. (?), Gualtieri Index, &c., 1281 : " M. caulescens, subdichotoma frontispiece, recta, solida, stellis alternis eminentibus." Matrcpora virginea, Oken, Zool., i. 72. , Pallas, Zooph., No. 180. Oculina virginea, in part, Lamarck, 455. , Esper, i. 112, tab. 14. This figure is , Blainv., Man., 380. 9. OCULINA DIFFUSA. (Lamarck.} 0. pumila, ramosissima, diffusa, ramis divaricatis et scepe coalitis, ramulis ^-1" longis et 1^'" crassis. Corallum caliculis prominulis, 1'" latis, numerosis, inferne erectis cum bast radiate striatd, superne valde obliquis, minoribus, et aperturd ellipticis ; lamellis paululum exsertis, subcequalibus. Small, much branched, branches divaricate, and often coalescing, upper branchlets £ to 1 inch long, TO of an inch thick. Corallum with the calicles a little prominent, 1 line broad, rather numerous, below, erect, with the base around radiately striate, above, very oblique, smaller and elliptical ; lamellse a little exsert, even. West Indies. Mauger. Lesueur. A small species, much branched, with the branchlets short, and calicles crowded at the summits. Oculina diffusa, Lamk., ii. 456, No. 3. Oculina pattens, var. a. Ehrenb., G. xlviii. , Blainv., Man., 380. sp. 4. 100 398 ZOOPHYTES. III. Glomerate, cellis tubulatis, laxl aggregatis. GENUS X.— ANTHOPHYLLUM.— SCHWEIGGER. GaryaphyllidcE. aggregator, glomeratce. Corolla tubulos caliculatos mas- semque cakaream spongiosam interstitialem, composita ; caliculis prominentibus, parietibus persolidis et scepe leviter striatis ; lamellis integris, scepius exsertis. Aggregato-gemmate, glomerate. Coralla consisting of calicular tubes, and a separable spongy calcareous base ; calicles prominent, with very solid sides, often faintly striate; lamellae entire, generally exsert. The Anthophylla form clusters of tubes, which project above the spongy base, by which they are surrounded below. The lamellae are often very prominent, and bristle the surface of the corallum; and in the live zoophyte, each corresponds to a tentacle of the animal, and is formed by secretions, within one of these organs. In one species examined, a series of bright green tentacles surrounded the top of the tube, like a string of emerald beads, while above, was a corona of other erect tentacles, tipped with pale green. A large mass covered with these tubular polyps, each with its emerald necklace, is one of the most beautiful objects of coral growth. In other species the lamellae are short, and the animals more resemble the ordinary coral polyp. These species form rude masses, either nodular or subcylindrical, and more or less lobed or subdivided. The tubes in the species known, vary from an eighth to a third of an inch in diameter, and usually taper downward. The Anthophylla, in the compact or solid walls of their tubes, as well as their frequent prominent lamellae, approach more nearly to the Oculinae, than to the Dendrophylliae and Caryophylliae, and might form a subfamily along with that genus, and the Stylince. This group, which is part of the Gary ophy Ilia of Lamarck, is re- ferred to the Sarcinula of that author, by Blainville, as one of his Sarcinulse is apparently of this genus. The species constitute the larger part of Schweigger's genus AnihophyUum ; and Ehrenberg, in TRIBE II.— CARYOPHYLLACEA. 399 consequence, adopted for it Schweigger's name. As the lamellae are often much exsert, and the cell appears as if filled with a cluster of them, with their summits projecting out, the name (from avflos, flower, and ipuXXov, leaf) is not inappropriate. It is in part the Acropora and Caryophyttites, of early authors. The fossil Anthophylla of Blainville, fall mostly into the genus Turbinalopsis of Lamouroux. Arrangement of the Species. I. Glomerate, often lobed. 1. A. musics le. *4. A. cespitosum. *2. A. fasciculatum. *5. A. hystrix. 3. A. astreatum. 6. A. cuspidatum. II. Erect cylindrical or club-shaped stems. *7. A clavus. 1. ANTHOPHYLLUM MUSICALE. (Linnaeus.) Schrveigger. A. coraUi tubulis elongato-turbinatis, scepe curvatis, striatis, raro 2'" latis, massd spumosd laminisve spumosis connexis. Corallum consisting of long turbinate and often curved tubes, striate without, and hardly 2 lines in diameter, connected by a spongy mass or a series of spongy plates. Indian Ocean. This species differs from the other Anthophylla in the smaller size of its tubes. They are gradually attenuate below, and curved, and the paste in which they are embedded, is often in successive layers instead of being solid. Mad. musicalis, Linn., ed. xii. 1278. Galaaxa musicalis, Oken, Zoo]., i. 73. , in part, Esper, i. 160, tab. 30, fig. 2. Anthophyllum musicale, Schweig. Handb. Caryophyllia musicalis, Lamk., ii. 350, 418. No. «. , Ehrenberg, G. Ivi. sp. 4. , Lamouroux, Encyc., 170. Sarcinula musicalis, Blainv., Man., 348. 2. ANTHOPHYLLUM FASCICULATUM. (Linnceus.) Dana. A. coratti tubulis clavato-turbinatis, scepe curvatis, e massd spongiosd 400 ZOOPHYTES. surrectis ; caliculis £" altis, compressiusculis, sapius 3'" latis ; lamellis 1-1^'" exsertis, cultriformibus. Corallum consisting of clavato-turbinate and often curved tubes, rising from a spongy base ; calicles half an inch high, a very little com- pressed, mostly a fourth of an inch broad ; lamellae 1 to 1J lines exsert, cul triform. East Indies. — Vanikoro. Quoy $ Gaymard. — Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. The calicles in this species vary from an eighth to a third of an inch in diameter, but are generally about a fourth of an inch. There are twenty-six to thirty lamellae in the larger calicles, and about twelve of these are much the largest and nearly equal. Mad. caryophyllites, Pallas, Zooph., 313, , Lamour., Exp. Meth., 48, tab. 30 ; No. 183. Encyc. 169. Caryophyllum saxeum (?), Rumph., Am- , Blainv., Man., 345. boyn., tab. 87, fig. 3. , Quoy & Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Ast., Mad.fascicularis, Linn., ed. xii. 1278. iv. 190, pi. 15, figs. 3-6. The drawing , Ellis and Solander, tab. 30. of both the corallum and the animal is Caryophyllia fasciculate, Larnk., ii. 349, imperfect. No. 4. Galazeafascicularis, Oken, Zool., i. 73. 3. ANTHOPHYLLUM ASTREATUM. (Lamarck.) A. glomerato-globosum. Corallum caliculis brevissimis, truncatis, e massd spumosd surrectis; lamellis margine eminentioribus. Glomerato-globose. Corallum with very short calicles, truncate, rising from a spumous base ; lamellae elevated above the margin of the cell. Lamarck states that the tubes are not turbinate, and the calicles are very short. Described from a worn specimen of the cespitosum ? Caryophyllia astreata, Lamk., ii. 350, No. Anthophyttum astreatum (?), Ehrenb., G. 5. He refers with a query to Esper's Ivi. sp. 2. "Tubulis striatis, 2j'" latis, tab. 30, fig. 1, which appears to be a indistincte turbinatis, subcylindricis, pallii worn specimen of the cespitosum. appendicibus celluloso-laminaribus, inter- , Lamouroux, Encyc., 170. ruptis, subtilioribus." Sarcinula astreata, Blainv., Man., 348. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 4Q1 4. ANTHOPHYLLUM CESPITOSUM. (Esper.} Dana. A. glomeratum, scepe erectum et lobatum. Corallum caliculis prope 3'" latis, compressiusculis, supra leviter striatulis, e massti spumosd J" sur- rectis ; lamellis tenuissimis, papyraceis, paulum remotis, 6-9 valde latioribus, %'" exsertis, oblique truncatis. Glomerate, often erect and lobed. Corallura with the calicles about | of an inch in diameter, a little compressed, very faintly striate above, projecting £ an inch from a spumous base; lamellae very thin, papyraceous, rather remote, 6 to 9 much broader than the others ; £ a line exsert, obliquely truncate. Plate 28, fig. 4, natural size ; also fig. 23, page 62. East Indies. Exp. Exp. This common species forms large glomerate masses, a foot or more across, and more or less lobed or subdivided, occasionally rising into stout subcyliridrical forms. The evenly thin, truncate, and slightly exsert lamellae give the cell a neat, and also a peculiarly open ap- pearance. The larger lamellae almost meet at centre, leaving hardly a line of interval, and the cell is very shallow. When broken off near the bottom, the cell presents a distinct star of six or eight rays, meet- ing at the centre, with smaller lamellee between. These characters distinguish the species from the fasciculatum, in which the lamellae have not the paper-like thinness, arid are more exsert. The calicles vary much in size ; but they are generally a fourth of an inch in their longest diameter, with the exterior faintly striate above. Mad. cespitosa, Esper, i. tab. 27. Esper Antkophyllum Esperi, Schweigger, Handb. seems to have incorrectly considered his 417. species the Mad. cespitosa of Linnaeus. 5. ANTHOPHYLLUM HYSTRIX. (Dana.} A. glomeratum ; tentaculis bursiformibus, Icete virentibus, et aliis apice pallide virentibus, coralligenis, itaque erectis lamdlam cakaream inclu- dentibus. Corallum caliculis 6-8'" altis, et scepe 4-5'" latis, com- pressiusculis, extus remote carinatis, e massd spumosd surrectis ; lamellis cultriformibus, scepe 3'" exsertis, apice subacutis. 101 402 ZOOPHYTES. Glomerate ; a series of bursiform tentacles of a bright green colour, and others with pale green tips, which are coralligenous and there- fore erect, and enclose a calcareous lamella. Corallum with the calicles 6 to 8 lines high, and often 4 to 5 broad, somewhat com- pressed, exterior remotely carinate, rising from a spongy base ; lamellae cultriform, often 3 lines exsert, apex subacute. Plate 28, fig. 2, corallum, natural size ; 2 a, animal, enlarged ; 2 b, tentacle, enlarged ; 2 c, calicle, natural size ; 2 d, section of calicle ; 2 e, texture of spongy part. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The sharp projecting lamellae give a bristled appearance to the corallum, as in the cuspidalum. It differs from that species in its smaller size, its calicles not turbinate, and crowded together with intervals between of but a line in width. The projecting lamellaB of the exterior are sharp and thin. The specimen is a convex mass, the margin of which is free and spreading, with small horizontal calicles. 6. ANTHOPHYLLUM CUSPID ATUM. (Esper.} Dana. A. glomeratum; tentaculis clavatis, purpurascentibus, apice albis, disco late viridi. Corallum tubulis compressiusculis, angulosis, caliculis turbinatis, £-1" latis, scepe valde irregularibus, lamellis longe exsertis. Glomerate; tentacles clavate, colour approaching purple, white at tips; disks bright green. Corallum with the tubes much com- pressed, angular ; calicles turbinate, £ to 1 inch broad, often very irregular, lamellae long exsert. Red Sea, Ehrenberg. — The China Seas, Esper, who received it from M. Chemnitz. The large size of the calicles distinguishes this species from the other Anthophylla. Madrepora cuspidata, Esper, i. 155, tab. Gcdaxea cuspidala, Oken. Zool., i. 73. 28 ; a species with long turbinate calicles Antlwphyllum fasciculare, Ehrenberg, op. of the size above mentioned, with the la- cit. Gen. Ivi., sp. 1. "Tubulis com- mellse one-third to one-half of an inch pressis, angulosis, 4" altis, turbinatis, exsert, and nearly acute at apex. stellis 5-!" latis, lamellis exsertis," &c. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 403 7. ANTHOPHYLLUM CLAVUS. (Dana.) A. daviforme et subdivisum, erectum, 1J' altum. Corallum caliculis cylindricis, parvis, 2-3'" longis et l£"' latis, et massd spumosd sur- rectis ; lamellis paulum exsertis, truncatis. Claviform and subdivided above, erect, a foot and a half or more high. Corallum with small cylindrical calicles, 2 to 3 lines long, and 1£ broad, rising from a spongy base; lamellaB a little exsert, truncate. Plate 28, fig. 3, corallum, natural size ; 3 a, calicle, enlarged ; 3 a', natural size ; 3 b, section of part of stem. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is peculiar in its erect cylindrical or clavate forms, two to four inches in diameter, and in its small calicles. The tubes of the interior of the corallum, are flexuous and crowded, and may be easily separated from the spongy base which unites them. Large areas are covered by these coral stumps. APPENDIX. — The Anthophyllum spherula of Ehrenberg, was de- scribed from a worn specimen in the Museum Nat. Cur. at Berlin, as follows: "Globosum, pollicare, tubulis 1" nunquam latioribus, totis cel- luloso-concatenatis, ubi partim liberi cernuntur, substriatis, caliculis rotundis, margine paululum prominulis, radiis 12-24, interstitiis inter- dum profundius impressis, irregularibus." Op. cit. Gen. Ivi., sp. 3. The Madrepora divergens and chakidicum of Forskal (op. cit. p. 136), are probably of this genus, as suggested by Blainville, and the chalcidicum may be identical with the fasciculatum. GENUS XI.— STYL1NA.- LAMARCK. Caryophyllidce fasciculato-glomeratce. Corolla tubulis cylindrids stri- atis, per dissepimenta transversa et scepe massam celluksam connexis stellarum centra exsurgenti. 404 ZOOPHYTES. Fasciculate-glomerate; tubes of the coralla cylindrical and striate, connected by transverse septa and often also by a cellular base; the centre of the cells exsurgent. The Stylinse, as Blainville suggests, resemble the smaller species of Orbicellse, especially the A. pleiades; but they are distinct in the hori- zontal septa of the interstices, and the absence or paucity of trans- verse dissepiments in the tubes ; and in this last respect they have the characters of the Caryophyllise. The star in a transverse section is a simple series of rays radiating from a central spot, sometimes quite large ; and in a vertical section, the same simple structure is seen. The centre of the cell is often observed to be quite prominent, and on this character the genus was first founded. Milne Edwards states that the exsert centre is not constant, but forms and disappears at intervals by a peculiar process of growth.* The Stylinae are near the Anthophylla, but differ from them in the transverse plates of the interstitial material uniting the tubes; and, moreover, the tubes are in general decidedly striate, and minute dis- sepiments form cellules in the stria?. The mode of growth by which the centre of the cell becomes prominent is also peculiar. The Sarcinulre, according to Milne Edwards, differ but little from the Stylinse; and Blainville unites them to the Anthophylla: but the Sarcinula organum, figured in the Ama3n. Acad., i. tab. 4, fig. 6, has no relation to either of these groups, and is allied to the Columnaria3. See the remarks upon the Cyathophyllidse. STYLINA ECHINULATA. (Lamarck.} S. crassa, fasciculata, sessilis, corallo stylis truncatis superm echinato. Massive fasciculate, sessile. Corallum above echinate with truncate styliform prominences. * Speaking of the cells Milne Edwards says : " Elles sont d'abord tubiformes et lamel- leuses cotnme des Astrees, mais bientot elles se remplissent, s'etalent, et ferment ainsi une cloison transversale surmontee d'un mamelon central, et dont la forme ressemble un peu a celle d'un chapeau de cardinal ; de cette cloison horizontale s'eleve un nouveau tube qui, a son tour eprouve des modifications analogues et ainsi de suite, de facon que le meme Polypier presente taritot les caractferes d'un Styline tantot ceux d'une Sarcinulc." — Lamarck, 2d ed. ii. p. 339. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 405 The " Austral Ocean." Peron and Lesueur. Lamarck adds to this description that the species consists of vertical and parallel tubes, forming a thick mass, resembling a Tubipore or Favosite. Stylina echinulata, Lamk., ii. 339, No. 1. — , Blainv., Man., 351, pi. 62, fig. 5. , Schweig., Beobacht., tab. 7, fig. 63 ; , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 708. Handb., p. 420. APPENDIX. — The Sardnula perforata was described by Lamarck from a specimen brought by Peron and Lesueur, from the "Austral Seas," and from the description, it appears to have been a beach-worn specimen, although not fossil. It consisted of an aggregation of straight, parallel tubes, nearly contiguous, with filled interstices, and open at both ends; they were striated by longitudinal laminae within, and, according to Blainville's figure, were an eighth of an inch in dia- meter. (Lamarck, ii., 340, Sarcinula, No. 1 ; Blainville, Man. d'Act., 348, pi. 62, fig. 6.) It is not a Stylina; neither does it seem entitled to form, of itself, a genus; and not being confident as to where it should be referred, it is simply noticed in this place. B. GLOMERATE; CALICCLIS BKEVISSIMIS, POLYPIS LONGE EXSERTIS. GENUS XII.— ASTROITIS.— BOCCONE. Caryophyttidce aggregates, polypis basi tantum coralligenis, itaque salien- tibus. Corolla caliculis viz prominulis, cellis concavis, fere contiguis, lamellis subcequalibus, inclusis. Aggregate Caryophyllidse, forming coral secretions only at base ; and polyps, hence, appearing to be long salient. Coralla with the cali- cles scarcely at all prominent ; cells nearly contiguous, concave ; lamellaB included and even. The species of this genus are remarkable for their long salient polyps. The coralla are somewhat Astraoid, but they are formed by secretions only in the lower parts of the polyps. The Astrseae, with narrow interstices, bud in the disks by subdivision, while these 102 406 ZOOPHYTES. bud interstitially, like the Porites, and other massive species with late- ral gemmation. They have but sparingly the transverse dissepiments between the lamellse of the corallum, which belong to the Astraeae. The typical species of this genus is included with Caryophyllia by Lamarck, with Astraa by Blainville, and with Cladocora by Ehren- berg, from all of which groups it is separated by its long salient polyps. Ehrenberg states that Boccone in his Museo di Fisica (Venice, 1694), called it Astroites. Quoy and Gaymard suggested the name Astroidea. ASTROITIS CAL1CULARIS. (BoCCOHC.) A. ghmerata, incrustans, animalibus purpureis vel aurantiacis. Co- rallum tubulis 2J'" latis, contiguis et interdum spumose connexis ; cettis excavatis, orliculatis et scepe angulatis, fundo latis et prominulis. Glomerate, incrusting, animals purple or orange. Corallum with the tubes 2J lines broad, contiguous, and sometimes with cellular inter- stices ; cells excavate, circular or angular, bottom of cell broad, and somewhat prominent. Mediterranean ; Bay of Algesiras, off Algiers, and elsewhere. Mad. calicularis, Cavolini, Pol., Mar. i. tab. Caryophyllia calycularis, Lamk., ii. 348, 3, figs. 1-5 ; the polyps of this coral are No. 2. figured by this author, who describes them , Lamouroux, Encyc., 169. as of a purple colour, and remarks upon , Milne Edwards, Cuvier's Reg. Anim. their great beauty. 1837, pi. 83, fig. 2. , Delle Chiaje, Anim. senza Vert, di Anthophyttum ca/ycw&zre,Schweig.,H.4I7 . Nap., ii. pi. 17, fig. 7. Astrcea calycularis, Blainv., Man., 367. , Pallas, Zooph., 314, No. 186. Cladocora calycularis, Ehrenb., G. Ii. sp. 2. -, Esper, i. p. 117, tab. 16, figs. 1,2; Astroidea lutea, Quoy and Gaymard, Ann. Esper figures a specimen with cells one- des Sciences Naturelles, x. pi. 9 B ; and fourth to half an inch in diameter. Astrtza calycularis, Voyage de 1'Astro- Astroites calycularis, Walch, Naturf., 49, labe, iv. 200, pi. 15, figs. 10-23 — includ- No. 8. ing figures of the polyps, of an orange , Boccone, Museo di Fisica, i. pi. 5. colour. ASTROITIS VIRIDIS. (Quoy $ Gaymard.) Dana. A. subglobosa, polypis valde exsertis, griseis, tentaculis viridibus. Co- TRIBE II.— CARYOPHYLLACEA. 407 rallum porosum, cellis immersis, 2'" latis, polygonis, compressis, conicis ; lamellis cequatibus, denticulatis ; margins, rugosis. Subglobose, polyps much exsert, grayish, tentacles green. Co rail urn porous, with immersed cells, 2 lines broad, polygonal, compressed, conical ; lamellae even, denticulate ; margin rugose. Island of Vanikoro. Quay $ Gaymard. This species is added to the genus with hesitation. Quoy and Gaymard describe it as occurring in rounded or ovoidal masses, as large as a pear; its cells quite deep, with the sides vertical. The polyps are salient, more than half an inch, with a prominent (tres- developpe), buccal disk. The species has much analogy with the Goniopores, but the deep cells with denticulate lamellae are peculiar. Astrcea viridis, Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 204, pi. 16, figs. 1-3. NOTE. — The genus Goniopora is placed in the family Poritidae, on the ground of a general similarity of the polyps and their coralla, to those of the Porites. Yet it may be equally proper, if not more so, to add them in this place, and consider them the represen- tatives among the Caryophyllacea, of the Porites, in the tribe Madreporacea. FAMILY III.— GEMMIPORID^. Caryophyllacea polyporum discis latis, sape convexis el margine tenta- culatis, tentaculis brevibus. Coratta porosa, super fide non striatd; cellis margine parietibusque crassis ; lamellis indusis, angustis etfere cequalibus. Caryophyllacea with broad, often convex, disks to the polyps, having the tentacles marginal and short. Coralla internally porous, surface granulous and not striate, margin and sides of the cells stout ; la- mellae included, narrow and neatly even. 408 ZOOPHYTES. The Gemmiporidae assume glomerate and broad foliaceous forms. The latter are often of large size, and consist of plates sometimes a foot or more in width, either standing like broad vases on a pedicel, or clustered and rolled around one another, resembling some large-leaved plants. The whole interior of the plates or vases is covered with polyp-flowers, and fresh buds are constantly appearing at the margin, as explained in § 66. The polyps have a broad convex disk, which is fringed around with short tentacles in two or more series. The cells of the corallum are nearly cylindrical, and are evenly set around with narrow and entire lamellae, appearing often like mere strise of the inner surface. The calicles are thick with a granulous exterior like the whole corallum, and the margin, though sometimes subacute, is always stout. In a transverse section, the cells of the corallum consist of a neat star of cellules radiating from a porous centre. The Gemmiporidse are confined to the warm coral-reef seas. This family includes but two genera : Gemmipora. Calicles prominent, cylindrical or conico-cylindrical'. Astreqpora. Calicles obsolete or nearly so. GENUS I.— GEMMIPORA.— BLAINVILLE. Gemmiporidce foliacea aut glomeratce. Corolla porosa, super faie granu- losa, caliculis cylindrids aut conico-cylindricis. Foliaceous or glomerate. Coralla porous, with a granulous surface and cylindrical or conico-cylindrical calicles. The genus Gemmipora was established by Blainville from the Ex- planaria of Lamarck, a mixed group united only on the ground of their unifacial explanate form. The glomerate species were arranged by Lamarck with the Astrseas. Ehrenberg, adopting the name Expla- naria for the Orbicellse, with which he united one or two of the Gem- miporce, placed the remainder of the Gemmiporse under Turbinaria, a name which was proposed for this group by Oken, previous to the introduction of Blainville's Gemmipora. The word is so near Tur- binalia, one of Lamarck's genera, that Blainville's, which has been TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 409 generally adopted, may better be retained. Moreover, Oken's name was introduced without any reference to the previously formed genera of Lamarck. Arrangement of the Species. I. Glomerate. *1. G. palifera. II. Ezplanate from a central pedicel. *2. G. peltata. 4. G. crater. *3. G. patula. *5. G. cinerascens. III. Foliaceous ivith tlie folia clustered. *6. G. frondens. *7. G. brassica. I. Gemmiporce glomeratce. 1. GEMMIPORA PALIFERA. (Lamarck.} Elainville. G. glomerata, scepe subglobosa et hbata ; polypis flavescentibus, tenta- culis brevissimis. Corattum caliculis valde confertis, cylindricis, 1-3'" altis, et !£"' crassis, apicepaulo minoribus, margine crassis. Glomerate, often subglobose and lobed ; polyps yellowish, tentacles very short. Corallum with the calicles much crowded, cylindrical, 1 to 3 lines high, and l£ lines in diameter, and a little smaller at summit; margin thick and stout. Plate 29, fig. 2, corallum; 2 a, transverse section, enlarged; 2 b, animal, enlarged. The Austral Seas. Lamarck. — Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. Forms irregularly rounded masses, sometimes subdivided or lobed, and crowdedly covered with stout cylindrical calicles. One specimen in the Expedition collections is six inches in diameter and four thick. The cells contain about thirty even lamellse, and are a line deep, with the bottom small and flat. Astrcea palifera, Lamk., ii. 409, No. 14. Gemmipora palifera, Blainv., Man. d'Act., , Lamouroux, Encyc., 130. 387. 103 410 ZOOPHYTES. II. G. explanaUe, centra stipitatce. 2. GEMMIPORA PELTATA. (Esper.} Blainville. G. explanata; fronde stipitatd, saepe peltata et superne concavd, scepe varie plicato-contortd, margine 2—3'" crasso. Corallum caliculis cylindricis, inter dum obsoktis, plerumque 3'"- latis et margine crasso, lamellis ferme 32. Explanate; frond stipitate, often peltate, usually concave above, often variously plicato-contorted when of large size ; margin 2 to 3 lines thick. Corallum with the calicles cylindrical, sometimes obsolete, mostly 3 lines broad, with a stout margin and about 32 lamellae to the cell. East Indies. — The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. When of small size, or but four or five inches in breadth, the form of the species is that of a shallow basin supported below at centre ; but on growing beyond this size, the margin becomes contorted in broad folds. One large specimen of this kind, obtained at the Feejees, measures sixteen inches in breadth, and twelve in height The cali- cles are sometimes a third of an inch in diameter, and about the lower parts of the concavities are obsolete. The cells are two to three lines deep, and have a broad and somewhat convex bottom. Madrepora peltata, Esper, Fortsetz., i. 27, Explanaria crater, Schweig., Handb., 419. and ii. p. 15, tab. 42, and 86, fig. 2; Gemmipora peltata, Blainv., Man., 387. characteristic figures : the first is nearly Turbinaria cupula, Ehrenb., G. 49, sp. 1 ; flat and peltate, the second is convex above Ehrenberg's T. peltata has smaller cali- instead of concave. The larger calicles cles than the cupula, and the description are from three to four lines in diameter. does not agree as well with Espcr's figure. 3. GEMMIPORA PATULA. Dana. G. explanata ; fronde stipitatd, infundibuliformi, et scepe varie plicato- contorta, margine l£-3"' crasso. Corallum caliculis brevibus, cylin- dricis, 2'" latis, margine subacutis, multis brevissimis aut obsoktis. Explanate; frond stipitate, infundibuliform, and often variously pli- TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 4H cato-contorted ; 1 to l£ lines thick at the margin. Corallum with the calicles short, cylindrical, 2 lines in diameter ; margin subacute ; many very short or obsolete. This species has the general habit of the peltata, but grows in some- what thinner fronds, with smaller calicles, which, at margin are nearly acute. It attains a breadth of ten or twelve inches. It appears to be the peltata of Ehrenberg, and, as that name is applied to another species, we have changed it as above. Turbinaria peltata, Ehrenberg, G. xlix. sp. 2. 4. GEMMIPORA CRATER. (Pallas.) Blainville. G. explanata ; fronde stipitatd, infundibuliformi, margine I'" crasso. Corallum caliculis brevibus, fere !£"' latis. Explanate; frond stipitate, infundibuliform, margin a line thick. Corallum with the calicles short, nearly l£ lines in diameter. East Indies. This species has much smaller calicles than the preceding. The slightly larger calicles and thicker fronds distinguish it from the cine- rascens. Esper and Pallas describe it as finely striate without. Madrepora crater, infundibuliformis, stri- Explanaria infundibulum, Lamk., ii. 398, ata, Pallas, Zooph., 332. No. 1. , Esper, Fortsetz., i. 91, tab. 74, and , Lamouroux, Encyc., 385. Fortsetz., ii., tab. 86, fig. 1 ; the first Turbinaria crater, Oken, Zool., i. 67. figure is cup-shaped, six inches broad, Explanaria crater, Blainv., Man., 387, pi. finely striate below, with a stout obconi- 56, fig. 6 ; a reduced figure, badly drawn. cal pedicel, and scattered calicles within. 5. GEMMIPORA CINERASCENS. (Ellis.} Dana. G. explanata ; fronde stipitata, late hypocrateriformi, scepe plicato-con- torta, tenui, margine J'" crasso. Corallum extus rugatnm ; intus caliculis brevibus, L'" latis, conicis vel globoso-conicis, cellis §'" latis et profundis. 412 ZOOPHYTES. Explanate; frond stipitate, broad, hypocrateriform, often plicato-con- torted, thin (margin but £ a line thick). Corallum wrinkled with- out; within calicles short, a line in diameter, conical or globoso- conical, cells § of a line broad and deep. Plate 30, fig. 11, surface of corallum magnified. East Indies, Singapore. Exp. Exp. The cinerascens in its very thin frond, approaches the following species, but grows from a central pedicel. The under surface is wrinkled for an inch or two from the margin. Under the microscope the surface of the corallum presents minute, irregular, distant gra- nules, and pores still more distant, as shown in the figure. It grows to a height of a foot or more. The surface, when weathered, has usually a light bluish-ash colour. Mad. cinerascens, Ellis and Sol., 157, tab. 43 ; a characteristic figure. , Esper, Fortsetz., i. 84, tab. 68. Explanaria mesenterina, Lamk., ii., 399, No. 2 ; more than one species may be here included. , Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., 57, pi. 43. Tarbinaria cinerascens, Oken, Zool., i. 67. Explanaria cinerascens, Schweig., Handb., 419. Gemmipora mesenterina, Blainv., Man., 387. The Turbinaria microstoma, of Ehrenberg, Gen. xlix., sp. 3 ; appears to be identical with the cinerascens of Ellis, of which it may be a small specimen. His de- scription is as follows : " Quadripollica- ris, cinerascens, cyathiformis, stellulis (caliculis) apice angustioribus, subconicis, i'" latis, intcrstitiis glabris, parcius exe- sis." The locality is not given. The Explanaria cinerascens of Ehrenberg (op. cit. Gen. 1. sp. 2) is another species, as indicated by its mode of growth, and the character of its surface; it may be the G. brassica. 3. G.foliacece,frondU>us aggregatis. 6. GEMMIPORA FRONDENS. (Dana.} G. explanata; frondibus aggregatis, suberectis, sinuatis, margine §'" tenuibus, inter dum lobatis; polypis flams. Corallum extus non ru- gatum, intus caliculis confertis, brevibus, subcylindricis et globoso-coni- cis, cellis profundis, apertura £-§'" ^"- Explanate; fronds clustered, suberect, sinuate, margin § of a line thick, sometimes lobed ; polyps yellow. Corallum not wrinkled TRIBE II. — C ARYOPH YLLACE A. 413 without; within, calicles crowded, short, subcylindrical or globoso- conical, cells deep, aperture £ to § of a line wide. Plate 30, fig. 10, corallum, showing its form, and a single lobe with the calicles, natural size; 10 a, appearance of an animal partly ex- panded ; 10 b, section of folium enlarged ; 10 c, surface magnified. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species grows in clusters of leaves nearly erect, some of which are six or eight inches high, and four or five broad, much bent and curved, and not unfrequently lobed. The thickness below is often one-third of an inch. The absence of wrinkles from the back sur- face, except perhaps faint traces within a fourth of an inch of the margin, and the structure of the surface under the microscope, dis- tinguish the species from the following ; and both of these characters, with the mode of growth, separate it from the preceding. The polyps of the specimen examined never fully expanded. 7. GEJIMIPORA BRASSICA. (Dana.) G. explanata, frondibus basi cucullate convolutis, tenuibus, maximis. Corallum extus omnino rugatum ; intus caliculis spar sis, conico-cylin- dricis, cellis paulo profundis, apertura %'" latis. Explanate ; fronds cucullately infolded with one another at base, thin, very- large. Corallum with the exterior every where wrinkled; within, calicles rather remotely scattered, conico-cylindrical, cells shallow, \ a line broad at the aperture. Plate 29, fig. 1, corallum; \b, transverse section of calicle, seen from above, enlarged ; 1 c, calicle enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species forms large clumps, consisting of leaves, rolled around one another, sometimes two and a half feet or more high, and two feet in breadth. The folia are nearly straight vertically, and very thin, scarcely exceeding an eighth of an inch in any part. The under surface is wrinkled for six inches or more from the margin, in which it differs strikingly from the two preceding species. The granules of 104 414 ZOOPHYTES. the surface, as seen under the microscope, are in much shorter series, and less crowded than in thefrondens. The Explanaria dnerascens of Ehrenberg (op. cit. Gen. 1. sp. 2) is near the above, though probably distinct. It is described as follows : — " Subpedalis, varife plicata et sinuosa, processibus saepius infundibuliformibus, intus sterilibus (nee extus),caliculis line- aribus, semiglobosis, interstitiis gyrose asperis; animalis pallii colore nigro-fusco." " In- fundibula hujus formae aperte non e gemmis sed e pallii plicis coalitis oriunda." GENUS II.— ASTR^EOPORA.— BLAINVILLE. GemmiporidcB glomerate, ; polypis sparsis ; coraUi caliculis obsoletis, cellis profundioribus, cylindrids ; interstitiis porosis. Gemmiporidae, with glomerate mode of growth ; polyps scattered ; calicles of corallum obsolete, cells quite deep, cylindrical ; inter- stices porous. The Astroeoporse are massive corals with scattered cells hardly pro- minent, though sometimes nearly hemispherical. The lamellae are narrow as in the Gemmiporse. The texture of the corallum is porous, with no traces of a lamellar texture, in which respect, as well as in the deep cylindrical cells, the species are very distinct from the As- traas. This genus contains two groups, which when the animals are studied may constitute different genera. In one of them the coralla have the fine porous (almost compact) texture and surface of a Gemmipora, and in the other, a coarser porous texture, with a decidedly echinulate surface. From the absence of calicles it is probable that the polyps are salient when expanded. These species are confined to the coral-reef seas. The Astrseoporse were separated from the genus Astrsea of Lamarck, by Blainville. Arrangement of the Species. *1. A. pulvinaria. 3. A. fungiformis. 2. A. punctifera. *4. A. stellulata. TRIBE II.— C AR YOPH YLLACE A. 415 1. ASTR^EOPORA PULVINARIA. (Lamarck.) Blainvitte. A. glomerata, scepe globosa, incrustans ; tentaculis 24 velpluribus, brun- mscentibus. Corallum valde porosum, undiquepulvinato-echinulatum; caliculis fere hemisphericis et basi contiguis, interdum obsolescentibus et remotis ; cellis valde profundis, |'" latis. Glomerate, often globose, incrusting ; tentacles 24 or more, brownish. Corallum very porous, surface pulvinato-echinulate ; calicles nearly hemispherical, and contiguous at base, sometimes nearly obsolete and distant; cells very deep, ^ of a line broad. Plate 29, fig. 3, corallum, natural size ; 3 a, animal, partly expanded, enlarged ; 3 b, cell, enlarged ; 3 c, animal, less expanded ; 3 d, vertical section of corallum, enlarged. The " Austral Seas." Peron 4- Lesueur. — The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The masses sometimes have an undulating surface, and occasionally are spheroidal or globular. One of the latter kind in the collections is four inches in diameter ; and one of the former, six inches broad, with a thickness of two to three inches. The cells are mostly a line and a half deep, and the lamella are vertical, but much less crowded than in the stellulata. On different parts of the same specimen the calicles are crowded or distant, nearly obsolete or conoido-hemisphe- rical. The polyps of the specimen examined were but partly expanded, showing only the extremities of twenty-four tentacles in two series (3 a). When less expanded the cells were closed by a radiated mem- brane having an opening at centre, as shown in fig. 3 c. Astrea pidvinaria, Lamk., ii. 409, No. 15. , Lamouroux, Encyc., 130. Astreapora pulvinaria, Blainville, Man., 383. The Astrea myriophilialma of Lamarck, is near the above. Lamarck states that he separated it with some hesitation from the pulvinaria on account of its less promi- nent and less crowded calicles, an unim- portant character, as our specimens show. Esper's tab. 54 B, fig. 2 (Pflanz. Fortsetz. i.), to which Lamarck refers with a query under A. myriophthalma, is a worn frag- ment of a Madrepora (ii. 407, No. 9. — Astrceopora myriophthalma, Blainville, Man., 383). 416 ZOOPHYTES. 2. ASTR^EOPORA PUNCTIFERA. (Lamarck.} BlainviUe. A. globosa. Corallum cettis suborbiculatis, incequalibus, exiguis, inter- stitiis levibus, poroso-punctatis. Globose. Corallum with the cells nearly circular, unequal, small ; interstices smooth, poroso-punctate. East Indies. Lamarck. Lamarck states that the species is globular like a cannon-ball, without any point of attachment. The cells are small and unequal, and not prominent. Astrea punctifera, Lamk., ii. 407, No. 8. Astreoporapunctifera^umv., Man. d'Act., , Lamouroux, Encyc., 132. 383. 3. ASTRJEOPORA FUNGIFORMIS. (BlainviUe.) A. stipitata, subfungiformis. Corallum porosum ; cettis immersis, ellip- ticis,fere 2'" latis,fundo convexis et porosis. Stipitate, subfungiform. Corallum porous, cells immersed, elliptical, nearly 2 lines broad, with a convex and porous bottom. Astrceopora fungiformis, BlainviUe, Man., 387. , Michelin, Guerin, Mag. de Zool., 1840, pi. 2. 4. ASTR.EOPORA STELLULATA. (Lamarck.} BlainviUe. A. glomerata, superficie undulata. Corallum subtiliter porosum, cellis orbiculatis, 1-2'" remotis, fere \'" latis, valde profundis, margine elevatis; lamellis minutis, verticalibus ; inter stitiis planiusculis, subti- lissime arenosis. Glomerate, with an undulate surface. Corallum very minutely porous; cells circular, 1 to 2 lines distant, nearly a line broad, very deep ; margin elevated ; lamelte minute and vertical ; interstices nearly flat, very finely arenose. Seas of America (?). Lamarck. — Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 417 Lamarck states that the cells are deep, with very finely striated sides, which is true of the specimens examined by the author. Blain- ville's figure well represents it, except that the lamellae are not suffi- ciently numerous, the number varying from twenty-four to thirty in the Feejee specimens. The surface is nearly smooth, and the cells are about a line deep. The masses collected were about five inches in breadth, with a thick- ness of two to three inches. The polyps had a yellowish colour. Astrea stellukita, Lamarck., ii. 408, No. Astreopora stellulata, Blainv., Man., 383, pi. 12. 60, fig. 4. FAMILY IV.— ZOANTHID^. Caryophyllacea simplicissima, out gemmata ; extus subcoriacea ; polypis discis latis, convexis, margins, radiate striato et interdum valde re- jhxo; corallo nullo, sed zoophytis scepe arenulas corallicas induden- tibus. Caryophyllacea either budding or simple ; exterior subcoriaceous ; polyps with broad convex disks having the margin radiately striate and sometimes much reflexed ; no coral secretions, but coral sand often included in their texture by the growing zoophytes. The coriaceous exterior with no corallum within, and the radiated margin of the disk, are the most striking peculiarities of the Zoan- thid>e 16-crenatis et 16-tentaculatis ; tentaculis hyalinis uniseriatis ; lamellis internis 32. TRIBE II. — CARYOPHYLLACEA. 427 Polyps united to their summits, bright greenish-yellow; disks mar- gined with 16 crenatures, and as many tentacles; tentacles hyaline, and in a single series; internal lamella 32 in number. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. flavo-virulis, Ehrenberg, G. xiii., The Alcyoniitm titberculosum, of Esper sp. 1 ; Ehrenberg suggests that this spe- (Pflanz., iii. 68, tab. 23), resembles this cies may prove identical with the Jlava, as well as the following species. It was which is imperfectly described by Lcsueur. received by him from the Indian Ocean. 9. PALYTHOA ARGUS. (H. $ Ehrenberg.) P. flavo-fusca, scape subglobosa ; polypis contractis 6—10'" latis ; discis margine 20-crenatis, tentaculis 40, paliide fuscis, in serie duplici, majoribus internis, obtusis, davatis ; lamellis internis 32. Brownish-yellow, often subglobose ; polyps, when contracted, 6 to 10 lines broad; disks with 20 crenatures to the margin; tentacles 40, pale brown, in two series, the internal larger, obtuse, clavate ; vis- ceral lamella 32 in number. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. Pali/lhoa urgus, Ehrenberg, G. xiii., sp. 3. 10. PALYTHOA C^ESIA. (Dana.) P. convexa, umbrina; polypis contractis 4-6'" latis ; discis umbrinis, sed medio ccesiis aut paliide violaceis, extus margine crenulatis ; tenta- culis valde numerosis in serie duplici umbrinis. Convex ; colour umber ; polyps, when contracted, 4 to 6 lines broad ; disks umber-coloured, except the centre, which is pale grayish- violet; outer margin of the disks crenulate ; tentacles very nume- rous, in two series, umber-coloured. Plate 30, fig. 3, and 3 a to 3 h. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species has been particularly described on pages 40-42. Corticifcru aggregata (?), Lesson, Coquille, Zooph., pi. 8, fig. 3; island of Bolabo'a. 428 ZOOPHYTES. TRIBE III.— MADREPORACEA. Actinaria tentaculis duodecim (rarissime pluribus] uniseriatis, alternis inter dum minoribus: gernmipara; gemmatione inferior e: coralligena; corallis calcareis, cellis 6-12 radiatis aut lamettis obsoletis, superficie interstitiali non lamello-striata. Actinaria with the tentacles 12 in number (rarely more), in a single series, the alternate sometimes smaller: gemtniparous; gemmation inferior: coralligenous ; coralla calcareous, with the rays of the cells 6 to 12 in number or obsolete, interstitial surface not striated with the prolonged lamellae of the cells. The polyp of the Madrepore tribe is a simple star-shaped animal of twelve rays, presenting generally bright green, red, or umber tints. The rays or tentacles are at times nearly obsolete, or are reduced to rounded crenations of the circular disk, and in species of this cha- racter, lilac, yellow, and green colours of different shades have been observed. The corallum is at once recognised by the few rays to the cells, the number being twelve or less, and sometimes the whole are obsolete. Among the forms of these zoophytes there is nearly every variety that occurs in the Actinaria; but the glomerate are never as neatly regular as among the Astrseas, while the ramose forms are singularly varied and beautiful. Segregate ramose forms, like those of the Cary- ophylliaB, are never met with ; and only among the fossil Favositidse, do we find coralla consisting of separable columns — a structure arising from the fact that the polyps (as in the Columnarise) are united late- rally only by their outer non-secreting integuments. This tribe includes three families, as already explained : the Ma- dreporidBe, the Favositidse, and the Poritidse. The following table contains the received genera of this tribe, and exhibits their relations to the corresponding genera adopted by the distinguished authors whose names are placed above the several columns. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 429 X u N 00 co OD 2 ® B: i— i i— < S 2 • o £ d 8- S 1 g" i. I 1 _o 1-1 >r | |_| M O g 1 S $ g 1 1 f •a •£« E rz3 ^ 1 £ 1 1 J5 £ b < 3 1 s V R- CD g E X! ^H 00 1 O 1— < _§" < 1 g g T3 ® t» 3 •"§ So g -f IT o 0 o '•3 g g" j£ & SCH WE] cb i— i |l|l | g o '5 g s- Ilia f S 02 Seriatopora Madrepora 1 • Favosites. 1 Catenipora. 1 1 a' ,^j 1 * ^ FN^»— » ' - BLAINVILI o' co CO 1 g g g g g - 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 i 1 1 1 S S eu !S •«! o3 02 Seriatopora. Pocillopora. [ Favosites. ' Alveolites (pat Catenipora. I ! ! "^ "e5 ^ CQ £ 3l Goniopora. . ••^ ~Y ^mf ^ S f ^ M EHKKNH CO CO 2 a" = 0 5 C w' 2 o o o 5T" Cl* DC •*— I ! 1 1 s S a E O 'C o O2 Pocillopora. >• Calamopora es s_ 1 3 i i fi^, ^5 . ^*~ "^ 00 as • **s * a S s,' g »^S •s* »«^ K -x Q S S rt S -3 s "^ g 91 • a s - -g ^ c • -S § H -g q K) H 4 4 1 >3 5 *i K 0> a g G «T S g 1 S l| 1 •g •£ fl g v § g 9 JE "a S a- S •< 02 Seriatoporf Pocillopora Favosites, Catenipora, •1 1 i 1 J* i 3J Q> ^Z H £E S g" 1 1 o 108 430 ZOOPHYTES. The characteristics of the coralla in the several genera, are as fol- lows : FAMILY I.— MADREPORID.E. Cells deep and without cross septa. GENUS 1. MADREPORA. Branches with an apical calicle, and distinct lateral caliclcs upon the branchlets. Cells deep, 6-12 radiating points within, which are sometimes obsolete. GENUS 2. MANOPORA. No apical calicle ; calicles all obsolete, or irregular ; coralla quite porous ; cells as in the Madreporae. FAMILY II.— FAVOSITID.E. Cells with cross septa within the coralla ; rarely, solid below. SUBFAMILY 1. ALVEOPORIN^E. Coralla very light porous; cells deep, and with radiating points within, as in the Madreporae. GENUS 1. ALVEOPORA. Cells contiguous, with very thin cribrate parietes. SUBFAMILY 2. FAVOSITIN^E. Cells with radiating entire lamellos, often becoming obsolete; contiguous, at least at the summits of the coralla. GENUS 2. SIDEROPORA. Coralla with obtuse branches ; cells containing a distinct star of six rays, meeting in a short columella at centre — not seriate, distinctly traceable within the coral lum. GENUS 3. SERIATOPORA. Coralla with very slender terete branches, often pointed : cells seriate ; texture very solid, and cells, therefore, not traceable within the coralla. GENUS 4. POCILLOPOHA. Coralla with the branches never terete ; surface usually verrucose, and cells traceable within, except when quite slender ; texture mostly very com- pact ; lamellae nearly obsolete. GENUS 5. FAVOSITES. Coralla consisting of agglomerated prismatic cells. GENUS 6. CATENIPORA. Coralla consisting of single lines of cells, forming mean- dering vertical plates, which plates often intersect one another. SUBFAMILY 3. HELIOPORINjE. Cells circular, not contiguous. GENUS 7. HELIOPORA. Cells with narrow radiating lamellse; texture of the inter- stices minute tubular. GENUS 8. HELIOLITES. Cells with narrow lamellse ; interstices irregularly cellular. GENUS 9. MILLEPORA. Cells very minute ; rays obsolete ; texture of the interstices quite compact or sparingly porous. FAMILY III.— PORITID^. Cells shallow, hardly traceable within the coralla, which are throughout fine-porous. GENUS 1. POHITES. Coralla glomerate or furcato- ramose ; cells not over a line in diameter ; (polyps with twelve short tentacles.) GENUS 2. GONIOPORA. Coralla glomerate or columnar ; cells over a line in diame- ter; (polyps with sixteen to twenty-four tentacles.) TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 431 FAMILY I.— MADREPORID^E. Madreporacea polyporum basi medio non coralligena; itaque, corallorum cdtts valdt profundis et penitus non transverse septatis. Polyps not coralligehous at middle of base; cells of the corallura therefore, very deep, and not crossed by septa within. The Madreporidse include the most common branching corals. As many of them bud from a parent or apical polyp, their forms are often arborescent, and among them are found some of the largest of coral trees. Besides these there are shrubby clumps, reticulate fronds, vases, and large foliated species, as elsewhere explained. This family comprises but two genera, which are closely related, although separated widely by previous authors. The genus Madre- pora, includes species which bud from a parent-polyp, with which each branch terminates. They have regular calicles, and the branches, although not always erect, are neat and cylindrical, except when this character is lost by their coalescence. But two or three species are known in which the apical polyp cannot be distinguished, and these form a connecting link between this genus and the following. The genus Manopora comprises incrusting, glomerate, and foliaceous or branched Madrepores, in which there is no proper apical polyp, and the calicles are either obsolete or very irregular. The deep cell, traceable far within the corallum, without any cross divisions, sepa- rates these zoophytes from those of the following families. These cells are never over half a line in diameter. The Madreporidse, with one or two exceptions, have been found only in the coral-reef seas. GENUS I.— MA DRE FOR A.— LINN. Madreporidce patrio-ramosce ; arbwescentes, cespitosce, interdum reticu- latce aut coalescenter foliacece. Corolla ramis teretibus; caliculis re- gularibus. 432 ZOOPHYTES. Patrio-ramose ; arborescent, cespitose, or through coalescence, reticu- late or foliaceous. Coralla with the branches terete (very rarely compressed) ; calicles regular. Madrepore corals are the most common species in collections, and are generally distinguished by their cylindrical branching forms, covered with small calicles, each of which contains a minute cell. The forms of the calicles are quite various. The principal are as follows (see plate 31) : 1. TuUform. Cylindrical in shape (figures 2 a, 3 a). The apex may be either transverse (figs. 3 a), or oblique (figs. 35, 11 c, 12 b, c, d), and when oblique the aperture is usually oblong. They may also be spreading, or close appressed to the branch (figs. 3 a, 9 a, 8 a). 2. Nariform. A compressed calicle, resembling in shape a nose inverted (fig. 4 a). It is triangular in profile, with the upper side, which contains the aperture, nearly at right angles with the stem. In some instances the outer lip of the calicle is elongate, producing a rostrato-nariform shape ; and in others the nariform calicle is tubular .at base — tubo-nariform (fig. 5 a, 45). 3. Cochkariform. A short, stout, erect, cylindrical calicle, with a broad apex, and the upper side partly wanting (fig. 10 a, 10 b). 4. Dimidiate. A tubular calicle bisected vertically nearly to its base (fig. 7 a). Labellate (from labellum, the lower lip}. Long-lipped, or in shape nearly like the blade of a shovel, the upper side of the calicle being entirely wanting, and the lower thin and nearly flat (fig. 6 a, 6 b, 6 c). It passes into the dimidiate form. The cells are internally more or less perfectly radiated with minute teeth. Of the twelve lamellae to which the teeth belong, half are often smaller, or quite obsolete; sometimes only two opposite, the inner and outer, can be distinguished, and of these the outer is usually largest: these last occasionally meet and bisect the cell vertically. Figures 25, 3 c, 4c, and others on plate 31, represent some of the varieties. The most important characters for distinguishing species are as follows : 1. The mode of growth : a, erect, arborescent, stems solitary ; b, erect, arborescent, and clustered (fruticose}; c, spreading obliquely upward,, and much ramose, forming an even top clump (corymbed or fastigiate) ; d, spreading nearly horizontally, and often from a pedicel, with the branchlets above nearly simple, digitiform, or spiciform, and forming TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 433 an even top clump (cespitose) ; spreading each way from a central pedicel, and concave above (vasiform, or vase shape) ; spreading hori- zontally or obliquely, and coalescing into a solid plate, without branch- lets above (foliate}. A few species grow in erect plates clustered on a common base, often incrusting, without any apical polyp, and these form the transition to the genus Manopora. 2. The size of the branches and branchlets : in adult specimens this character admits of but little variation ; the size of the branchlets is quite uniform in the same species. 3. The frequency of branching: which determines whether the branchlets are short, or long and tapering, crowded or few (confertim out laxe ramosa}. 4. The angle of branching : when this angle is small, the branches and branchlets are closely ascending (stride ramosa) ; when as great as 60°, — the usual angle, — the clumps are quite open ramose (late ramosa) ; when near 90° or reversed, they are divaricate. 5. The character of the branches and branchlets: whether terete or not, straight or curved, simple or proliferous, evenly or unevenly covered with calicles, coalescent or not, as well as their size and posi- tion as alluded to above. 6. The form and position of the calicles, and the character of their exterior surface, whether harsh and striate, or appearing smooth, and either very fine striate or simply minute granulous, under the micro- scope. 7. When the branches coalesce, as they sometimes do, into a solid plate, rudiments of the constituent branches or branchlets may gene- rally be detected at the margin, and. as in other cases, the size of these free branchlets is an important distinctive character. In describing the species, I have generally followed Ehrenberg, in giving the definite dimensions of the calicles and branches, having ascertained, by much study, the advantage to be derived in deter- mining species, from a knowledge of the actual limits of variation in this respect. The cespitose species appear to vary in shape somewhat according to the depth at which they grow. In those near the surface, the branches spread more nearly horizontally, and are consequently more crowded and more completely coalescent; while those at greater depths have a more ascending mode of growth, and the less coale- scent branches appear longer and more subdivided. In the one case, the clump is nearly flat below, while in the other it is subturbi- 109 434 ZOOPHYTES. nate. All the cespitose species, however, are not subject to this vari- ation. Among the species of Madrepora, there are some in which one of the tentacles of the polyps is long and flexible. This was observed in a cespitose species (M. prostrata) having thin labellate calicles. But whether it belongs or not to all the horizontally growing species with similar calicles, remains to be determined. This character may hereafter lead to a subdivision of the genus, and a separation of the species having labellate calicles, (M. conigera, efflorescens, cytherea, spicifera, hyacinthus, surculosa, millepora, prostrata, subulata, tur- binata, and convexa,) as a distinct group. Madrepores are among the most important of reef-forming corals, and grow in great profusion about the outer reefs, as well as within the bays, channels, and lagoons, enclosed by coral barriers. Some species attain a large size, though compared with the forest trees of the land, trees of coral growth dwindle to mere nursery saplings. The staghorn Madrepore (M. cervicornis) is sometimes six to eight feet in height, and the vase corals spread to a diameter of four or fi-ve feet. Huge plates of a foliate Madrepore are often thrown on the shores of some of the Pacific islands, measuring six feet square and three to six inches in thickness, which are but portions of a zoophyte, probably three or four times as large. The species called Neptune's Chair (M. palmata), from the West Indies, grows in stout, deeply divided plates, spreading from a common footstalk or pedicel ; and occasionally the whole coral plant is six or seven feet high and nearly as many broad, with the pedicel six or eight inches through. The genus Madrepora* of early authors included all coral zoophytes with stellate cells, and thus embraced the Astrsea and Caryophyllia tribes, along with the Madreporacea. It was restricted by Lamarck to the limits here adopted. The Seriatopora, Sideropora, and Pocilloporse, differ from the Madreporae, not only in the closed bottom of the cell, and the trans- verse septa within, but also in the absence of all calicles, the nearest approach to which is found in a slight vaulting above, or a promi- nence of the upper side of the cell. * Madrepora is an Italian word, from the Latin mater, motJier, and poms, pore, used for a porous stone: because it produces stone? See a note by Ehrenberg, op. cit. Berlin. Trans., 1832, p. 345. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 435 The species of this genus are multiplied in this treatise much beyond what is found in preceding works, the nine of Lamarck being increased to more than sixty. The author has had the advantage of a large collection of specimens from known and unknown regions ; and these specimens, with but two or three exceptions, have been perfect, full-grown clumps, instead of mere fragments. Many of the species would be confounded if studied only from a detached branch- let : even the tall arborescent species, and the spreading cespitose frond, might, in many instances, be thus thrown together. A general survey and close investigation of the subject has rendered the multi- plication unavoidable. Ehrenberg, in his Memoir on the Corals of the Red Sea, describes twenty-one species : but, in most instances, the descriptions are unfortunately concise; and, as they are unaccom- panied by drawings, it has been a perplexing task to identify them, and the more so as the names of Lamarck's species have been given in several instances to species wholly different. Arrangement of the Species. A. Horizontal or oblique foliate, without proper branchlets above. I. Caliclcs tubiform. *1. M. palmata. *3. M. flabellum. *2. M. alces. *4. M. cyclopea. II. Calicles labellate (surface ofcoraUum covered with incipient conical branctdets). *5. M. conigera. B. Horizontal or oblique, with erect or ascending branchlets above, which form a clump with an evenly concave or convex top — vasiform or cespitose. I. Calicles thin labellate. *6. M. efflorcscens. *11. M. millepora. *7. M. cytherea. *12. M. prostrata. *8. M. spicifera. *13. M. subulata. *9. M. hyacinthus. *14. M. convexa. *10. M. surculosa. II. Calicles quite thin ; round-narifbrm, or appressed-tiibiform. *15. M. aculeus. *17. M. tubicinaria (suffruticose). *16. M. tenuis. III. Calicles stout, nariform or tubiform. *18. M. paxilligera. *21. M. globiceps. *19. M. nasuta. *22. M. effusa. *20. M. digitifera. *23. M. corymbosa. 436 ZOOPHYTES. *24. M. appressa. *25. M. echidnoea. *26. M. plantaginea. *27. M. cerealis. *28. M. acervata. *29. M. valida. *30. M. retusa. C. Fastigiate, calicles short, and round nariform ; branches much and closely subdi- vided, erect. *31. M. ramiculosa. D. Arborescent, branches evenly covered with proliferous branchlets or clusters. *32. M. echinata. *34. M. rosaria. *33. M. carduus. *35. M. florida. E. Arborescent or fruticose, branches either not proliferous, or unevenly so. I. Calicles thin and fragile, labellate, round nariform, or tubiform. *36. M. implicata. *41. M. cribripora. *42. M. gravida. *37. M. tortuosa. *38. M. aspera. *39. M. hebes (cespitose ?). *40. M. exigua. *43. M. virgata. *44. M. horrida. II. Calicks stout, tubiform, dimidiate, or nariform. *45. M. formosa. *46. M. brachiata. *47. M. arbuscula, *48. M. robusta. *49. M. hystrix. *50. M. divaricata. *51. M. abrotanoides. *52. M. austera. I w 01 C U S2 2 o *53. M. cervicornis. *54. M. prolifera. *55. M. nobilis. *56. M. secunda. *57. M. gracilis. *58. M. humilis. *59. M. pocillifera. F. A few long stems, simple, or rarely branched, from a common base. *60. M. deformis. *61. M. cuspidata. G. Erept plates in place of proper branches, and no distinct apical polyp. *62. M. labrosa. *64. M. cuneata. *63. M. securis. A. Ramis ramulisque coalitis et laminas solidas expansas instruentibus. I. Culiculis tubiformibus. 1. MADREPORA PALMATA. (Lamarck.) M. ponderosa, latissime foliata, frondibus oblique expansis, basi subcon- volutis, profunde kbatis ; lobis scspe 2-3' longis, 1-2' latis, et 1-2" TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 437 crassis ; margine extimo paulum laciniato J" crasso. Corallum infra breviter caliculatis, caliculis nariformibus ; supra, caliculis cylindricis, valde incequalibus, scepe 2'" longis et l£"' latis, el apice obliquis, aliis rotundo-nariformibus, aliis obsoktis ; Stella conspicud. Ponderous, very broad foliate ; fronds spreading obliquely, subcon- volute at base, deeply lobed ; lobes often 2 to 3 feet long, and 1 J broad, with a thickness of 1 to 2 inches ; outer margin a little laci- niate, J an inch thick. Corallum below, short caliculate, calicles nariform; above, calicles cylindrical, with an oblique apex, very unequal, many 2 lines long and l£ broad, others round nariform, and others obsolete ; star distinct. Plate 31, fig. 11 a, view of cell, enlarged; 11 b, c, d, e, different calicles, natural size. West Indies, where it is a very common species. This widely spreading foliate Madrepora, sometimes attains a height of six feet or more, with a pedicel nearly a foot in diameter. Other specimens are but one or two feet high, with a few spreading fronds 3 or 4 feet broad, and these have given rise to the familiar name of the species, Neptune's Chair. The calicles are larger and stouter, and more acervate than in the akes, the lobes are much broader, and the margin much thicker. Corattium porosum, album, latissimum, Seba's figure 3, tab. 113, and Esper's 81, muricatum, Sloane's Jam., i. tab. 17, fig. which is a reduced copy of Seba's, be- 3 ; .a good figure. long to the M. alces, an East India spe- Mad. muricata, var., Esper, Fortsetz. i. cies ; and Ehrenberg appears to have tab. 51 . derived his description of the palmata, in Mad. palmata, Lamk., ii. 446, No. 1. part at least, from specimen's of that , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 503. species. , Blainville, Man., 389. 2. MADREPORA ALCES. (Dana.} M. crasse foliata, frondibus profunde digitato-lobatis ; lobis angusto- ebngatis, seu ligulatis, (scepe 2' longis, 2-4" latis, et £-lJ" crassis). Corallum infra caliculis brevibus confertis ; supra tubiformibus, in- aqualibus, 2-2£"' longis et £"' latis, erectis, nunquam nariformibus, no 438 ZOOPHYTES. multis obsoletis ; stelld conspicud, duabus lamettis infra fere conni- ventibus. Stout foliate, fronds deeply digitate lobed ; lobes narrow, oblong, or ligulate, often 2 feet long, 2 to 4 inches wide, and J to l£ inches thick. Corallum below, with short crowded calicles; above, calicles tubiform, unequal, 2 to 2£ lines long, and | of a line broad, erect, never nariform, many obsolete; star distinct, two lamellae nearly uniting below. Plate 31, fig. 12 a, view of cell, enlarged ; 12 b, c, d, e,f, different calicles, natural size. East Indies. Exp. Exp. The long narrow lobes of this spreading digitate species, at once distinguish it from the palmata. The calicles are less stout and none are nariform, although many are obsolescent, and others are reduced to immersed cells. They are also more distinctly stellate. The lobes are often convex below, and concave above, and at the extremity are about half an inch thick. Corallium grande, cornu cervini forma ; Mad. muricata var., Esper, Fortsctz. i. ramis latis, plants, porisimmersis,tubu- tab. 83; reduced from Seba. lalis, intus slellatis, Seba, Thes. iii., tab. Mad. palmata, in part, of Lamarck. 113 ; a good figure. 3. MADREPORA FLABELLUM. (Lamarck.) M. expanse foliata, frondibus subcrassis, basi convolutis, margine ramulis incipientibus viz J" crassis composite. Corallum infra caliculis bre- vibus confertis ; supra tenuiter tubiformibus, scepe 1J'" longis et £-§'" latis, nunquam nariformibus, totidem in seriebus acervatis, multis cellis immersis ; stelld viz conspicud. Spreading foliate, fronds rather stout, convoluted at base, the margin consisting of incipient branchlets scarcely \ of an inch thick. Co- rallum below, with short crowded calicles ; above, calicles slender tubiform, often 1£ lines long and £ to § of a line broad, never nari- form, sometimes acervate in lines, many immersed cells; star scarcely distinguishable. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 439 Plate 31, fig. 13 a, view of cell, enlarged; 13 b, c, d, e, different calicles, natural size. West Indies. This species has the general habit of the palmata, but is much smaller and thinner. The margin is scarcely over an eighth of an inch thick, and the flattened -incipient branchlets there apparent, show that the fronds are made by the coalescence of slender branches. The tubiform calicles are almost small enough to admit of being inserted into the cells of the palmata. The specimens seen by the author were from fifteen to twenty inches in height, and consisted of a few fronds, spreading nearly horizontally. Mad. Jlabcllum, Lamk., ii. 447, No. 2. nata, flabellata, erecta, margine superiore , Blainville, Man., 390. non cristate, sed in ramulos teretes polli- , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 503. cem crassos subacutos, basi sua mox in The Heteropora flabellum, of Ehrenberg truncum conpressum confluente, diviso, (Gen. Ixix. sp. 2), appears to be a differ- stellulis (caliculis) inaequalibus crebro ent species. The following is his de- tubulosis, levibus." Perhaps the coni- scription: " Pedem alta et lata, expla- geral 4. MADREPORA CYCLOPEA. (Dana.) M. latissimc foliata, ponderossima, frondibus expansis, lobatis, 3-6" crassis, 6' vel plures latis, supra tuber culis rotundis grandibus (2-3" crassis) remote sparsis. Corallum supra crebro caliculatum. Very broad foliate, and ponderous, fronds spreading, lobed, 3 to 6 inches thick, and 6 feet or more broad, with large, rounded, remotely scattered knobs (2 to 3 inches thick). Corallum above, having the calicles crowded. Wake's Island, Pacific Ocean. Exp. Exp. Only worn specimens of the corallum of this huge species of Ma- drepore have been seen by the author. These were massive plates, six feet square and four to six inches thick, which had been thrown up by the waves on the shores. They were parts of a large spreading species, which grew probably like the palmata, and attained a breadth of at least twenty feet. The knobs of the surface are incipient 440 ZOOPHYTES. branches, two or three inches thick, and the same in length, with a broadly rounded top. II. Calicitlis labellatis (ramulis incipientibus, conuliformibns). 5. MADREPORA CONIGERA. (Dana.) M. late foliata, frondibus crassis, margine lobatis et totidem profunde subdigitatis ; supra, conos crassos subacutos undique ferentibus ; infra super fide plant! . Corallum infra brevissime caliculatum; supra cali- culis valde confertis, labellatis, labello elongato et fere erecto, subcom- planato ; stettd obsolete!, duabus lamellis vix latioribus. Broad foliate, fronds stout, lobed at margin, and sometimes deeply subdigitate; above, covered with short and stout subacute cones; below, surface plane. Corallum below having very short calicles ; above, calicles much crowded, labellate, lip elongate, nearly erect, and almost flat; star obsolete, two of the lamellae scarcely broader. Plate 32, fig. 1, part of corallum in outline, natural size; la, one of the incipient branchlets, ditto. Singapore. Exp. Exp. The short stout cones — rudimentary branchlets — that cover the surface of this foliate Madrepore, and its long-lipped erect calicles, at once distinguish it. The cones average an inch in height, and are half to three-fourths of an inch broad at base ; but a few are two inches high and an inch at base. The calicles above are long and crowded. One frond in the Expedition collections measures twenty inches by twelve, and is over an inch and a half thick where stoutest, and half an inch or nearly so at margin ; the plate is but a fragment of the complete zoophyte. Another specimen is a single lobe, four- teen inches long, two to three inches wide, and one and a quarter thick. TRIBE II I. — MADREPORACEA. 441 B. Vasiformes, aut cespitosae. I. Caliculis fragilibus, labellatis. 6. MADREPORA EFFLORESCENS. (Dana.} M. vasiformis (?}, ramis in laminam solidam £-|" crassam coalitis, prope marginem, retrculatam et per ramos conjunctos costatam ; infra plana ; supra ramulis crebris brevissimis, marginalibus %" longis, et ^" crassis, medianis nunquam teretibus \" longis, acervatis et pro- liferis. Corallum infra breviter caliculatis ; supra ramulorum cali- culis labellatis, labello elongato et erecto, apicali cylindrico 1'" longo et $'" lato. Vasiform (?), branches coalescing into a solid plate £ to f of an inch thick, which is reticulate only near the margin, and ribbed with the coalescing branches; below flat; above, having very short crowded branchlets, the marginal £ an inch long and ^ of an inch in diame- ter, but those of the middle of the frond not terete, a fourth of an inch long, acervate and proliferous. Corallum below with short calicles; above, the calicles of the branchlets labellate, lip long and erect, the apical calicle cylindrical, a line long and J a line broad. Plate 33, fig. 6, fragment of corallum, natural size. Ceylon, East Indies. Rev. G. A. Aphthorp. This species approaches the cytherea in the proliferous clusters of calicles about the middle of the frond in place of proper branchlets, but differs essentially in the branchlets being coalesced into a solid plate; and, moreover, the branchlets near the margin are much shorter and more slender. The largest specimen examined was a fragment six inches in breadth ; in its stoutest part it was three-fourths of an inch in thickness. The solid frond resembles the flabellum ; but that species is without branchlets above, and has tubular calicles. 7. MADREPORA CYTHEREA. (Dana.) M. vasiformis, pedicellata, fronde latissimu, 1-2" crassa, ramis reticu- lato-coalitis ; infra complanalis, ramulis nullis ; supra, ramulis con- Ill 442 ZOOPHYTES. fertis, |-1" longis, sa.pt brevissimis et acervato-proliferis. Corallum ramulorum caliculis labellatis, labetto elongato, vix complanato ; api- cali, elongate cylindrico, 2— 2£'" longo et f '" lato. Vasiform, pedicellate ; frond very broad, 1 to 2 inches thick ; branches reticulately coalescent ; below complanate, without branchlets ; above branchlets crowded, £ to 1 inch long, often very short and acervato-proliferous. Corallum having the calicles labellate; lip long and scarcely at all flattened ; the apical calicle long cylindrical; 2 to 2£ lines long and ^ of a line broad. Plate 32, figs. 3 a, 3 b, fragments of corallum, natural size ; 3 a, weathered specimen. Tahiti, Society Islands. Exp. Exp. The vases are often four feet in breadth, and stand on a pedicel one to two feet in height. In one specimen the upper part is placed ob- liquely, arising from an oblique position in the pedicel while growing. The coalescing branches of the frond are not so far flattened and united as to lose their individuality ; the open intervals are numerous, yet narrower than the branches. The squarrose appearance of the branchlets of the corallum, especially of those about the middle portion of the vase, resembling proliferous heaps of calicles, allies the species to the preceding. The branchlets, toward the margin, are about an inch long, and have long calicles ; those of the margin itself are much clustered. In weathered specimens (fig. 3 a), the calicles, just below the apex, are sometimes worn off, leaving the apical calicle apparently a third to half an inch in length. 8. MADREPORA SPICIFERA. (Dana.) M. vasiformis, fronde latissimd, £-lJ" crassd ;* infra stricte reticulatd et complanatd ; supra ramulis subsimplicibus £-1" longis, 2'" tenuibus, subacutis. Corallum ramulorum caliculis imbricatis, labellatis, labello subcomplanato, truncato, stellu inconspicud. * In stating the thickness of the frond in this, and other instances following, and also the preceding, the ivliak thickness to Hie summits of the branchlets is included. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 443 Vase-shaped, fronds very broad, \ to 1^ inches thick; below closely reticulate and complariate ; above with nearly simple branchlets, £ to 1 inch long, 2 lines in thickness, subacute. Corallum having the calicles of the branchlets imbricate, labellate ; lip somewhat flat- tened, truncate; star indistinct. Plate 33, fig. 4, specimen from the Feejees, natural size ; 4 a, frag- ment of same; 4 b, and 5, fragments of specimens from Singapore: plate 31, figs. 6 a, b, c, calicle of Feejee variety, enlarged. Singapore and the Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species forms shallow, fragile vases, sometimes three feet broad, raised on short pedicels, and bearing above small slender branch- lets, covered closely with thin appressed calicles. The under sur- face of the corallum is naked, excepting a few appressed tubular calicles towards the margin. The delicate branchlets are neatly terete and not proliferous near the summit, though often furcate below, or two or more rising apparently from the same base. The terminal calicle is about three-fourths of a line broad, and not tumid, being an even prolongation of the body of the branchlet ; the other calicles are nearly half a line broad, and about a line and a half long. On the main branches and the bases of the branchlets, the cells are immersed, without calicles, and the texture of the corallum is very spongy. In a Feejee specimen, which is but seven inches across, the lip of the calicles is longer than in those from Singapore, and the intervals in the reticulate frond are few and about an eighth of an inch wide, while these intervals in the latter are more numerous and about a fourth of an inch in width. It may be a young specimen of the cytherea. /8. abbreviata (fig. 5). In some of the specimens from Singapore, which have the general habit of the preceding, the branchlets (which vary from a fourth of an inch to one inch in length) are much more obtuse, with the apical calicle scarcely at all prominent; the lateral calicles, moreover, are much shorter, and more closely crowded. j. eudadia. This name is applied to a specimen resembling, some- what, the preceding; but presenting some peculiarities which may distinguish it as a separate species. The under surface of the frond is remarkable for being covered with stout obsolescent calicles, which are rather crowded, and render the surface uneven. The branchlets above are very neat, regularly tapering, and subacute, about three-fourths of 444 ZOOPHYTES. an inch long, one and three-fourths to two lines thick at base, with in- tervals between of but a fourth of an inch; and they are crowdedly and evenly covered with small thin calicles. The branches of the frond are very closely coalescent, with the open intervals about one-eighth of an inch wide. The specimen is a shallow vase, one foot in diame- ter, and belongs to the Boston Natural History Society. LitJwdendrum cakareum sessile, Rumph. Amboyn., pi. 86, fig. 2. Madrepora corymbosa, in part, of Lamarck. The Heteropom microclados, of Ehrenberg, (op. cit. Gen. Ixix., sp. 4), as described, is not far from the above species ; but his queried reference to Ellis's figure, plate 57, — a shrubby species, — would imply that it is quite different. It is thus de- scribed : " Pedalis, prostrata, repens, ra- mosa, ramis reticulato-coalitis, horizontali- bus, ratnulis erectis, spiniformibus, semi- pollicaribus ct pollicaribus, divisis, apice tubuloso-asperis, stellis levibus hispidisve, semilinearibus, myxatis, striatis, apicali- bus I'" latis, integris." 9. MADREPORA HYACINTHUS. (Dana.) M. vasiformis, pedicellata, fronde 1-1 \" crassd, ramis parce coalitis ; infra ramulis crebris divaricatis, J-£" longis, scspe proliferis ; supra ramulis gracilibus (^"),fere simplicibus, totidem proliferis, £-f" elon- gatis. Corallum caliculis tubo-labellatis, crassioribus, 1-1J'" longis, labello non minime complanato, cellis apertis ; stelld inconspicua ; apicali cylindrico, prominulo. Vasiform, pedicellate, frond 1 to 1J inches thick, branches sparingly coalescent ; below, branchlets crowded and spreading, J to £ inch long, often proliferous ; above, branchlets slender (^ of an inch thick), nearly simple, sometimes proliferous, £ to f of an inch long. Corallum having the calicles tubo-labellate, not fragile, 1 to 1J lines long, lip not at all flattened ; cells open with an indistinct star, apical calicle cylindrical, prominent. Plate 32, fig. 2, fragment of corallum, natural size, showing the character of the upper and under surface. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species has some resemblance to the spicifera, but the nu- merous branchlets of the under surface, directed obliquely downward, as well as the stouter calicles, somewhat tubiform, and much firmer, afford striking distinctive characters. The branchlets of the corallum TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 445 below, are muricate nearly like those above. The calicles near the apex are one to one and a half lines in length. The specimen in the collections is a vase five inches across, on a short stout pedicel. The tips of the branches when fresh have a violet tinge. 10. MADREPORA SURCULOSA. (Dana.} M. cespitosa, breviter crasso-pedicellata, hta, vix concava aut convexius- cula,fronde 1^-2" crassd, ramis coalitis ; infra, compkmatis, ramulis nullis ; supra, ramulis crebris, erectis, spidformibus, et subacutis, 1-2" longis, sape paulum angulosis, apice proliferis. Corallum ramu- lorum caliculis confertis vix labellatis, 1-1 J'" longis, lobelia elongate non complanato; subapicalibus minirnis ; apicali cylindrico |'" lato ; stella inconspicud. Short and stout pedicellate, broad, and slightly concave, flat or a little convex; frond 1£ to 2 inches thick, branches coalescing; below, flattened, and with no spreading branchlets ; above, branchlets crowded, erect, spike-shape, tapering, and nearly acute, 1 to 2 inches long, often a little angular, proliferous at apex. Branchlets of the corallum with crowded calicles, 1 to 1^ lines long, scarcely label- late, elongated lip not flattened, the subapical calicles becoming very small, the apical cylindrical, and f of a line broad ; star in- distinct. Plate 32, fig. 4, corallum (small specimen), natural size; 4 a, branchlet, ditto; fig. 5, probably the same, from Tahiti. Society and Feejee Islands, and East Indies. Exp. Exp. The clumps of this very common species are nearly flat above, with a stout and short pedicel below. They grow to a breadth of eighteen inches or more. The pedicel enlarges upward, and often the frond is solid below for half its diameter. The branchlets are tapering and subacute, and near the summit very many are peculiarly proliferous with several rudimentary branchings or cylindrical calicles: at base they are often half an inch through and angular, appearing to consist of two or three coalesced branchlets. The branchlets of the margin are neatly tapering, and their calicles are scarcely more spreading than those of the inner branchlets. The under surface of the frond bears 112 446 ZOOPHYTES. numerous rather short tubular calicles, rendering the surface quite uneven. /3. turbinata. The corallum resembles closely the above, in its smaller branchlets, both as regards their tapering form, their calicles, and the proliferous extremities. But instead of spreading horizontally and forming a solid or reticulate frond, the branches spread obliquely upward, and are several inches in length. The specimen in the col- lections is a turbinate clump, twelve inches broad at top, and the same in height, and has nearly the form of an inverted cone. The branches are one half to three quarters of an inch thick below ; the smaller branchlets are one to two inches long, nearly a fourth of an inch in diameter below, and often very proliferous at summits. The upper branchlets of the margin are as regular as those of the middle of the group, and the calicles not more spreading. The specimen is from Tahiti. 7- dijfusa. The branchlets are proliferous as above, and similar in size and form, but the branches are one half to three quarters of an inch thick, and distantly coalescent, with very large spaces ; moreover the branchlets are more remote, the intervals between being often an inch. A specimen belonging to the Boston Natural History Society, ap- pearing to be about a fourth of a whole frond, measures eighteen inches by fifteen in breadth. Though placed here as a variety of the surculosa, it has more of the habit of the subulata in the character of the frond, from which species it differs, however, in the length and characters of its branchlets. It is probable that the surculosa assumes the open character here described when it attains a large size. LitJwdendrum calcareum sessile? Rum- Heleropom corymbosa(1), Ehrenb., G. Ixix. phius, tab. 86, fig. 2 ; a reduced figure? sp. 16. Mad. corymbosa, in part, Lamk. 11. MADREPORA MILLEPORA. (Ehrenberg.} Dana. M. cespitosa, breviter pedicellata, lata, paulum convexa, ramis laxe re- ticulatim coalitis ; infra, ramulis paucis, nudis, appressis ; supra, ramulis bene teretibus, 2" longis, vix \" crassis, subsimplicibus. Co- rallum ramulis obtusis, caliculis breviter labellatis, confertim imbri- catis, \'" latis; stelld inconspicud, duabus lamellis valde latioribus ; apicali,fere 1'" lato et %'" exserto ; ramukrum marginalium caliculis valde laxioribus. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 447 Short pedicellate cespitose, broad, a little convex, branches openly reticulato-coalescent; below, a few naked branchlets appressed into the plane of the frond ; above, branchlets very evenly terete, 2 inches long and scarcely \ of an inch thick, nearly simple. Co- rallum with the branchlets obtuse, calicles short labellate, crowded imbricate, £ a line broad, star indistinct, two of the lamellae very prominent ; apical calicle nearly a line broad arid J a line exsert ; calicles of the marginal branchlets very much spreading. Plate 33, fig. 2, part of corallum, natural size ; 2 a, branchlet, ditto. East Indies, where it is common. Exp. Exp. This species is remarkable for its gracefully branched frond, its even cylindrical branchlets covered very neatly and closely with thin and fragile calicles. The spreading calicles of the outer branchlets contrast strongly with the close imbrication of those within. The fronds grow to a foot and a half or more in diameter; they are some- times attached by one side, and at others have a broad central pedicel. The thickness from the under surface to the tips of the branchlets is about three inches. The branchlets are not tapering, and have much closer calicles than the surculosa, and besides are not proliferous at apex ; they are much longer and larger than in the spicifera. The frond is sometimes solid at centre below. Hctcmjjom millepora, Ehrenberg, G. Ixix. Madrepora corymbosa, in part, Lamarck, sp. 5. No. 4. 12. MADREPORA PROSTRATA. (Dana.} M. cespitosa, prostrata, summitate plana, ramis remote coalitis ; infra non complanatis, ramulis paucis, cellis immersis ; supra ramulis bate cylindricis, subsimplicibus, \" crassis : polypis viridibus tentaculorum uno longiore. Corallum ramulis obtusis, caliculo apicali curto, £'" lato ; aliis confertis, labellatis, latis et patentibus, labello valde com- planato, cellis stellatis, duabus lamellis paulo latioribus. Cespitose, prostrate, with a flat top, branches remotely coalescing; below, not flattened, branchlets few, and cells all immersed; above, branchlets neatly cylindrical, nearly simple, \ of an inch thick: 448 ZOOPHYTES. polyps green, and having one of the tentacles much longer than the others. Corallum having the branchlets obtuse, the apical calicle short, y of a line broad ; other calicles crowded, labellate, broad and spreading, with the lip much flattened ; cells stellate, two of the lamellae a little the broadest. Plate 33, fig. 1, part of corallum, natural size ; 1 a, one of the polyps, enlarged ; 1 b, same, partly expanded, an upper view ; 1 c, branchlet, natural size ; 1 d, calicles, enlarged ; 1 e, same in profile ; 1 f, trans- verse section of branch, enlarged. Feejee Islands, and Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. This species, as observed by the author, grows horizontally, from a lateral attachment. It is distinguished by its neatly terete branches and branchlets, and broad equal calicles closely crowded upon one another, and standing nearly erect on the surface of the branchlets. The branches are sometimes proliferous, but never acervate so as to lose their terete forms. Its stellate cells, as well as other characters, remove it from the surculosa. Madrepora pocillifera, var., B. (?) Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 238, pi. 19, fig. 8. 13. MADREPORA SUBULATA. (Dana.) M. prostrata, plana, ramis laxe intricatis, remote coalitis, ramosis, £" crassis ; infra, ramulis paucis subnudis et infrondem appressis ; supra, ramulis undique teretibus, subulatis, paulum undulatis, subacutis, 2£" longis et 2—3'" crassis, subsimplicibus. Corallum caliculis labellatis fere obsoletis, ramulorum marginalium caliculis diffusioribus et paula grandioribus ; stella obsokta, duabus lamellis valde latioribus; caliculo apicali valde exserto (!'"), fere £'" lato. Prostrate, plane above ; branches loosely intricate, and remotely coa- lescing, ramose, J an inch thick ; below, branchlets few, nearly naked, and appressed into the plane of the frond ; above, branchlets every where terete, subulate, a little undulate and subacute, 2£ inches long and 2 to 3 lines thick, nearly simple. Corallum having the calicles labellate, but quite small and very short or scarcely prominent, those of the marginal branchlets more spreading and TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 449 somewhat larger; star obsolete, two lamellae quite broad; apical calicle very exsert (1 line), nearly or quite | of a line broad. Plate 33, fig. 3, part of corallum, natural size ; 3 . 9*$"?? * *$*& M ^gogg^ TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 453 Plate 34, fig. 1, part of corallum, natural size ; 1 a, part of branchlet, ditto ; 1 b, profile of calicles, ditto. Tahiti, Society Islands. Exp. Exp. The corallum is a circular stony plate, having the margin squar- rosely incised or incipiently branching, and bearing above erect finger-shaped branchlets. One of the specimens is two feet in dia- meter, and the solid part is two inches thick at centre; it was attached below by a small and short pedicel. This species resembles the nasuta, but differs strikingly in having no distinct marginal branchlets. 19. MADREPORA NASUTA. (Dana.} M. late cespitosa, breviter pedicellata, paulum convexa ; basi solida et plano-obconica ; infra, complanata et subnuda, crasso-pedicellata ; supra ramulis crebris, digitiformibus, subsimplicibus, raro proliferis, subteretibus, 2-2£" longis, et 4-5'" crassis, subacutis ; margine ra- mulis horizontalibus elongatis. Corallum caliculis valde prominenti- bus, subtiliter striatulis, compresso-nariformibus, stelld scepe conspicud, duabus lamettis paulo latioribus. Broad cespitose, short pedicellate, a little convex, with a solid plano-obconical base; below, complanate and nearly naked, stout pedicellate; above, branchlets crowded, digitiform, nearly simple, rarely proliferous, subterete, 2 to 2£ inches long and 4 to 5 lines thick, subacute, branchlets of the margin horizontal and elongate. Corallum with the lateral calicles very prominent, compressed-nari- form, very finely striate ; star often distinct, two of the lamellae a little the broadest. Plate 34, fig. 2, corallum, natural size; 2 a, branchlet, ditto; 2 b, profile of calicles. Tahiti, Society Islands. Exp. Exp. The stony compact base, formed from the coalescing of horizontal branches, is six inches in diameter in a specimen which is twelve inches across : from the margin of the base horizontal branchlets ex- tend out, which are a little ascending and subramose. The plate was attached below by a pedicel three and a half inches broad. The 114 454 ZOOPHYTES. calicles stand out very prominent, though much compressed, and sometimes range in longitudinal series; the striatures are very fine and minutely echinulate. The aperture of the cell is oblong and opens upward. 20. MADREPORA DIGITIFERA. (Dana.) M. late cespitosa, planiuscula, frondis basi solidd et disciformi; supra ramulis creberrimis digitiformibus, viz teretibus et subacutis, 2J-3" longis et 4-5'" crassis, scepe breviter proliferis. Corallum caliculo apicali prominulo, vix 1"' lato; lateralibus, confertis, divaricatis et dimidiatis, non compressis, erectis, |'" longis, labio subcrasso, cellis immersis spar sis, Stella breviter 6-radiatd, lamella exteriore promi- nente. Broad, nearly flat above, base of the frond solid and disk-form; above, branchlets crowded, digitiform, scarcely terete, and subacute, 2i to 3 inches long and 4 to 5 lines thick, often short proliferous. Co- rallum with the apical calicle a little prominent, scarcely a line broad ; the lateral crowded, divaricate, dimidiate, erect, and not at all compressed, ^ of a line long, lip rather thick, with some scat- tered immersed cells ; star short 6-rayed, exterior lamella quite prominent. The corallum of this species has a solid circular base like the pre- ceding ; but the dimidiate calicles are not nariform, nor at all com- pressed, and they stand erect upon the branchlet, so that the under side is at right angles with it : they are neatly striate, and the striaB are nearly entire. There are some immersed cells, and about the lower part of the branchlets (as also in the preceding species) all the calicles are obsolescent. The branchlets are crowded together, with intervals only of a sixth of an inch. The specimen seen by the author belonged to the Boston Natural History Society : the locality is not known. 21. MADREPORA GLOBICEPS. (Dana.} M. late cespitosa, supernc convexa, basi solida et disciformis, supra, ra- TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 455 mulis erectis digitiformibus, crebris, subangulatis, 2|" longis et £-$" crassis, apice rotundata. Corallum caliculo apicali vix minims, pro- minente, 1'" lato; lateralibus confertis, breviter tubiformibus aut tubo-nariformibus, obsolete striatulis, apice obliquis, aperturd elliptica, steM, conspicua. Broad cespitose, convex above, with a solid disk-form base; above, branchlets erect digitiform, crowded, subangular, 2i inches long and | to § of an inch thick, rounded at apex. Corallum having the apical calicle scarcely at all prominent, a line broad; the lateral crowded, short, tubiform or tubo-nariform, obsoletely striate, oblique at apex, aperture elliptical, star distinct. Plate 34, fig. 3, branchlet, natural size. Tahiti, Society Islands. Exp. Exp. This species has the general habit of the nasuta, but the digitiform branchlets are very obtusely rounded or almost truncate at top ; they are about a fourth of an inch apart, and somewhat angular. The solid base in the specimen in the collections is obconical below, and was attached at centre by a breadth of four inches; the whole clump is a foot in diameter and six inches high. The calicles are three- quarters of a line in diameter, and below are obsolescent. The subangular form of the branchlets, in this and other cespitose species, arises apparently from the proximity of the branchlets to one another. 22. MADREPORA EFFUSA. (Dana.) M. late cespitosa, convexa, bast fere solida et disciformis; supra, ramulis crebris, digitiformibus, 1£" longis et 4-5'" crassis, ramulis margina- libus vix minime liberis. Cor.allum caliculo apicali crasso, cylindrico, 1'" paululo latiore ; lateralibus confertissimis et in&qualibus, com- presso-nariformibus, !£"' longis, interdum tubo-nariformibus et pro- liferis ; subtus, confertim breviter caliculatis. Broad cespitose, convex above, base nearly solid and disk-form; above, branchlets crowded, digitiform, li inches long, and 4 to 5 lines thick ; at the margin, the branchlets scarcely free. Corallum having 456 ZOOPHYTES. the apical calicle stout, cylindrical, rather more than a line broad, the lateral much crowded and unequal, compressed-nariform, l£ lines long, sometimes tubo-nariform and proliferous : under surface crowdedly covered with short calicles. Ceylon, Indian Ocean. Rev. G. A. Apthorp. The clump resembles the nasuta in general appearance, but its calicles are more unequal, and the apical calicle is twice as broad ; moreover, the branchlets are shorter and more unequal, the surface below is crowdedly muricate, and the marginal branchlets are coa- lescent and not free. The calicles are about a line and a half long, with many quite small interspersed, and others larger that are tubi- form. The clump measures fourteen inches by eleven in breadth, and five inches in height. The pedicel below occupies two-thirds the whole breadth of the base. 23. MADREPORA CORYMBOSA. (Lamarck.} M. late cespitosa, convexa ; ramulis digitiformibus, subsimplicibus, 3-4'" latis et 2|— 3" longis, subteretibus. Corallum caliculo apicali lato (1-J^'"); lateralibus l^-lf" longis, tubiformibus, apice obttquis, margine echinulatis, extus striatis et scabrosis, paucis caliculis minutis spar sis ; stelld brevissimd aut inconspicud, duabus lamellis paulo pro- minulioribus. Broad cespitose, convex above; branchlets digitiform, subsimple, 3 to 4 lines broad and 2£ to 3 inches long, subterete. Corallum with the apical calicle large (1 to \\ lines broad); the lateral 1^ to 1| lines long, tubiform, with the summit oblique and margin echinu- late; exterior striate and scabrous; a few minute calicles inter- spersed; star very short or indistinct; two of the lamellae a little the most prominent. East Indies, and Indian Ocean. This species forms broad corymbed clamps, resembling the nasuta in form ; but it has not the much-compressed, nariform calicles of that species, and the apical calicle is quite large. The under surface of the outer branchlets of the clump have a few large arid stout tubular calicles. From those of the following species, to which it is allied, it TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 457 differs in having the calicles scabrous and striate, and not appressed to the branch. Madrepora corymlwsa, Lamk., ii. 447, No. 3. Many species are included by Lamarck under this name, of which the above corresponds nearly with his description, which is as follows: " M. ramosissima, orbiculata, ramis ascendentibus, ramulosis, ramulis creberri- mis, in corymbum latissimum obliquum digestis." " Ses cellules tubuleuses sont ine- gales, serrees et striees en dehors." The figure by Rumphius (Amb. tab. 86, fig. 2), to which Lamarck refers, represents a vase-shape species, concave above, near the M. spicifera or surculosa. 24. MADREPORA APPRESSA. (Ehrenberg.) M. prostrata, ramis horizontalibus in laminam complanatam subinte- gram coalitis ; infra nuda ; supra, ramulis erectis crebris, spidfor- mibus, fere teretibus, 2£-3" longis et 3'" crassis. CoraUum cali- culo apicali prominulo ; later alibus confertis et cequalibus, !£'" longis, appressis subimbricatis, rostrato-nariformibus, subtilissime striatis, Stella bene conspicud, duabus lamellis panto prominulioribus, infra conniventibus. Prostrate, the horizontal branches coalescing into a plate which is nearly entire, flattened, and naked below ; above, branchlets erect, crowded, spiciform, nearly terete, 2£ to 3 inches long and 3 lines thick. Corallum with the apical calicles a little prominent; the lateral crowded and equal, 1J lines long, appressed and subimbri- cate, rostrato-nariform, very minutely striated ; star very distinct, two of the lamellae a little the most prominent, and meeting below. Plate 34, fig. 3, branchlets of corallum, natural size; 3 a, calicle, natural size; plate 31, figs. 8 a, 8 b, different views of calicle, en- larged. East Indies, Singapore. Exp. Ezp. This common species forms very broad, flat-top fronds, growing apparently from a lateral attachment. The under surface, formed by the coalesced branches, is nearly flat and naked, with here and there a break. Above, the slender branchlets are remarkably neat and even in their subimbricate calicles, which are minutely striate, and about one and a half lines long. One specimen in the collections is two 115 458 ZOOPHYTES. feet in breadth, quite horizontal above, and nearly flat below, with the whole frond (including branchlets) about five inches in thickness. In the following species, which this somewhat resembles, the calicles are much unequal, giving the branchlets a ragged look. Madrepora appressa (?), Ehrenb., G. Ixix., sp. 3 : " Novempollicaris, prostrata, rcpens, ramosa, ramis reliculato-coalitis, horizontalibus, ramulis, angulo recto surgentibus obli- quisve, pollicaribus, simplicioribus, tubuliferis, imbricatis, tubulis myxatis, arete appres- sis, amplis, hispidis, stellulis terminalibus tumidis, validius hispidis, obsolete striatis." 25. MADREPORA ECHIDN^EA. (Lamarck.} Dana. M. late cespitosa (?), ramulis proliferis et irregularibus, ferme 3-4'" crassis, tritico habitu affinibus sed gracilioribus. Corallum caliculo apicali valde elongato; later alibus stride appressis, inaequalibus, tubi- formibus obtuse rostratis, scepe 3-4'" longis, extus levibus; apertura minima, suborbiculatd ; stelld bene conspicud, duabus lameltis infra fere conniventibus. Broad cespitose (?), branchlets proliferous and irregular, about 3 or 4 lines thick; near the triticum in habit, but more slender. Corallum with the apical calicle much elongate; the lateral close appressed, unequal, tubular, obtusely rostrate, often 3 to 4 lines long, exterior smooth ; aperture minute, nearly circular ; star very distinct, two of the lamellae nearly meeting below. Plate 35, fig. 3, branch, natural size ; 3 a, calicle, natural size ; plate 31, figs. 9 a, 9 b, different views of calicle, enlarged. The East Indies. Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. Only a few fragments of this species were obtained by the author; but their oblique mode of growth appears sufficient to indicate that they belong to a horizontally growing zoophyte, resembling the plan- taginea, and it may possibly come from the marginal portions of that species. The branchlets are very unevenly covered with long cylin- drical calicles having a smooth appearance and an obtuse elongated lip, with the minute aperture situated a little below the apex. Mad. rosea, Esper, i. 115, tab. 15. Heteropora echidncea, Ehrenb., G. Ixix. sp. Oculina echidnaa, Lamk., ii. 457, No. 6. 13. TRIBE III. — MA DREP OR ACE A. 459 26. MADREPORA PLANTAGINEA. (Lamarck.} M. latissime cespitosa, superne vix convexa, ramis Iwrizontalibus, et in laminam complanatam subintegram infra nudam coalitis; supra ra- mulis spiciformibus, 4-6'" crassis et 2-2^" longis, scepe proliferis et irregularibus. Corallum caliculo apicali lato (\—\%"},prominulo; la- teralibus tubiformibus, appressis, valde incequalibus, scepe 2"' longis et 3'" crassis, validis, labio obtusis, extus subtiliter striatis, fere kvibus, paucis brevissimis spar sis ; apertura vix elliptica, stella conspicud, duabus lamellis prominulioribus infraque fere conniventibus ; subtus super fide levi, paucis cellis perforate. Very broad cespitose, slightly convex ; branches horizontal, and coa- lescing into a flattened lamina nearly entire, naked below, and inter- rupted by an occasional break; above, branchlets spiciform, 4 to 6 lines thick, and 2 to 2£ inches long, and often proliferous and irre- gular. Corallum having the apical calicles a little prominent, and broad (1 to 1J lines) ; the lateral, tubiform, appressed, very unequal, often 2 lines long, and £ of a line broad ; stout, with an obtuse lip, exterior very finely striate, smooth; aperture scarcely elliptical; star quite distinct, two of the lamella? most prominent, and nearly meeting below. The East Indies, and Singapore. Exp. Exp. — Ceylon. Rev. G. A. Apthorp. This species approaches the cerealis, which it resembles in its nearly smooth and unequal calicles, and general habit; but the calicles are much longer, and the apical calicle much larger. It grows to a breadth of eighteen inches or more. In the under surface of the frond it re- sembles the appressa, but not in its calicles, which are very unequal, arid not distinctly imbricate. The rudis and acervata have much stouter calicles ; the echidncea, longer and smaller apical calicles, and longer calicles generally. The corymbosa has its calicles less ap- pressed, scabrous, and distinctly striate, not thick-lipped, and not stel- late within. Mad. plantaginea, Lamk., ii. 447, No. 4. Gaymard (Voy. de 1'Ast. iv. 234, pi. 19, Heterapora decurrens (1), Ehrenb., G. Ixix., figs. 3) cannot be recognised from the sp. 12. description or figure, both of which are The Madrepora plantaginea of Quoy and very imperfect. 460 ZOOPHYTES. 27. MADREPORA CEREALIS. (Lamarck.} M. late cespitosa, paulum convexa ; supra, ramulis numerosis erectis spi- ciformibus, 3—4'" crassis et 2" longis, proliferis et non teretibus. Co- rallum caliculo apicali prominulo, parvulo (vix }'"} ; lateralibus appressis, subtubiformibus in&qualibus, 1-1^'" longis, subrostratis, extus sublevibus, aperturd elliptica, stelld brevissima aut subconspicua, duabus lamettis paulo prominulioribus. Broad cespitose, somewhat convex; above, branchlets numerous, erect, spiciform, 3 to 4 lines thick, and 2 inches long, proliferous, and not terete. Corallum having the apical calicles a little promi- nent, small (scarcely y of a line) ; the lateral, appressed subtubi- form, unequal, 1 to 1£ lines long, subrostrate, exterior smooth, aper- ture elliptical, star very short or imperfectly distinct ; two of the lamellae a little prominent. Plate 35, fig. 2, part of corallum, natural size; 2 a, branchlet, ditto. The Sooloo Sea, East Indies. Exp. Exp. This species has the habit of the plantaginea, but is smaller in its calicles, apical as well as lateral. The branchlets are very unevenly covered with calicles, some of which are long and proliferous. The specimen in the collections is five inches high and six in diameter ; and the branchlets above are about a fourth of an inch thick : it is not complanate below ; but this may be owing to its not being full grown. In another specimen, from the same locality, apparently this spe- cies, the short calicles, low on the branchlets, have extremely minute cells, while in the above, they are about a third of a line in diameter. Mad. muricata, var., Esper, Fortsetz. i. 56, tab. 53 ; a tolerable figure of a specimen from the East Indies. 28. MADREPORA ACERVATA. (Dana.) M. kite cespitosa, paulum convexa, ramis exterioribus fere prostratis, et infra parce complanatis ; supra, ramulis 2" altis et 5-8'" crassis, TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 461 apice valde proliferis scepe acervatis, et subretusis. CoraUum caliculo apicali latissimo (li-2'"), vix exserto, lateralibus confertis, appresso- tubiformibus, 1-1^'" longis, extus subkvibus, apice obliquis, labio in- crassato, apertura elliptica, stelld bene conspicud, duabus lamdlis infra fere conniventibus. Broad cespitose, a littlaconvex, exterior branches nearly prostrate, and somewhat flattened below ; above, branchlets 2 inches high, 5 to 8 lines thick, very proliferous, often acervate at apex, and subretuse. CoraUum with the apical calicles very broad (1£ to 2 lines), scarcely exsert; the lateral crowded, appressed-tubiform, 1-1J lines long, exterior rather smooth ; oblique at apex ; lip thick, aperture ellip- tical ; star very distinct, two of the lamellfe nearly meeting below. Plate 34, fig. 43, branchlet, natural size. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. This species is low spreading cespitose, with the extremities of the branchlets often proliferous and much enlarged, or terminating in two, three, or more broad apical calicles. The apical calicles are scarcely at all exsert, and contain a cell hardly one-fourth the diameter ; the texture appears spongy. The lateral calicles are much smaller than in the valida, and are distinctly striated. 29. MADREPORA VALIDA. (Dana.) M. cespitosa, ramulis subdigitiformibus, irregularibus, 2J" longis, et 6-8'" crassis, ruditer proliferis, polypis maximis. CoraUum caliculis lateralibus incequalibus, appresso-tubiformibus, crassimis et maximis, 2-4'" longis, et 1'" latis, extus kvibus ; stelld paulum conspicud, duabus lamellis infra conniventibus. Cespitose, branchlets subdigitiform, very uneven, 2J inches long and 6 to 8 lines thick, rudely proliferous, polyps quite large. CoraUum having the lateral calicles unequal, appressed-tubiform, very stout, and large, 2 to 4 lines long, and 1 line broad, exterior smooth; star rather distinct, two of the lamella? meeting below. Plate 35, fig. 1, corallum, natural size. 116 462 ZOOPHYTES. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen in the collections is a small clump, four inches in diameter, consisting of short digitiform branchlets, covered unevenly with very large and stout appressed-tubiform calicles, having a smooth exterior. The under surface of the outer branchlets is much flattened and nearly naked. p. digitata of Gualtieri. Under this name a fragment is alluded to belonging to the Boston Natural History Society, presenting many of the above-mentioned characters. It is branched, but whether cespi- tose or fruticose is not deter minable from the specimen. The branches are from one-half to three-quarters of an inch thick, and are unevenly covered with very stout calicles one and a half to three lines long, appearing smooth and not at all striate, having a thick lip and a small circular aperture very neatly stellate. The summits of some of the branchlets are acervately proliferous, like the acervata, and terminate in two or more large and stout scarcely exsert calicles ; but the lateral calicles are larger, and have not the exterior striate. (Madrepora albida digitata of Gualtieri, figured in his index, on back of title page to part third.) 30. MADREPORA. RETUSA. (Dana.) M. cespitosa, pumila, convexa, ramulis digitiformibus, \" crassis, <2\" longis, non teretibus, apice truncatis. Corattum caliculis lateralibus confertis, apiceque ramulorum acervatis, valde inczqualibus, aliis 3'" longis, aliis sparsis obsoletis, appresso-tubiformibus et tenuibus, labio elongatis, extus kvibus ; apertura scepe oblongd, stelld vix conspicua. Cespitose, small, convex, branchlets digitiform, £ an inch thick, 24 inches long, not terete, truncate at summit. Corallum having the lateral calicles crowded and acervate at the summit of the branchlets, very unequal, some 3 lines long and others obsolete interspersed, appressed-tubiform and slender, lip elongate, exterior smooth ; aperture often oblong, star scarcely distinct. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen in the collections is a small clump about four inches high and as many broad, consisting of a few irregular digitiform branches rising from a common base. The species is remarkable for TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 463 its unequal, tubiform, thin, though not fragile, calicles, and the flat- tened obtuse summits of the branches consisting of numerous crowded calicles, among which the apical calicle is sometimes with difficulty distinguished. It has the general habit of the plantaginea. C. Fastigiatce ; caliculis breviter orbiculato-nariformibus, subvalidis ; ramis tenuiter valdeque subdivisis. 31. MADREPORA RAMICULOSA. (Dana.} M. subfastigiata, stride ramosa et valde ramiculosa, ramiculis, creberri- mis, subteretibus, 1^-2'" crassis. Corallum vix porosum, kve; cali- culo apicali fere 2'" exserto et 1'" scepe latiore ; later alibus y remotis, breviter orbiculato-narifarmibus, subvalidis, ramorum cettis immersis cum stelld conspicua. Subfastigiate, close ramose, and very minutely subdivided into branchlets ; ramicles much crowded, subterete, 1£ to 2 lines thick. Corallum slightly porous, smooth ; apical calicle nearly 2 lines pro- minent, and often over a line in breadth ; the lateral, remote, short, round-nariform, rather stout; cells of the branches immersed, and having a very distinct star. Plate 35, fig. 4, part of a branch of corallum, natural size ; 4 a, ex- tremity of a branchlet, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. Forms spreading clumps, very much subdivided into slender branch- lets, and constituting together a zoophyte with an even top, or a little convex. The small calicles upon the upper branchlets are remote, and occasionally in short series. Upon the lower exterior branchlets of the clump, the calicles are nearly or quite obsolete. Under the microscope the surface appears very finely spinuloso-striate, and scarcely porous. One of the specimens obtained is about eight inches high, and a foot broad above, and is somewhat turbinate in shape, with the top a little convex. 464 ZOOPHYTES. D. M. arborescentes, ramis ramiculos proliferos regulariter undique gerentibus. 32. MADREPORA ECHINATA. (Dana.} M. arborescens, late remoteque ramosa, ramis £-|" crassis, ramiculos polypiferos capiUares undique crebroque gerentibus. Corattum rami- culis capillaribus echinatum, super fide vix porosum ; ramiculis calicu- latis tubulatis et vix j|" longis, levibus, caliculis singulis £-|" longis et %'" latis; stelld sex-radiatd bene conspicud. Arborescent, spreading, and remotely ramose, branches £ to J of an inch thick, and covered evenly and crowdedly with capillary polyp- bearing ramicles. Corallum with the surface scarcely porous ; ramicles nearly | of an inch long, and consisting of a few thin and smooth tubiform calicles; single calicles J to J of an inch long, and f of a line broad, star six-rayed, and very distinct. Plate 36, fig. 1, corallum, natural size; 1 a, one of the ramiculi. Feejee Islands, and Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. The branches are very neatly bristled with the delicate branchlets, and thus covered, have an even cylindrical outline, and are about two inches in diameter. The whole zoophyte is sometimes two feet in height, and is but sparingly branched, the branches being often six inches long. 33. MADREPORA CARDUUS. (Dana.) M. arborescens, echinatae affinis, ramis superne stride subdivisis, rami- culis lateralibus polypiferis longioribus (1"), et crassioribus (1-2"'). Corallum ramiculorum caliculo apicali tubiformi 1-1^'" longo, cali- culis lateralibus appresso tubiformibus et orbiculato-nariformibus. Arborescent, near the echinata in habit, branches above, very closely subdivided, lateral polypiferous ramicles longer (1 inch), and stouter (1 to 2 lines). Corallum with the tubiform apical calicle of the ramicles 1 to \\ lines long; the lateral calicles appressed-tubiform, or round-nariform. TRIBE III— MADREPORACEA. 465 Plate 36, fig. 2, corallum, natural size; 2 a, branchlets, ditto. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species resembles the echinata in habit ; but the lateral branch- lets that surround and bristle the branches, make them from two and a half to three inches in diameter, and the calicles which compose them are also much shorter. The branches are subdivided above, into a number of very close ascending branchlets. The surface of the calicles is very finely striate The specimens in the collections are eighteen inches in height, with a breadth of 2£ to 3 inches below, and widening above, where the branch subdivides, to 6 inches. 34. MADREPORA ROSARIA. (Dana.) M. rectt arborescens, caulibus supra stride subdivisis, et lateraliter un- dique ramiculosis, ramiculis creberrimis, valde obtusis, 3-4'" usque ad apicem crassis, subteretibus, scepe proliferis. Corallum ramiculo- rum caliculo apicali grandi (l-l£"' crasso), paululum exserto; latera- libus validis, breviter nariformibus, compressis, striatis, interdum subseriatis, stelld 12-radiatd conspicua. Erect arborescent, stem above closely subdivided, and throughout laterally ramiculose ; ramicles much crowded, very obtuse, 3 to 4 lines thick even at apex, subterete, often proliferous. Corallum having the apical calicles of the ramicles large (1 to l£ lines broad), a little exsert; the lateral stout, short, and compressed-nariform, striated, sometimes subseriate ; star 12-rayed, distinct. Plate 36, fig. 3, corallum, natural size ; 3 a, branchlet, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The crowded ramicles are so evenly clustered around the erect stem that the whole has a cylindrical shape, and is about fifteen inches high and four in diameter. The lateral calicles have a very thick margin, and many of them are proliferous. The ramicles are about as large at the obtuse apex as below, and the cluster of calicles which constitutes the extremity has a rosette appearance. 117 466 ZOOPHYTES. 35. MADREPORA FLORIDA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, maxima, late remoteque ramosa, ramis \\" crassis, sensim attenuatis, acervos polypiferos parvulos undique gerentibus. Corallum acervis caliculatis J" latis, caliculis incequalibus, tubifor- mibus valde brevibus, et incrassatis, striatis, aliis tubo-nariformibus, cellis immersis interspersis ; stelld sex-radiata conspicua, duabus lamellis non prominulioribus. Arborescent, very large, broad and remotely ramose, branches \\ inches thick, gradually tapering, bearing over the surface small .clusters of polyps. Corallum covered with calicular tubercles J of an inch broad, calicles unequal, very short tubiform, rather stout, striated; some tubo-nariform, with immersed cells interspersed; star 6-rayed, distinct, two of the lamellae not more prominent. Plate 37, fig. 1, corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen obtained at the Feejees is a very stout branch, eighteen inches high. The calicular tubercles or rosettes consist in general of six to ten very short calicles ; arid as they cover regularly the whole surface, they give a neat appearance to the corallum. Be- tween these rosettes, the cells are mostly immersed. E. Arborescentes, aut fruticosce, ramis inequaliter vel baud proliferis. I. Caliculis fragilibus, labcttatis, orbiculato-nariformibus, aut tubiformibus. 36. MADREPORA IMPLICATA. (Dana.) M. cespitoso-arborescens, stride ramosa, ramis confertis, curvatis et tor- tuose implicatis, scepe coalitis, tenuiter attenuatis, cauKbus crassitudine £", ramulis «". Corallum scabriculum, ports lineatis notatum, caliculo apicali cylindrico, $"' crasso ; later alibus, infra obsoletis, prope apicem brevibus et sparsis, orbiculato-nariformibus, fragilibus ; stelld obso- kscente. Cespitoso-arborescent, closely ramose, branches crowded, curved, and TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 45? tortuously entangled, often coalescing, slenderly attenuate ; stems £ of an inch thick, branchlets } of an inch. Corallum scabrous and striated with linear pores; apical calicle cylindrical, 4 of a line in diameter; the lateral obsolete below two inches from the summit, above this, short, round, nariform, and fragile, scattered ; star obso- lescent. Plate 37, fig. 2, part .of corallum, natural size ; 2 a, part of section of branch, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species forms crowded clumps six or eight inches high, con- sisting of slender tortuous branches and branchlets, bare of calicles except within one and a half to two inches of the summit. It resem- bles the tortuosa, but is more slender, more coalescent, and differs in the character of the surface and the calicles. The linear pores give rise to a wavingly striated surface. 37. MADREPORA TORTUOSA. (Dana.) M. cespitoso-arborescens, stride ramosa, ramis confertis, sape coalitis, paulo tortuosis, inferne, J" crassis, ramulis sape 2" longis et 2-4'" crassis, acuminatis et subacutis. Corallum scabriculum, non stria- turn; caliculo apicali |'" longo et lato ; lateralibus infra obsoletis, supra breviter orUculato-nariformibus, fragilibus, stelld obsokscente, duabus lameUis paululo prominulioribus. Cespitoso-arborescent, close-ramose, branches crowded, often coalesc- ing, a little tortuous, below, £ an inch thick, branchlets often 2 inches long, and 2 to 4 lines thick, acuminate and subacute. Co- rallum having the surface scabrous, but not at all striate; apical calicle f of a line long and broad ; the lateral below 3 inches obso- lete ; above, short round-nariform, fragile ; star obsolescent, two of the lamellae but slightly prominent. Plate 37, fig. 3, part of corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The clumps of this species resemble those of the implicata, and are 468 ZOOPHYTES. of the same height. A specimen in the collections is eight inches high and five broad. The calicles are irregular in position, opening sometimes outward and downward, as well as upward. The branch- lets taper gradually to a subacute apex. A fragment of the top of a branch resembles somewhat the corallum of the M. scabricula; but the apical calicle is very much smaller, and does not exceed in size the lateral calicles. 38. MADREPORA ASPERA. (Dana.} M. aborescens late ramosa, ramis terelibus, £" crassis, apice conicis, pro- liferis. Corallum porosissimum, scabriculum ; caliculo apicali crasso (!&"')> prominulo ; lateralibus, breviter labellatis, fragilibus, divarica- tis, non confertis, multis obsoletis, cellis grandibus, stettd brevissima, duabus lamettis latioribus. Arborescent, spreading, ramose, branches terete, £ an inch thick, summits conical and proliferous. Corallum quite porous, surface scabrous; apical calicle stout (l£ lines) a little prominent; the lateral short labellate, fragile, divaricate, not crowded, many obso- lete, cells quite large, star very short-rayed, two of the lamellse prominent. Plate 38, fig. 1, branch, natural size; 1 a, polyp, enlarged; 1 b, part of section of branch, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The branches, though terete, have a somewhat ragged appearance, owing to the unequal calicles. The immersed cells below are about half a line broad. The specimen is a fragment three inches in height. The fragile, labellate, lateral calicles, unequal, with some obsolete interspersed, and the very large apical calicle, and quite porous texture, are its more striking characters. 39. MADREPORA HEBES. (Dana.) M. arbor escens, late ramosa, apice prolifera, ramis bene teretibus, crassis, valde obtusis. Corallum caliculo apicali lalissimo TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 469 tumidulo, vix exserto; lateralibus confer tissimis, breviter labellatis cequalibus et divaricatis, fere J'" latis; stella subconspicud, duabus lamellis prominulioribus. Arborescent, spreading ramose, proliferous at apex; branches neatly terete, £ an inch thick, very obtuse. Corallum having the apical calicle very broad (1? to 2 lines), a little tumid, but scarcely exsert; the lateral very closely crowded, short labellate, equal and erect, nearly I of a line broad ; stars rather distinct, two of the lamellae most prominent. Plate 35, fig. 5, corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is remarkable for its very short and closely crowded calicles, each standing erect upon the sides of the branch, and all forming, together, an even surface. The obtuse apices and very large apical calicle, as well as the size of the branches, are other character- istics. In one specimen, the stem is a little curved, and it is possible that it may be part of a horizontally growing species, in which case it should rank near the prostrata. 40. MADREPORA EXIGUA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, late ramosa, gracilis, ramis teretibus, vix 3'" crassis, acuminatis, curvatis. Corallum caliculis lateralibus brevissimis, orbi- culato-nariformibus, vix £"' latis, paulo confertis, celld orbiculata, sex- radiatd, totidem duabus lamellis prominulioribus. Arborescent, spreading ramose, slender, branches terete, scarcely 3 lines thick, curved and acuminate. Corallum having the lateral calicles very short, round-nariform, hardly f of a line broad, a little crowded, cell round, six-rayed, sometimes two of the lamellse a little prominent. Plate 38, fig. 2, corallum, natural size; 2 a, extremity of a branch, ditto ; 2 b, profile of calicles. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. 118 470 ZOOPHYTES. This is a neat slender species, with very short calicles, the branches appearing almost naked. The specimen is about five inches high, and is sparingly branched. 41. MADREPORA CRIBRIPORA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, aut cespitoso-arborescens, late ramosa, ramis bene tereti- bus, 4-5'" crassis, ramulis longis (inter dum 3"), subacutis, attenuatis. Corallum scabriculum, porosissimum; caliculo apicali crasso (!-!£'"), prcebngo, striato; later alibus, brevissimv orbiculato-nariformibus, fra- gilibus, paulum confertis, celld aperta, stella obsolescente, lamella una interna conspicud. Arborescent or cespitoso-arborescent, spreading ramose, branches neatly terete, 4 to 5 lines thick, branchlets long (some 3 inches), attenuate, and subacute. Corallum scabrous, very porous; apical calicle stout (1 to 1£ lines), quite long, striate; the lateral very short, round-nari- form, fragile, a little crowded, cell open ; star obsolescent, one inner lamella prominent. Plate 31, fig. 1, zoophyte expanded, natural size; la, polyp en- larged; 1 b, extremity of branch of corallum; 1 c, surface of corallum, enlarged ; transverse section of branch, enlarged. Feejee Islands, about shallow parts of reefs. Exp. Exp. This is a neat species, growing in spreading branched clusters, with long and terete branches and branchlets, very short fragile calicles, and a long and large striated apical calicle. It is very porous and breaks easily. It was found on a portion of the reef near Rewa (Viti Lebu), where the waters are much freshened by the river which empties near, and was almost the only species occurring on that part of the reef. 42. MADREPORA GRAVIDA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, maxima, late remoteque ramosa, ramis crassimis (1-2") teretibus, apice sensim conicis, ramiculos semipollices conicos undique gerentibus. Corallum caliculo apicali lato (1-1J'") tumidulo, non TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 47] exserto; ramiculorum lateralibus parvulis et confertissimis, breviter labellatis et fragilibus ; aliis totis obsokscentibus. Arborescent, very large, spreading and distant ramose, branches very stout (1 to 2 inches), terete, summits gradually becoming conical, and sides covered with oblong conical ramiculi, ^ an inch in length. Corallum having the apical calicles broad (1 to l£ lines), a little tumid, but not prominent; the lateral calicles of the ramiculi quite small and very closely crowded, short labellate and fragile, the others throughout obsolescent. A large and stout species, with distant branches, remarkable for the incipient conical branchlets, which are rather thickly and evenly scattered over the surface, and the very short contiguous calicles. A specimen belongs to the East India Museum, at Salem, Massachu- setts, measuring two feet in length, and, where largest, two inches in diameter. 43. MADREPORA VIRGATA. (Dana.} M. gracittime arborescens, late remoteque ramosa, ramis vix $" crassis, valde elongatis, bene teretibus, et cequalibus, subarcuatis, polypis non proliferis. Corallum vix porosum, subtiliter granulosum ; caliculis lateralibus parvulis, subconfertis, prominulis, brevissime tubiformibus tenidbus, margine acutis, cella orbiculatd, stella breviter sex-radiatd, duabus lamettis prominulioribus. Slender arborescent, spreading and remotely ramose, branches scarcely £ an inch in diameter, very long, neatly terete and even, subarcu- ate, polyps not proliferous. Corallum scarcely porous, minutely granulous, lateral calicles small, rather crowded, very short and thin tubular, margin acute ; cell circular, star with six short rays, two a little the most prominent. Plate 39, fig. 1, corallum, natural size. The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is remarkable for its very neat cylindrical wand-like branches, but little porous, and its very small and short, nearly smooth, 472 ZOOPHYTES. thin-lipped, or obsolescent, calicles. The terminal branches are often six inches long, and are very gradually tapering. The specimen in the collections is fifteen inches high, and the lower eight inches are without a branch. 44. MADREPORA HORRIDA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, maxima, divaricate remoteque ramosa, ramis infra 1-2" crassis, fere teretibus, curvatis, sensim attenuatis, undique valde pro- lifer is, ramiculis divaricatis, l-2£" longis. Corallum Jiorride calicu- latum, scabriculum ; caliculo apicali tubiformi, non incrassato ; late- ralibus tenui-tubiformibus, divaricatis, totidem reflexis, valde incequa- libus, aliis J" longis, aliis sparsis obsolescentibus, aliis proliferis, extus striatis ; stelld sex-radiatd. Arborescent, very large, divaricately and remotely branched, branches below 1 to 2 inches thick, nearly terete, curved, gradually attenu- ate, throughout very proliferous, with divaricate ramiculi 1 to 2£ inches long. Corallum bristled with calicles and scabrous; apical calicle tubiform, not incrassate; the lateral, thin-tubiform, divari- cate, and sometimes reversed ; very unequal, some J of an inch long, others interspersed obsolescent, others proliferous ; star six- rayed. Plate 39, fig. 2, corallum, natural size ; 2 a, extremity of branch, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is remarkable for its size, and its few large and long branches, bristled with unequal tubiform calicles and short branchlets, which stand out on all sides nearly at right angles with the surface. The specimen in the collections is a branch sixteen inches high, bearing three or four lateral branches, and is but a part of the whole zoophyte; it is nearly two inches thick at base, and gradually dimi- nishes upward. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 473 II. Calicidis validis; tubiformibus, dimidiatis aut nariformibus. 45. MADREPORA FORMOSA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, gracilis, late valdeque ramosa, ramis viz bene teretibus, 3-6'" crassis, ramulis curvatis, attenuatis, proliferis. Corallum leve, caliculo apicalifere $'" crasso et 1'" exserto ; lateralibus erectis, tenui- tubiformibus, validis, 1-1 £"' longis, vix confertis apice rotundatis ; infra minoribus sed nuttis obsoktis, aperturd minutissima orbiculata, stella conspicua. Arborescent, spreading, and much ramose, slender; branches scarcely terete, 3 to 6 lines thick, branchlets curved, alternate, proliferous. Corallum smooth, apical calicle nearly -J of a line broad, and 1 line exsert; the lateral, small, erect, and stout tubiform, erect, 1-1£ lines long, scarcely crowded, rounded at summit; below much smaller, but none obsolete; cell very minute and circular; star distinct. Plate 38, fig. 4, corallum, natural size; 4 a, extremity of branch; plate 31, figs. 2 a, 2 b, views of calicle, enlarged. Feejee Islands, and Sooloo Sea, East Indies. Exp. Exp. This species is one of the neatest and most graceful of the arbores- cent corals. It is distinguished by its rather crowded branchings, smooth surface, and small tubiform calicles. It resembles, somewhat, the brachiala, but is smaller and more ramose, and has a circular aper- ture to the cells. It is very near the gracilis in general appearance and size ; but has not the nariform calicles of that species. The tiny trees are fifteen to eighteen inches high, and nearly as broad, and the branches above are quite proliferous. Mad. muricata, Ellis and Solander, 171, tab. 57; Ellis's figure is a tolerably good representation of this species ; his description is as follows : " Ramulosa, ramulis attenu- atis, stellis prominentibus, cylindricis, oblique truncatis." The figure is referred by La- marck to the M. abrotanoides : but neither the figure nor description represent it as having immersed cells interspersed among the calicles. The figure of the Madrcjiont i>/(nitaginea of Quoy and Gaymard (Voy. de I'Ast., iv. 234, pi. 19, fig. 3), presents nearly the characters of the extremity of a branch in this species. The lleteropom Hcinprichii of Ehrenberg, from the Red Sea, is near Iheformosa, but has larger calicles and appears to grow differently. See op. cit. Gen. Ixix. sp. 6: "Semi- pedalis, brevius ramoso-cespitosa, subfastigiata aut irregularis, violacea, ramis undique 119 474 ZOOPHYTES. tubuloso-papillosis, tubulis cylindricis, bilincaribus, integris, apice obtusis, rotundatis et tenuiter perforatis, undique subtilissime denticulatis, obsolete aut non striatis, terminalibus li'" latis, majoribus." He states that Esper's tab. 52 is near this species. 46. MADREPORA BRACHIATA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, late remoteque ramosa, ramis longis, rectis, bene teretibus, 6-8'" crassis, ramulis extremis scepe 3" longis, apice parce proliferis. Corallum subleve, caliculis lateralibus, confertis, subcequalibus, erectis, tubiformibus, validis, compressis, oblique truncatis, extus subtiliter striatis, apertura oblongd, stelld conspicua, duabus lamettis prominen- tioribus. Arborescent, spreading, and remotely ramose; branches long, straight, neatly terete, 6 to 8 lines thick, upper branchlets often 3 inches long, apex sparingly proliferous. Corallum rather smooth, lateral calicles crowded, subequal, erect, compressed tubiform, stout, obliquely trun- cated at apex ; exterior very minutely striated, aperture oblong ; star distinct, two of the lamella much the most prominent. Plate 38, fig. 3, part of corallum, natural size; 3 a, extremity of branch ; 3 b, profile of calicle, natural size. The Sooloo Sea, East Indies. Exp.Exp. This species is remarkable for its long straight, evenly cylindrical branchings; and its crowded, compressed, tubular calicles, with an oblong aperture, erect, except near the apex. The surface of the corallum and calicles is smooth, nearly like that of the formosa ; in this character, and the oblong aperture of the cells, it differs from the arbuscula. 47. MADREPORA ARBUSCULA. (Dana.) M. arborescens, late ramosa, ramis teretibus, 6-9'" crassis, ramulis ex- tremis scepe 3" langioribus, arcuatis, sensim attenuatis. Corallum scabriculum, caliculo apicali latissimo (1J'"), exserto, celld J'" latdj lateralibus cequalibus, subconfertis, tubiformibus, striatis oblique pau- lum truncatis, erectis, non compressis, !-!£'" longis sedramorum latere inferiore brevissimis ; stelld valde conspicua. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 475 Arborescent, spreading ramose, branches terete, 6 to 9 lines thick, upper branchlets often more than 3 inches long, arcuate, gradually attenuate. Corallum somewhat scabrous, apical calicle quite broad (U lines), exsert, cell | a line broad; the lateral equal, rather crowded, tubiform, and striate, truncated at apex a little obliquely, erect, not compressed, 1 to 1^ lines long, but on the inferior side of the branches very short ; star very distinct. Plate 40, fig. 2, extremity of branch, natural size. Sooloo Sea, East Indies. Exp. Exp. This species closely resembles the secunda, differing principally from it in its tubular calicles. It has the wide-spreading branches of the cervicornis, and has probably been referred to that species, though smaller and different in its calicles. Madrepora muricata, Esper, Pflanz. Fortsetz. i. tab. 49. Esper states that his spe- cimen was brought from Madagascar. The figure is referred to the cervicornis by Lamarck. 48. MADREPORA ROBUSTA. (Dana.} M. arbwescens, late ramosa, ramis |-1" crassis, teretibus, ramulis ex- tremis vix minoribus, scepe 2-3" eiongatis, apice subito acuminatis et conicis. Corallum caliculo apicali crasso (1J'" lato], vix exserto; late- ralibus undique confertissimis et divaricatis, paulum incequalibus, sapius tuUformibus et !£"' longis, vix compressis, bene striatis, aliis minoribus apice valde obliquis ; stella sex-radiata conspicud, duabus lamettis prominulioribus. Arborescent, spreading ramose, branches f to 1 inch thick, terete, branchlets but little smaller, 2 to 3 inches long, abruptly taper- ing at apex and conical. Corallum having the apical calicles stout (1.3 lines broad), but slightly exsert; the lateral every where much crowded, standing erect on the surface, a little unequal, mostly tubiform, and lj lines long, scarcely compressed, neatly striate, the smaller very oblique at summit ; star 6-rayed, distinct, 2 of the rays most prominent. Plate 39, fig. 3, part of corallum, natural size ; 3 a, extremity of branch; plate 31, figs. 3 a, b, c, views of calicles, enlarged. 476 ZOOPHYTES. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. A stout species, remarkable for the short-conical extremities of the cylindrical branches, and the crowded unequal calicles, mostly tubi- form, and placed at right angles with the surface. The striatures of the calicles are neat and entire. The specimen in the collections is a branch six inches long. It resembles the brachiata, but differs in its stouter branches and branchlets, and its strongly striate calicles. The Heteropora cervicornis of Ehrenberg (op. cit. G. Ixix. sp. 10), which is far re- moved in its characters from Lamarck's cervicornis, a West India zoophyte, may be identical with the above species. 49. MADREPORA HYSTRIX. (Dana.) M. humilis,fruticosa, late ramosa, prolifera, ramis polypisque valde diva- ricatis, interdum reflexis. Corallum caliculo apicali oblongo lineam- que lato ; lateralibus incequalibus, 1^-4'" longis, sparsis, divarica- tis, tubiformibus, vel tubo-nariformibus, aliis obsolescentibus, aliis proliferis, subtilissimc scabro-striatis, totis validis sed margine non incrassatis. Low fruticose, spreading ramose, proliferous, branches and polyps very divaricate and sometimes reflexed. Corallum with the apical calicle oblong, a line broad ; the lateral unequal (H to 4 lines long), divaricate, scattered, tubiform or tubo-riariform, some obsolescent, some proliferous, very finely scabro-striate, stout, but margin not thick. Plate 40, fig. 1, corallum, natural size; plate 31, figs. 5, 5 a, view of calicle and cell, enlarged. Feejee Islands. The divaricate branches and the calicles standing at right angles with the branches or even reversed, varying much in length to a third of an inch, give a bristled aspect to the clump. Independent of the calicles, the branchlets are hardly more than a sixth of an inch thick, and the branches at base about half an inch. The specimens in the collections are four to five inches high, and five to six inches broad, and consist of several branched stems from the same base. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 477 50. MADREPORA DIVARICATA. (Dana.} M. fruticose arborescens, late valdeque ramosa, paulum prolifera, ramis divaricatis, arcuatis, subteretibus, |" crassis, ramulis extremis attenu- atis, 4-6'" crassis. Corattum leve ; caliculo apicali crasso (!£'"), ex- serto; later alibus remotis, validissimis, divaricatis, vix striatis, plerum- que ekngato-tubiformibus ('2'"), paucis gran dioribus proliferis ; multis brevibus et orbiculato-nariformibus ; stella inter dum conspicud, duabus lamellis prominulioribus. Shrubby arborescent, much and spreading ramose, a little proliferous; branches divaricate, arcuate, subterete, § of an inch thick ; branch- lets attenuate. 4 to 6 lines thick. Corallum smooth; apical calicle large (1| lines broad), exsert; the lateral remote, divaricate, very stout, scarcely striate, some long-tubiforrn (2 lines long), a few larger and proliferous, many short and round-nariform ; star some- times distinct, with two of the lamellae most prominent. Plate 41, fig. 2, part of corallum, natural size; 2 a, extremity of branch. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen of this species in the collections is a much-branched clump, about eight inches high and ten broad, remarkable for the re- moteness, inequality, and stoutness of its calicles, which give the branches an uneven appearance. The larger tubiform calicles are from a line to a line and a half in diameter, and are placed nearly at right angles with the branch. The cells are all very large; those in the smaller obsolescent calicles are about two-thirds of a line broad, and contain a distinct star of six rays. The surface of the calicles is scarcely striate, though harsh to the feel. 51. MADREPORA ABROTANOIDES. (Lamarck.} M. fruticosa, late ramosa, ramis vix teretibus, £-§" crassis, ramulis extremis 3-4'" crassis, arcuatis et pyramidato-attenuatis, valde brevi- terque proliferis. Corallum subleve, caliculo apicali 1"' lato, exserto ; lateralibus confertis, compresso-tubiformibus et tubo-nariformibus ; 120 478 ZOOPHYTES. margine crassis, valde incequalibus, multis proliferis, multis sparsis obsokscentibus, aliis 2'" longis, et !"' crassis, vix striatis ; apertura oblonga, stella conspicua, duabus lamellis prominulioribus. Fruticose, spreading ramose, branches scarcely terete, £ to § of an inch thick, summit branchlets 3 to 4 lines thick, arcuate and pyra- midato-attenuate, very proliferous, with short and unequal incipient branchlets. Corallum nearly smooth ; apical calicle a line broad, exsert; the lateral, crowded, compressed, tubiform or tubo-nariform, with the margin stout, very unequal, many proliferous, many obso- lescent; others 2 lines long and f of a line thick, scarcely striate ; aperture oblong, star distinct, two of the lamellae most prominent. Plate 41, fig. 1, part of corallum, natural size; 1 a, extremity of branch. Feejee Islands ? Exp. Exp. This species grows in clumps of much-branched stems, with the branches quite uneven from the unequal calicles and short incipient branchlets. The calicles are stout and have a nearly smooth exterior ; though very unequal, none are wholly obsolete; the surface is scarcely striated. The specimen in the collections is a broad clump ten inches high. Mad. abrotanoides, Lamk., ii. 448, No. 7. The Madrepora abrotanoides, of Quoy and , Blainville, Man., 390. Gaymard (Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 232, pi. The Heteropora abrotanoides of Ehrenberg, 19, figs. 1, 2), is probably a different (G. Ixix. sp. 19,) is another species. species. 52. MADREPORA AUSTERA. (Dana.) M. fruticosa, late ramosa, et valde prolifera, r amis fere teretibus, et supra attenuatis, ramulis incequalibus polypisque proliferis numerosis. Corallum scabriculum, caliculo apicali crasso (1-1 i'"), exserto ; late- ralibus ascendentibus, subconfertis, tulriformibus, out tubo-nariformi- bus, l-2£"' longis, aspere striatis; apertura orbiculata, stella profunda conspicua, sex-radiatd, duabus lamellis prominulioribus. Fruticose, spreading ramose, and very proliferous, branches nearly terete, and tapering above, with numerous unequal lateral branch- TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 479 lets and proliferous polyps. Corallum scabrous; apical calicle stout (1 to li lines broad), exsert; the lateral ascending, rather crowded, tubiform and tubo-nariform, 1 to 2£ lines long, rough and striate; aperture circular, star distinct but deep, six-rayed, with two of the rays most prominent. Grows in clumps six inches or more in height, consisting of several arborescent stems from- the same base, all of which are very proli- ferous. The apical calicle is very large and stout ; the upper lateral are minute (less than half a line), and gradually increase downward, and become tubiform with an oblique apex, the aperture opening inward and upward. Others still larger are regularly tubiform and proliferous, and commence to form branchlets. The species is near the abrotanoides, but differs in its harsher surface and strongly striate calicles; moreover, obsolescent calicles are rare. 53. MADREPORA. CERVICORNIS. (Lamarck.) M. arborescens, maxima, late et remote ramosa, caule 1J-2" crassa, ramulis prcelongis, £-f " crassis, arcuatis, teretibus, sensim attenuatis. Corallum scabriculum, caliculo apicali crasso (Ji'"), elongato ; late- ralibus subcequalibus, or~biculato-nariformibm vix compressis, l£-2'" longis, fere 1'" crassis, valde striatis, margine non crasso, stelld con- spicua. Arborescent, very large, spreading and remotely ramose, below, lito 2 inches thick, branchlets very long, £ to § of an inch thick, arcuate, terete, gradually attenuate. Corallum scabrous, apical calicle stout (li lines), and elongate; the lateral subequal, round-nariform, scarcely compressed, l£ to 2 lines long, and nearly a line in diame- ter, strongly striate, margin not thick, star distinct. West Indies. This is a common species in the West Indies, where it grows six feet or more in height, with wide-spreading arcuate branches, every where covered with stout prominent calicles. It differs from thepro- lifera in its larger size, more distant and arcuate branches, rarely pro- liferous, and the distinctness of the entire striae of the calicles. 480 ZOOPHYTES. Corattium album, porosum, maximum, mu- The Heteropora cervicornis, of Ehrenberg, ricatum, Sloane, Jam., i., tab. 18, fig. 3. (op. cit., sp. 10) is a Red Sea species, Corallium cornu cerwm'/-™<>s, porous and fragile. This group is included by Lamarck and Ehrenberg along with the genus Porites, excepting two or three species, which are placed by the former in the genera Agaricia, Millepora, and Explanaria. Blain- ville is the only author who has formed for any of them a distinct genus; and this — Montipora — is based upon an unimportant character, the presence of verrucas over the surface (to which his name alludes), and includes only a small part of the Manoporae. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 491 Arrangement of the Species. I. Short tubiform calicles, more or less angular, surface not papillose. *1. M. gemmulata. *3. M. caliculata. *2. M. lichen. II. No distinct calicles ; surface of the coralla papilloso-asperate. a. Free foliaceous or subramose. *4. M. palmata. *9. M. hispida. 5. M. compressa. 10. M. foliosa. *6. M. crista-galli. *11. M. expansa. *7. M. spumosa. *12. M. grandifolia. 8. M. circumvallata. b. Glomerate, incrusting, but not subramose (except becoming so by incrusting other bodies). *13. M. effusa. *16. M. nodosa. 14. M. stilosa. *17. M. scabricula. 15. M. venosa. HI. Cells immersed ; surface of the coralla very uneven ; but not regularly papillose. *18. M. incrassata. *19. M. erosa. IV. Cells immersed ; surface of the coralla not spinuloso-asperate ; interstitial spaces prominent, or with rounded verrucos or long rugse. (Montiporae of Blainville.) *20. M. capitata. 24. M. verrucosa. 21. M. nudiceps. *25. M. tuberculosa. *22. M. lima. *26. M. planiuscula. 23. M. papillosa. V. Cells immersed, situated at the bottom of deep circular pits; surface of the coralla not verrucose or papillose. *27. M. foveolata. VI. Cells superficial, immersed, surface of the coralla evenly smooth, zoophytes branched. *28. M. digitata. *29. M. tortuosa. I. Manoporce caliculatce. 1. MANOPORA GEMMULATA. M. explanata, contorto-foliacea, Gemmiporce affinis, cespitosa ; foliis 1—1^'" crassis, caliculis sparsis, breviter subtubiformibus, cellis optime I2-radiatis, paulum ellipticis, centra ad fundum brevissime lineato ; superficie externa levi, non rugata. 492 ZOOPHYTES. Explanate, contorto-foliaceous, near a Gemmipora in habit; folia clustered into a broad clump ; thickness 1 to 1^ lines ; calicles scat- tered, short subtubiform ; cells very neatly 12-rayed, a little ellip- tical, the centre of the bottom a short thin line ; outer surface smooth and not wrinkled. This species is so near a Gemmipora in habit, that, excepting its twelve-rayed cells and smaller polyps, it would fall into that genus. It forms one of the transitions between these groups. The clumps are a foot broad and six inches high, and consist of gracefully clustered folia. The calicles are all regular, and differ thus from the larger part of the Manoporse ; they are about a sixteenth of an inch broad, and the cells are half a line in their longest diameter. Here, as well as in nume- rous other instances, the fact is pressed on the attention, that there are no such groups as genera in nature. The specimen belongs to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 2. MANOPORA LICHEN. (Dana.} M. incrustans, explanata, undata sen contorta et scepe lobata, fa" crassa. Corallum caliculis tubiformibus, brevissimis sen obsokscentibus, cellis 6-radiatis, intermediis interdum conspicuis. Incrusting explanate, much contorted and uneven, often lobed, fa of an inch thick. Corallum having very short or obsolescent tubiform calicles ; cells 6-rayed, with the intermediate rays sometimes dis- tinct. Tahiti, Society Islands (?). Exp. Exp. In the surface of the corallum, this species resembles the caliculata, but it differs in being thin explanate, and in having the calicles less angular, with the cells one-half smaller. The folia were not clustered as in the gemmulata, and the cells are smaller and 6-rayed. 3. MANOPORA CALICULATA. (Dana.} M. glomerata, subgibbosa. margine crasso et revoluto. Corallum poro- TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 493 sum, caliculis subtubiformibus, scepe angulatis, |'" latis, brevibus sen obsolescentibus, confertis; cellis \2-radiatis. Glomerate, subgibbous, with a thick revolute margin. Corallum porous ; calicles subtubiform, often angular, crowded, |- of a line broad, very short or obsolescent ; cells 12-rayed. Plate 44, fig. 1, corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. One specimen obtained at the Feejees, measures four inches by three in breadth, and was attached at centre by a short pedicel. Its thick- ness is about two inches at centre and half an inch at the margin; the margin appears as if folded under, and contains immersed cells below for half an inch. The length of the calicles above is scarcely half their breadth : they are much crowded arid angular, and give an uneven surface to the corallum. II. Caliculis nullis, coralli superficie spinuloso-asperd. a. Laxe foliacece aut subramosce. 4. MANOPORA PALMATA. (Dana.} M. pumila, ramosa, scepe irregulariter palmata, ramis valde compressis, raro subteretibus et stride digitalis, 2-3'" crassis; polypis pallide brunnescentibus, disco maculatis; tentaculis complanatis, alternis cceru- lescentibus, aliis brunnescentibus, macula pallida prope apicem. Co- rallum fragile, papilloso-asperatum ; cellis numerosis, 6-12-radiatis. Small; ramose, often irregularly palmate, branches much compressed, rarely terete and close digitate, two to three lines thick ; polyps of a pale brown colour, with the disk spotted, tentacles flattened, the alternate pale bluish or lilac, the others pale brown, with a whitish spot on the upper surface near the apex. Corallum fragile, papil- loso-asperate, cells numerous, 6 to 12-rayed. Plate 44, fig. 2, flabellate variety, natural size; 2 b, polyp, enlarged ; 2 c, cells, showing also the surface, magnified 12 diameters ; 2 d, sur- face of corallum, natural size ; 2 e, transverse section of a branch mag- 124 494 ZOOPHYTES. nified 3 diameters ; 2 f, part of a transverse section, enlarged 12 diameters ; fig. 2 a, another variety. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This is a small fragile ramose species, either spreading palmate, and obtuse, or divided into several crowded nearly terete branchlets, often tapering to a point. The cells are about one-fifth of a line in diameter, and the papilla one-third of a line in length. Figure 3 of the same plate, represents a specimen which is much more compact than the above, but is probably only a variety of it. 5. MANOPORA COMPRESSA. (Linn.} Dana. M. caukscens, ramosa, subdichotoma et kbata, compressiuscula. Co- rallum fragile, granuloso-asperum ; cellis undique prominulis, scdbris, stellatis, pkrumque Q-radiatis. Caulescent ramose, subdichotomous and lobate ; somewhat com- pressed. Corallum fragile, granuloso-asperate ; cells every where a little prominent, scabrous, stellate, and generally with 6 rays. Mediterranean Sea? Corallium asperum, &c., Marsilli, Hist. figure the branches are half an inch wide, Phys., 143, tab. 31, fig. 149, and tab. with the sides irregularly lobed. The 32. figs. 150, 151. The specimen was six-rayed cells and granulous surface are from near Marseilles, off the shores of represented in his figure 3. Riou. The branches are from one- This species is united by Lamarck, Ehren- quarter to one-half an inch wide, and berg, and others, with the " l\Ii/lej>ora are described as rough-granulous like aspera," which differs decidedly in its shagreen. " poris fissis," and has been made into Millepora compressa, Linn., ed. xii. 1283. the new genus Errina, by Gray. , Esper, i. 203, tab. 10. In Esper's 6. MANOPORA CRISTA-GALLI. (H. 4- Ehrenberg.) Dana. M. arrecto-subcespitosa, incise lobata, compressa, angulosa vel ahta, kbis S(spe cultratis. Corallum fragik, super fide partim spinukso-aspera ; cellis per spinuks raro obvattalis, conspicue Q-radiatis, cristis non celliferis. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 495 Erect-subcespitose, inciso-lobate, compressed, angular and alate, lobes often cultrate. Corallum fragile, surface partly spinuloso-asperate, cells rarely bordered by papillae, very distinctly 6-rayed; crests without cells. Plate 46, fig. 1, part of corallum, natural size. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. — Singapore. Exp. Exp. The clumps are often a foot high and the same in breadth, and consist of erect thin lamellate branches, having a sharp edge above ; they are often vertically winged. The cells are generally nearly naked ; but occasionally there are a few minute spinuliform papillae about them, which sometimes run into thin longitudinal ridges. The cells are one-third to one-half a line broad. Under the microscope the surface is very neatly laciniate-porous, or consists of mossy points about the pores. 7. MANOPORA SPUMOSA. (Lamarck.} Dana. M. arrecto-subcespitosa, gibboso-subramosa, lobis brevibus, crassis, scepe tubercutato-gibbosis, raro angulosis, apice interdum subclavato. Co- rallum fragile, confertim spinuloso-asperum, apice papillis crassioribus et obtusis ; cellis immersis, margine non tumidis, stetta 6-12-radiatd. Subcespitose, erect, gibboso-subramose, lobes short, stout, often tuber- culato-gibbous, rarely angular, sometimes subclavate at summit. Corallum fragile, crowdedly spinuloso-asperate, papillse at apex much stouter than elsewhere and obtuse ; cells immersed, margin not tumid, star 6 to 12-rayed. Plate 44, fig. 4, corallum, natural size. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. — Red Sea. Ehrenberg. A coarse stout species, growing erect ; the stems are very thick and irregular, often coalescing laterally, find have tuberculate ascending lobes rather than branchlets. The summits are usually a little angu- lar, with stout papilla? or irregular incipient ridges, instead of spines. The spines of the lateral surface are crowded and slender, and about a line long. The cells have usually more than six rays. Under the 496 ZOOPHYTES. microscope the surface appears fine mossy granulous, but not very distinctly porous. The species resembles the hispida, but differs in the larger obtuse papillae of the summits, and does not appear to be foliaceous at base. The specimen in the collections is ten inches high, and eight broad. Porites spiimosa, Lamarck, ii. 440, No. 16. pedalis, cespitosa, ramuloso-subfoliacea, TheM. P. spongiosaot Ehrenberg(op. cit., multilobata, ramulis angulosis, compres- Gen. Ixx. sp. 4), with which he makes sis, apice dilatatis, subcristatis lobatisque, the spumosa synonymous, is probably a stellulis immersis, sexangularibus, mar- different species ; he refers to Savigny's gine tumido, superficie ubique setuloso- figure, pi. 4, fig. 4, but describes it with hispida, spongiosa, j'" latis." Red Sea. other characters, as follows : " Semi- 8. MANOPORA CIRCUMVALLATA. (H. 4- Ehreriberg.} Dana. M. cespitosa, semipedalis, ramulosa, irregularis, ramulis angulosis, irre- gularibus, lobato-ramulosis, apice rotundatis, nee cristatis. Corallum cellis incequahbus, confertis, margine lobato (quadrilobato) subinfundi- buliformi circumvallatis, interstitiis setulose asperis. Cespitose, half a foot high, irregularly ramulose, branchlets angular, irregular, lobato-ramulose, rounded at summit and not crested. Co- rallum having the cells unequal, crowded, bordered by a lobed (quadrilobate) margin, making it subinfundibuliform ; interstices setu loso-asperate. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. M. Porites drcumvallata, H. & Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen., Ixx. sp. 5. 9. MANOPORA HISPIDA. (Dana.} M. base late foliato-explanata, parum convexa et margine sublobata aut undulata, et £" crassa, supra paucis caulibus crassimis, erectis, gibbosis et tuberosis, nunquam angulatis. Corallum fragile, undique usque ad apicem, dense spinuloso-asperum, spinulis fragilibus, 1'" longis ; cettis immersis J'" latis, valde stellatis, Q-radiatis ; superjicie inferna nuda. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 497 Broad foliato-explanate at base, a little convex, with a somewhat lobed or undulated margin, and J of an inch thick ; bearing above a few very stout erect stems, gibbously divided and tuberose, never an- gular. Corallum fragile, every where densely spinuloso-asperate, even over the summits; spinules slender and fragile, a line long; cells immersed, ^ of a line broad, very distinctly 6-rayed ; under surface of the corallum naked. Plate 44, fig. 5, corallum, natural size. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. The foliate base in the specimen collected, measures fourteen inches by nine in breadth, and one of the glomerate branches rising from the upper surface is six inches high, and, where thickest, nearly three inches through. They are often smaller at base than some distance above. The coral is very porous and covered quite evenly with the spmuliform papilla? as well at apex as elsewhere. Porites spumosa, in part, of Lamarck, ii. 440. 10. MANOPORA FOLIOSA. (Ehrenberg.) Dana. M. explanata, concava, nunc convoluto-foliacea, nunc tuberculoso-subra- mosa, scepius crispa. Corallum porosum, spinuloso-asperum, cettis exiguis, incequalibus, obvallatis, interdum tubuli instar ; superfaie inferno, plana, (zquabili. Explanate, concave, either convoluted-foliate, or tuberculoso-subra- mose, usually crispate. Corallum porous, spinuloso-asperate; cells minute, unequal, surrounded by a prominent border, and sometimes subtubular ; under surface plane and nearly even. The Red Sea. Ehrenberg. This species, as described by Ehrenberg, resembles the hispida ; but differs in its obvallate cells, its more commonly foliaceous forms, concave above instead of convex. M. Porites foliosa, Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixx., sp. 13. The Madrepora patiniformis of Esper (Pflanz. Fortsetz. i. 94, tab. 75, figs. 1, 2, 3, and 56, figs. 1, 2), is either identical with this species or still another Manopora. It is described by Esper as occurring in broad, concave, explanate, or foliaceous forms, with 125 498 ZOOPHYTES. a plicate margin. The fronds are porous, yet so firm as to ring when struck ; they arc mostly half an inch thick, but thin out to an edge one-sixth of an inch thick. The upper surface is covered with minute scabrous conical spines, and finely reticulate with meandering ridgelets partially enclosing the cells. The under surface is plicate, but nearly smooth, with numerous immersed cells for two and a half inches from the margin, and occasionally one a little raised. The cells above are six-rayed. The species was received by Esper, from the East Indies. The Madrepora foliosa of Pallas, and Forties rosacea of Lamarck and other authors, are imperfectly known species. The foliosa, as figured by Ellis (Ellis and Solander, tab. 52), may be an Echinopora, and such also appears to be Pallas's species. Seba's Corattium infundibuliforme (Thes. iii., tab. 110, fig. 7), called M. foliosa, in Esper's work (tab. 58, A.), and placed by Lamarck as synonymous with rosacea, may be the M. lima (Agaricia lima, of Lamarck). 11. MANOPORA EXPANSA. (Dana.) M. tenui-foliacea (1J-2'" crassa), late effusa et stolonifera, scepe patini- formis, inter dum par tim incrustans, margine paula undulala, vixpli- cata; subtus 2" animata ; tentaculis albis tuber culiformibus. Coral- lum fragile, spinuloso-asperum, cettis minutis (fere £"' latis), scepe partim obvattatis; subtus caliculis tubiformibus, remotis, elongatis (3'") appressis, et cellis spar sis. Thin foliaceous, (1£ to 2 lines thick,) wide-spreading, and a little ascending, often broad dish-shape, sometimes incrusting in part; margin a little undulate, scarcely plicate ; below, alive for 2 inches from the edge; tentacles white, tuberculiform. Corallum fragile, spinuloso-asperate ; cells minute (nearly J of a line broad), often imperfectly obvallate ; below, a few distant, long (3 lines), tubiform calicles, close appressed to the folium, and also a few scattered cells. Plate 45, fig. 2, outline of a specimen, natural size ; 2 a, polyp, enlarged ; 2 a', natural size of the same ; 2 b, part of a folium, showing the upper and under surfaces ; 2 c, upper surface, with the cells magni- fied ; 2 d, transverse section, magnified twelve diameters. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. This species grows in wide-spreading fronds, attached often at centre, and having a broad dish-shape. The folia are brittle, and are rough above, with slender spinules scarcely a line long. The under surface for two inches or so is smooth, and contains a few distantly TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 499 scattered cells, and long tubular appressed calicles. This last-men- tioned character distinguishes the species from the patiniformis of Esper, and also from the following. The specimen in the collections measures sixteen inches by twelve in breadth, and six inches in height. 12. MANOPORA GRANDIFOLIA. (Dana.) M. tenui-foliacea (!£"' crassa},fere erecta, lata et subflabellata, margine pauci-lobata; extus 5-6" animata ; tentaculis complanatis, brevibus, lutescentibus, disco pallide cinereo, lineis 12 albis radiatim notato. Co- rallum fragile, spinuloso-asperum et expansae affine; cettis minutis (J'"); scepe sub-obvallatis ; subtus, caliculis brevissimis, confertis, mar- gine acutis. Thin, foliaceous (l£ lines thick), nearly erect, broad, and subflabellate ; margin sparingly lobed ; exterior alive for five or six inches from the edge ; tentacles flattened, short, yellowish ; disk pale ash-colour, and marked with 12 white radiating lines. Corallum fragile, spinu- loso-asperate, and resembling that of the expansa; cells minute (£ of a line), often imperfectly obvallate ; outer surface covered crowdedly with very short obsolescent calicles, having acute margins. Plate 45, fig. 1, natural size; 1 a, the animal enlarged; 1 a', the natural size of the same ; 1 b, upper and under surface of the corallum, natural size ; 1 c, upper surface, magnified ; 1 d, part of a transverse section of the corallum, magnified twelve diameters. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. The folia grow nearly erect, in clusters, and somewhat convoluted. In this respect, and in the cells of the exterior surface, the species differ decidedly from the expansa, although hardly distinguishable in the character of the upper surface. The polyps are quite different in form as well as colour. One of the specimens is fifteen inches high, and nine broad ; it is very thin and fragile throughout, and thus dif- fers from the patiniformis of Esper. 500 ZOOPHYTES. b. M. glomeratco aut incrustantes, nunquam benc foliaceae aut ramosae, (serpulas inter- dum tegentes, itaquc subramosse.) 13. MANOPORA EFFUSA. (Dana.) M. explanation incrustans, margine breviter libera; scepe serpulas ascen- dentes tegens, itaque ramosa, ramis tortuosis cylindricis, §" crassis. Corallum papilloso-asperum, spinulis £-1'" longis, interdum compres- sis et breviter confluentibus, ceUis £'" latis, 12-radiatis. Explanately incrusting, margin free for a short distance ; often cover- ing growing serpulas, and thus become ramose, with the branches tortuous, cylindrical, § of an inch thick. Corallum papilloso- asperate, spinules £ to 1 line long, some compressed, and for very short distances confluent ; cells £ of a line broad ; 12-rayed. Plate 46, fig. 4, corallum, natural size ; 4 a, view of surface, ditto. Tahiti, Society Islands. Exp. Exp. The corallum often consists of a series of plates partially united to- gether. The branches formed by incrustation are sometimes six inches long and of nearly uniform size. The margin of the spread- ing plate was free for two or three inches from the edges, thin and turned up; and the surface below was alive for a fourth of an inch, though without cells. The cells above are from a line to a line and a half apart, and in some parts, the confluent spinules form an imperfect septa between two or three cells, or partially encircle them. The corallum is very porous, except the under surface, which, as the animals desert it, is rendered quite compact. The Ezplanaria cristata of Peron and Lesueur, may belong near here, though a dif- ferent species. The concise description of it given, is as follows : " Partly incrusting, and in part plicato-cristate, rising into crests more or less plicate ; cells very minute, not pro- minent; under surface finely arenaceous, but not striate." Lamarck, ii. 400, sp. 6. 14. MANOPORA STILOSA. (H. $ Ehrenberg.} Dana. M. effusa, glomerata, incrustans, rubella, super -fide tuberculoso-conveza ; polypis kete violaceis, aut rubescentibus, disco lineis 12 albis violaceis TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 50 1 que notato, tentaculis 12, papilliformibus, minimis. Corallum aspe- rum, cellis exiguis (A'" latis), immersis, per lamellulas asperas circum- vallatis, interstitiis setosis, setis exiguis, asperis, obtusis, subcequalibus, juxta cellas lamellosis. Spreading glomerate, incrusting, reddish, surface convex and tuber- culous ; polyps bright violet, or verging towards red, disk marked with 12 white -and violet lines, tentacles 12, papilliform, minute. Corallum asperate ; cells minute (£ a line), immersed, surrounded by rough minute lamellae, interstices setose, setae slender, rough, obtuse, subequal, lamellate about the cells. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. The above characters are from Ehrenberg's description of this species. It is stated to grow to the size of half a foot. The species agrees nearly in the character of the surface with the effusa, but differs from it in its glomerate mode of growth. M. Parties stilosa, Ehrenberg, Gen. Ixx., sp. 14. 15. MANOPORA VENOSA. (H. 4- Ehrenberg.) Dana. M. effusa, glomerata, gibbosa. Corallum asperum, scabritie subtilissi- mum, cellis majoribus (!'" latis), margine calloso reticulatim con- juncto, inaquali, (itaque super fide cor alii venosd); stellis conspicue 12-radiatis. Spreading, glomerate, gibbous. Corallum rough with extremely minute points; cells quite large (1 line broad), with callous mar- gins, which are reticulately united and uneven, giving a venose appearance to the surface ; stars distinctly 12-rayed. M. Porites vetiosa, Ehrenberg, Gen. Ixx., sp. 15. 16. MANOPORA NODOSA. (Dana.) M. incrustans, glomerata, tuberculosa, tuberculis subconicis ; polypis pallide violaceis, tentaculis obsoktis, disco \Z-crenato, margine albo. 126 502 ZOOPHYTES. Corattum vix fragile, spinuloso-asperum, spinulis confer tissimis, vix $'" tongis, paulo compressis et obtusis ; cellis exiguis (i'"), 6-radiatis. Incrusting, glomerate; surface tuberculous, with the tubercles sub- conical; polyps pale lilac, tentacles obsolete, disk with 12 short crenations and a white margin. Corallum hardly fragile, spinuloso- asperate; spinules very much crowded, scarcely £ a line long, a little compressed and obtuse; cells minute (I of a line broad), 6- rayed. Plate 46, fig. 2, zoophyte, natural size ; 2 a, part of surface and polyps, enlarged ; 2 b, surface of corallum and cells, enlarged ; 2 c, transverse section, enlarged. Feejee Islands at Mathuata, Island of Venua Lebu. Exp. Exp. Forms thick tuberculate masses, with the tubercles mostly conical, and like rudimentary branches. The margin of the incrusting coral- lum is rather thin, and sometimes free for an inch or so ; it is a little turned up with the surface below smooth, and containing a few minute cells, which are slightly prominent. 17. MANOPOKA SCABRICULA. (Dana.} M. incrustans, glomerata, gibbosa, tuberculis super fide ; rotundatis ; po- lypis olivaceis, tentaculis obsoktis, disco 12-radiato, 6 alternis promi- nentioribus. Corallum non fragile, undique subtilissime spinuloso- asperum, spinulis vix £"' longis, et nunquam lamellosis ; cellis valde exiguis (}-£'"), 6-12-radiatis. Incrusting, glomerate, gibbous, with the tubercles of the surface rounded ; polyps olive-green, tentacles obsolete ; disk 12-rayed. with 6 alternate rays larger, and most prominent. Corallum rather firm, every where very minutely spinuloso-asperate, spinules scarcely s of a line long, and never lamellate ; cells very minute (| to | of a line broad), 6 to 12-rayed. Plate 46, fig. 3, zoophyte, natural size ; 3 a, part of surface with the polyps, enlarged ; 3 b, surface of corallum, enlarged ; 3 c, vertical sec- tion, ditto. TRIBE III. — MADREPORAC E'A. . 5Q3 Feejee Islands, Mathuata, Island of Venua Lebu. Exp. Exp. This species resembles the preceding, but is much more minutely spinulous, and the polyps are very different. The margin, moreover, is thick, and is folded under instead of being reflexed ; and the cells near the margin are entirely immersed. III. Cellis coralli immersis, superficie non lene papillosd, sed valde irregulari. 18. MANOPORA INCRASSATA. (Dana.) M. crasse explanata (J"), paulum undulata, parce lobata, superficie an- gulate salebrosa, et gibbosa. CoraUum vix fragile, non spinulosum, cellis numerosis, £'" latis, undique sparsis, interdum marginatis, 6-12- radiatis. Thick explanate (£ an inch), a little undulate, sparingly lobed ; sur- face angulately rough, or covered with very irregular polygonal prominences. Corallum hardly fragile, not spinulous, cells nume- rous, ^ of a line broad, every where scattered, some with an elevated margin, 6 to 12-rayed. Plate 47, fig. 1, corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The broad plates are half an inch thick, nearly flat, and have a very uneven hackly surface ; the angular prominences are from one to four lines high, but sometimes rise to an inch or two, with a breadth of an inch. The cells are rather large, and are about a line apart. The margin of the corallum is rounded ; below it is alive for an inch or two from the edge, with a smooth surface and numerous immersed cells. The Montipora verntcosa, of Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 247, pi. 20, fig. 11, may be identical with this species. The figure is a doubtful one. The Porites complanata, of Lamarck (ii. 439), is imperfectly described as follows, and may be near the above: "In laminam partim liberam explanata; superna superficie sub- undata, stellifera ; cellis exiguis, immarginatis." " Du voyage de Peron et Lesueur." 504 ZOOPHYTES. 19. MANOPORA EROSA. (Dana.) M. glomerato-ramosa, erecta, caulibus subangulosis, crassis, acervate, tuberculosis, erosis, obtusis. Corattum kve ; cellis immersis, undique ad apicem usque sparsis, stella 6-radiatd. Glomerato-ramose, erect, stems subangular, stout, acervately tuber- culous, erose, obtuse. Corallum without papillae, cells immersed, every where scattered, even at the summits; star 6-rayed. Plate 46, fig. 5, corallum, natural size; 5 a, vertical section, en- larged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. A rudely glomerato-ramose species growing in thick clumps, con- tracting and enlarging irregularly, and with a very uneven surface, porous, but not at all spinulous. The cell has a flaring aperture, and the star is situated rather deep within. It resembles the spumosa in its massive mode of branching, but differs widely in not being spinulous. The specimen in the collec- tions is six inches high and five broad, with the stems one-third of an inch to two or three inches through. It is incrusting below, but hardly foliaceous. IV. Cellis coralli immersis, superficie non spinuloso-asperd, sed crassl papillosd,, aut verrucosa aut longl rugosd. 20. MANOPORA CAPITATA. (Dana.) M. cespitoso-ramosa, ramis £-1" crassis, scepe irregulariter inflatis seu nodosis, et coalitis, apice rotundatis vel capitatis. Corallum undique usque ad apicem confertim papillosum, papillis oblongis, 4-1"' crassis, obtusis; cellis immersis, minutis. Cespitoso-ramose, branches £ to 1 inch thick, often irregularly inflated or nodose, and very frequently coalescing, rounded at apex or capi- tate. Corallum every where crowded ly papillose, even at apex, papillae oblong, £ to 1 line thick, obtuse ; cells immersed, minute. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 505 Plate 47, fig. 4, corallum, natural size. Sandwich Islands, Hawaii, Hido Bay. Exp. Exp. The clumps are a foot or more high, and consist of large and stout irregular branches much coalescing. At apex the branches are thick and rounded, the papillse are less porous than the interstices. The zoophyte is alive for two or three inches from the summit. 21. MANOPORA NUDICEPS. Dana. We notice under this name the specfes from the Red Sea, elegantly figured by Sa- vigny, in the large work on Egypt (Plate iv. fig. 4, of Zoophytes), which has many of the characters of the above, yet is quite distinct in its more crowded and much smaller branches (one-third of an inch thick), and their naked summits. This is the Madrepora abrotanoides of Audouin. 22. MANOPORA LIMA. (Lamarck.) Dana. M. late foliacea, subcucullata, extus 3" animata. Corallum vix fra- gile, supra, confertim rugosum, rugis tenuibus (vix %'"}> interdum reticulatis. Broad foliaceous, subcucullate, exterior alive for 3 inches or so. Co- rallum scarcely fragile, above, crowdedly rugose, rugae thin (hardly £ a line thick), sometimes reticulate. "Austral Seas." Peron 4- Lesueur. — Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. The cucullate folia are about one-eighth of an inch thick, and form clumps a foot or more in diameter. The thin prominent ridges of the surface are very uneven, scarcely half a line thick, and the intervals between, seldom broader. Corallium infundibuliforme, &c. (?), Seba, Agaricia lima, Lamarck, ii. 382, No. 6. iii. tab. HO, fig. 7. Montipora lima, Blainville, Man., 389. Madrepora foliosa (?), Esper, Fortsetz. i. tab. 58., A. 127 506 ZOOPHYTES. 23. MANOPORA PAPILLOSA. (Lamarck.} Dana. M.foliacea,frondibus subjlabellatis. Corallum superne papillosum, pa- pillis obtusis, rotundatis, 1'" crassis, ad marginem attenuatis, asperi- usculis, kngitudinaliter seriatis. Foliaceous, fronds subflabellate. Corallum above papillose, papillae obtuse, rounded, a line thick, attenuate towards the margin, longi- tudinally seriate. "Austral Seas." Peron 4- Lesueur. Agaricia papittosa, Lamarck, ii. 382, Montipora papillosa, Blainville, Man., 389, No. 5. pi. 61, fig. 2. 24. MANOPORA VERRUCOSA. (Lamarck.} Dana. M. undato-gibbosa, explanata. Corallum cellis immersis, profundis, in- terstitiis verrucosis, verrucis convexis, variis. Undato-gibbous, explanate. Corallum with deep immersed cells, in- terstices verruciferous, verruca? convex, and various in size. Lamarck states that this species forms broad undulate expansions, and has deep pocilliform cells radiated within and very small at bottom. The wart-like prominences or verrucse are sometimes quite large. Poritcs verrucosa, Lamk., ii. 439, No. 12. The M. verrucosa, of Quoy and Gaymard, Montipora verrucosa, Blainville, Man., 389, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 247, pi. 20, fig. 11, pi. 61, fig. 1. may belong here. 25. MANOPORA TUBERCULOSA. (Lamarck.) Dana. M. incrustans, rudis, indivisa. Corallum cellis exiguis, inter stitiis tuberculatis ; tuberculis echinatis, prominentibus, columniformibus, interdum in cottinas conjluentibus. Incrusting, irregular in form, not lobed. Corallum having the cells TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 507 minute, with the interstices tuberculate; tubercles echinate, promi- nent, columniform, sometimes confluent in ridges. A specimen allied to this species, yet possibly distinct, was obtained at the Feejee Islands, and is represented on plate 47, figure 2. It is a glomerate mass covered with large rounded tubercles (two to three lines broad), some oblong and curving, and others nearly hemisphe- rical. The cells are one-third of a line broad, and have a distinct star of six rays, with the six intermediate usually apparent. One specimen is three inches by four in breadth, and two to three thick. Figure 2 a represents the unexpanded animal ; 2 b, the interior structure in a cross section, magnified twelve times. Porites tuberculosa, Lamarck, ii. 439, No. 13. 26. MANOPORA PLANIUSCULA. (Dana.) M. glamerata, incntstans, superne planiuscula ; interstitiis 1-1 J'" latis, paulum convexis. Corallum porosum ; cellis prof undis, viz conspicue 12-radiatis. Glomerate, incrusting, nearly plane above; interstices 1 to l£ lines .broad, a little convex. Corallum porous; cells deep, rather in- distinctly 12-rayed. Plate 47, fig. 3, corallum, natural size; 3 a, vertical section, en- larged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. An incrusting species nearly one-third of an inch thick, distin- guished by the naked arid slightly convex interstices between the cells, seldom exceeding half a line in height. The cells are large and rather deeply seated. V. Cellis comlli in f undo favearum prof undarum immersis, interstitiis angustis, nudis. 27. MANOPORA FOVEOLATA. (Dana.} M. glomerata, incrustans, superne planiuscula, out undulata. Corallum 508 ZOOPHYTES. profunde foveolatum ; cellis radiatis in imis foveis dispositis, inter- stitiis tenuibus, interdum subacutis. Glomerate, in crusting, nearly plane or a little undulate above. Co- rallum profoundly alveolate, the radiated cells situated at the bottom of deep pits a line broad; interstices very thin and sometimes sub- acute. Probably the Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The pits of the surface are often subangular, and generally a line to a line and a half deep, and the cell at bottom is very distinctly twelve- rayed. The specimen in the collections is an incrusting mass, half an inch to three-quarters thick, and ten inches in breadth. VI. Cellis caralli immersis, superf.de omnino kvi, zoophytis ramosis. 28. MANOPORA DIGITATA. (Dana.} M. pumila, ramosa, scepe digitata, ramis subteretibus, compressiusculis, scepe tortuosis, \" crassis, subcequalibus, obtusis ; polypis flavis, tenta- culis brevibus, cequis. Corallum omnino leve, cellis immersis, «•'" latis. Small, ramose, often digitate, branches subterete, somewhat com- pressed, often tortuous, \ of an inch thick, subequal, obtuse; polyps yellow, tentacles short, equal. Corallum quite smooth, cells im- mersed, i of a line broad. Plate 48, fig. 1, zoophyte, natural size; la, polyp, enlarged; 1 b, extremity of branch, natural size ; 1 c, cell and surface around, en- larged ; 1 d, part of transverse section of branch, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen is a ramose stem, three and a half inches high, having numerous crowded branches, two inches or so in length. In its smooth surface, it resembles a Millepore, but the cells are not internally crossed by septa. Towards the extremities of the branches, each cell is the centre of an obsolete depression, a line in diameter, and the surface consequently is faintly pitted. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 509 29. MANOPORA TORTUOSA. (Dana.} M. ramosa, ramis scepe 4" longis, \" crassis, curvatis vel tortuosis, sub- teretibus, compressiusculis. Corallum omnino kve, cellis immersis, \'" latis. Ramose, branches- often 4 inches long, \ of an inch thick, curved or tortuous, subterete, somewhat compressed. Corallum quite smooth, cells immersed, J of a line broad. Plate 48, fig. 2, corallum, natural size. Singapore, East Indies. Exp. Exp. This species resembles the digitata, in its Mittepore habit and gene- ral size ; but the branches are much longer and less crowded, and the cells are larger. FAMILY II.— FAVOSITID^. Madreporacea polyporum basi seriatim coralligena, itaque cellis fundo solidis, et penitus, transverse septatis, aut raro solidescentibus ; calicu- lis nullis. Polyps intermittedly coralligenous at base, cells, therefore, solid at bottom, and within the corallum crossed by septa, or quite closed by the secretions ; calicles none. The polyps of the Favositidse, as far as examined, scarcely differ externally from the Madreporae, except that the tentacles are shorter. Their coral secretions are at once distinguished by the transverse septa, or cross-partitions of the cells, a structure exhibited when the interior is laid open by a cross-fracture. In a few slender species, these secretions seem to lose their intermittent character, or, if it is 128 510 ZOOPHYTES. continued, they go on to accumulate, till it is lost by a complete coalescence of all the depositions and a filling of the cell internally, thus rendering the coral quite solid within. This is the case with the Seriatoporae, and also with some of the smaller Pocilloporse, although the larger species of this last genus contain the septa as distinct and regular as the fossil Favosites. The cell is usually shallow, and is bordered around by six to twelve lamellae, generally entire and often quite narrow, or even obsolete : their size varies from a mere point to a line and a half. There are no prominent calicles, and only a few branching species have the upper side of the cell a little projecting. The FavositidfB grow in glomerate or massive forms, and in ramose shapes. The latter enlarge by the budding of a parent-cluster, and branching consequently takes place by furcation, producing crowded cespitose clumps, which are usually hemispherical in outline. In some species, the separate polyps are imperfectly coalescent, or are united laterally only by their non-secreting exterior integuments, and their secretions form separable columns or tubes. The corals of this family, in the present seas, are confined to the coral-reef latitudes, and the known species are from the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and seas adjoining. The Favositidse may be divided into three subfamilies: — I. ALVEOPORIN^;. — Cells contiguous, slenderly echinulate within ; parietes cribrate. II. FAVOSITIN^:. — Cells contiguous, at the summits at least; rays entire or obsolete. III. HELIOPORIN.E. — Cells in no part contiguous, circular. SUBFAMILY I.— ALVEOPORIN^. FavositidcB spongiose coralligence ; cellis angulatis, contiguis, intus tenui- ter echinulatis. Favositidse, forming spongy calcareous secretions ; cells angular, con- tiguous, internally slenderly echinulate. TRIBE II I. — MADREPORACEA. 511 GENUS I.— ALVEOPORA.— BLAINVILLE. Alveoporina glomeratce aut furcato-ramosce ; corallis spongiosis ; cellis contiguis parietibus tenuissimis et aperte cribratis ; septis transversis remotis. Glomerate or furcato-ramose ; coralla spongy ; cells contiguous, with the sides very thin, and thickly pierced with holes ; transverse septa remote. The Alveopone are either glomerate or ramose in their mode of growth, and attain a large size. The coralla are very light, and open cellular; and the parietes of the polygonal cells, as exhibited by a vertical section, look much like lace-work. The lamellaB of the cells are represented by a few slender points or spicula. The animals of the Alveopone were first accurately figured by Savigny, who found them prominent when expanded, with a circle of twelve tentacles around the mouth; though near the Porites in this respect, as well as in the porous corallum, yet the deeper cell, trace- able through the corallum, and its structure within, affiliates them more strongly to the species with which they are here associated. They are intermediate in character between the Manoporse on the one side, and the Favositinse on the other. They are confined to the coral- reef seas, and have been found only in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. The genus Alveopora was instituted by Blainville, for some of the Porites of Lamarck, and certain Pacific corals obtained by Quoy and Gaymard, in their celebrated voyage of discovery. The name is de- rived from the Latin alveum, a bee-hive. Arrangement of the Species. I. Glomerate. 1. A. retepora. *3. A. spongiosa. *2. A. dedalea. II. Branched. 4. A. rubra. 5. A. fenestrata. 512 ZOOPHYTES. 1. ALVEOPORA RETEPORA. (Ellis.) Blainville. A. glomerato-globosa. Corallum cellis angulatis, margine erecto, denti- culisque scabro. Glomerato-globose. Corallum with the cells angular, and having an erect margin, scabrous with minute teeth. The characters laid down for this species are insufficient to distin- guish it from some of the following. According to Ellis's figure, which is probably natural size, the cells are nearly a sixth of an inch in diameter, and in this large size the species is peculiar. The loca- lity is not given. Mad. retepora, Ellis and Solander, 166, Forties reticulata, Deslongchamps, Encyc., tab. 54, figs. 3, 4, 5. 651. Parties reticulata, Lamk., ii. 433, No. 1. Porites Peronii, Blainville, Diet, des Sci. , Lamour., Exp. Meth., 60, pi. 54, figs. Nat., xliii. pi. 39, fig. 3 ; and Alveopora 3, 4, 5. retepora, Man., 394, pi. 59, fig. 3. 2. ALVEOPORA DEDALEA. (Forskal) Blainvitte. A. lobato-glomerata, 2-3" animata ; polypis expansis rufo-fuscis aut cinerascentibus, tentaculis filiformibus ; contractis, ceruginoso-vires- centibus. Corallum tenerc spongiosum, cellis linearibus, raro latiori- bus, septis sursum spinulosis — itaque super fide tola hispidd. Lobato-glomerate ; expanded polyps, brownish-umber, or ash-coloured, tentacles filiform; when contracted, greenish-bronze. Corallum spongy and tender; cells a line in diameter, rarely wider, septa spinulous above, and the surface of the corallum, therefore, through- out hispid. Red Sea. Forskal, Savigny, and Ehrenberg. According to Savigny's beautiful figures in the great work on Egypt, the specimens are alive for about an inch and a half or two inches at top, and the holes of the cribrate parietes are scarcely wider than the intervals between them; and in both of these characters as well as its rather firmer texture, the species differs from \hespongiosa. In the collections of the Expedition there are specimens apparently TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 513 of this species, supposed to have been obtained at the Sandwich Islands. They have an inverted pyriform shape (plate 48, fig. 4), having been attached by the smaller end, are about two and a half inches high, and alive for one and a half inches. In the size of the cells and internal texture, they agree with the figure by Savigny. Below the live part, the surface is covered with an incrusting Nul- lipore, which advances upward as the animal dies. Mad. dedalca, Forskal, Anitn. Egyp., 133, Alcyonella SavigHii, Audouin, Explic. des tab. 37, fig. B ; the animal of this species planches de M. Savigny. was first imperfectly figured by Forskal. Forties dedalea, Ehrenb., G. Ixx., sp. 10. Madrepora, Savigny, PEgypte Pol., tab. Alvcopora dedalea, Blainv., Man., 394. 3, fig. 4. 3. ALVEOPORA SPONGIOSA. (Dana.} A. grandis, lobato-glomerata, 10-12" animata. Corallum tenerius spon- giosum; cellis ttnearibus, vix profun dis, apice valde miriaribus ; intus JiUferis ; parietibus tenuissime cribratis, porulis angusto-oblongis. Large, lobato-glomerate, alive for 10 to 12 inches. Corallum spongy and very tender ; cells a line in diameter, scarcely as deep as broad, filiferous within; at apex much smaller; parietes filamento-cribrate, porules narrow-oblong. Plate 48, fig. 3, corallum, reduced two diameters; 3 a, part of same, natural size ; 3 b, cells of surface, enlarged ; 3 c, vertical section of a cell; 3 d, vertical section of corallum, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen in the collections is a large sponge-like mass, four- teen inches high and six thick, with short rounded lobes above, and alive throughout, excepting three inches below. The oblong porules of the parietes are separated by thread-like intervals. 4. ALVEOPORA RUBRA. (Quay 4- Gaymard.) A. furcato-ramosa, ramulis elongatis, erectis ; polypis rubris, breviter crasso-tentaculatis. Corallum cellis spinosis, sex-dentatis. 129 514 ZOOPHYTES. Furcato-ramose, branchlets long, erect; polyps red, with short and stout tentacles. Corallum with spinous cells, sex-dentate within. Port Carteret, New Ireland. Quay $ Gaymard. This species, according to Quoy and Gaymard, approaches the true Madrepores, and also the Porites. The specimen examined by them was two or three inches high, with dichotomous branchings, cylin- drical or a little compressed, subacuminate, and covered with very small irregular crenulate cells, separated by porous partitions, the porosity of which is compared to "a confused crystallization." Alveopora rubra, Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 242, pi. 19, figs. 11-14. 5. ALVEOPORA FENESTRATA. (Lamarck.) Dana. A. furcato-ramosa, ramis crassis, subgibbosis, obtusissimis. Corallum cellis profundis, subangulatis, intus Jiliferis, parietibus fenestratis. Furcato-ramose; branches stout, subgibbous, very obtuse. Corallum having the cells deep, subangular, filiferous within; parietes fenes- trate. "Austral Seas." Peron $ Lesueur. This species, which is referred to the genus Pocillopora by La- marck, has the cells of an Alveopora; they are described as enclosed by cribrate parietes, with small calcareous threads within the cells, which coalesce at the bottom of the same. Pocillopora fenestrata, Lamarck, ii. 443, No. 5. NOTE. — The Alveopora mrirlis, of Quoy and Gaymard, as figured by them, has the cells and general habit of a Sideropora. The A. rubra also approaches that genus. SUBFAMILY II.— FAVOSITIN^. Favositidce cellis coralli ad summitates contiguis, angulatis ; lamellis in- tegris, scepe angustissimis out obsoletis. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 515 Cells of the corallum at the summits at least contiguous and angular ; lamellae entire, often very narrow or obsolete. GENUS II.— SIDEROPORA.— BLAINVILLE. Favositince furcato-ramosce ; cellis bene stettatis, lamellis sex axi medio conjungen tibus. Furcato-ramose ; cells with 6 lamellae meeting at centre in an axis, and forming a star of six rays. The Sideroporae form closely branched hemispherical clumps, con- sisting of flattened or nearly cylindrical branches, with obtuse sum- mits. The cell is usually slightly vaulted, and the star within is very regular; often at centre where the lamella? meet, there is a short point forming an axis or columella to the cell, which when broken is seen to be tubular in some species. In many of the Sideroporse the inner half of each ray is quite deep within the cell, and the cell appears therefore six-toothed (sex-dentate). The polyps are simply regular stars of twelve short rays, and usually of some tint of bright green. In the species examined by the author, the tips of the tentacles were a rich green, with the bases brownish. This genus is united with Porites by Lamarck and Ehrenberg. It was instituted by Blainville, and named in allusion to the star of the cell, from the Latin sidus, a star. It forms part of Oken's genus Acropora, and includes Schweigger's Stylophora, and Gray's An- thophora. Arrangement of the Species. *1. S. digitata. *4. S. palmata. 2. S. elongata. *5. S. mordax. 3. S. subdigitata. 1. SIDEROPORA DIGITATA. (Pallas.} Blainvilk. S. ramulis, J-J" crassis, raro |", obsolete compressis, scepe paulum tumidis. 516 ZOOPHYTES. Branches J to J an inch thick, rarely | of an inch, obsoletely com- pressed, often a little tumid at intervals. Red Sea and East Indies. Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. Forms hemispherical clumps, six or eight inches in diameter, neatly branched; the branchlets are about half an inch apart, one-fourth to one-half an inch broad at top, and rarely one and a half inches long. The following may be a variety of this species, yet it seems doubtful. /3. coakscens. Branches often nodose, a little compressed, frequently anastomosing, one-fourth to three-fourths of an inch thick, cells much vaulted, columella prominent, star sex-dentate. One specimen from the Feejees (plate 49, fig. 2), is eight inches high, with the branches coalescing every half inch to two inches. Another, a worn specimen from the Sooloo Sea, has smaller branches, but is otherwise similar. Milleporaakicornis,Forska\.Anim. Egypt., Aniliopliora cucuUata, Gray, Zool. Trans., 137. 1835, p. 85. Madrepom digitata, Pallas, Zooph., 326. Alveopora viridis (?), Quoy and Gaymard, , Ellis and Solander, No. 74. Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 240, pi. 20, figs. 1-4 ; Savigny, Egypt. Polyp, pi. 4, fig. 3 ; an ex- this species, imperfectly described, has, in cellent figure. the figure, the cells of a Sideropora, and Forties scabra, Lamk., ii. 436, No. 6. the general form of the above species ; , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 652. but it may be distinct. It is from Port PocilloporaAndreossyi,A.udoum,Exp\ic.des Carteret, New Ireland. The branches planches de M. Savigny. are one-third to half an inch thick, and iSicfcroporasca&ra,Blainville,Man.,384,and somewhat compressed; the cells are deep Porites scabra, 396. with crenulate margins, and thin fenes- M. Porites digitata, Ehrenb., G. Ixx., sp. 7. trate parietes; the polyps have green tips. 2. SIDEROPORA ELONGATA. (Lamarck.} Blainville. S. ramulis ekngatis, cylindricis. Corattum cellis sex-dentatis, margine superiors prominulo. Branchlets elongate, cylindrical. Corallum with the cells sex-dentate; superior margin a little prominent. The Indian Ocean? Lamarck. Lamarck says that this species differs from the preceding in its general appearance and scarcely prominent cells. TRIBE III. — M ADREPORACEA. 517 Porites elongata, Lamk., ii. 437, No. 7. Sideropora ehngata, Blainville, Man., 384. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 652. NOTE. — S. pistillata. Esper's Madrepora pistittata (the Stylophora of Schweigger, p. 413), is, beyond doubt, a Sideropora, and possibly a variety of this species. Pflanz. Fortsetz. i. 73, tab. 60. Ehrenberg, placing the species with his Porites, as Porites pistillata, gives the follow- ing description of a specimen from the Red Sea, which he considers identical with it (G. Ixx., sp. 3): " Ramulis teretibus, gracilibus, flexuosis, apice rotundatis (4'" crassis) ad dichotomiam incrassatis, ste"llulis sexangularibus, columella inclusa pistillatis, denticulo hispido, supero obsolete fornicatis, interstitiis setuloso-hispidis, planis." 3. SIDEROPORA SUBDIGITATA. (Lamarck.} Blainville. S. lobato-ramulosa, ramis brevibus, subdigitatis. Corallum stettis sex- dentatis ; interstitiis prominulis et echinulatis. Lobato-ramulose ; branches short, subdigitate. Corallum with the stars sex-dentate; interstices a little prominent and echinulate. The Indian or Austral Ocean. Lamarck. Porites snbdigitata, Lamk., ii. 438, No. 10. Sideropora subdigitata, Blainv. Man., 384. , Deslongchamps, Encycl., 653. 4. SIDEROPORA PALMATA. (Blainville.) S. ramis valde compressis et superne rarioribus,flabellatis,parce digitato- lobatis aut subpalmatis, sape 1-2" latis, et apice 3-5'" crassis. Co- rallum cellis paulum marginatis, columella prominula. Branches much compressed and thinner above, flabellate, sparingly digitate lobed, or subpalmate, often 1 to 2 inches broad, and 3 to 5 lines thick at apex. Corallum having the cells slightly margined, and the columella a little prominent. East Indies. Exp. Exp. The clumps in the Expedition collections, which have afforded this description, are flattened hemispherical, about six inches high, and ten or twelve broad, and consist of flat branches thinning towards the apex. This last character and the less distinctly vaulted cells distin- 130 518 ZOOPHYTES. guish it from the mordax. The intervals between the branches are one-half to two-thirds of an inch, rarely an inch. Sideropora palmata, Blainville, Man., 384, 385 ; the description by Blainville is im- perfect, and the specimens are referred to his species with some hesitation. 5. SIDEROPORA MORDAX. (Dana.} S. ramis subsimplicibus, valde compressis, superne, non rarioribus, vix flabellatis, £-1" latis, et J" crassis ; polypis disco lutescentibus, tentaculis brevibus, late virentibus, basi brunneis. Corallum cellis valde fornicatis, itaque super jicie bene scabrosa. Branches nearly simple, much compressed, not thinner at apex, scarcely flabellate, £ to 1 inch broad, and J of an inch thick ; polyps with a pale yellowish disk, and short tentacles of a bright green colour, deep brown at base. Corallum with the cells strongly vaulted, and the surface, therefore, decidedly scabrous. Plate 49, fig. 1, zoophyte, natural size; 1 a, polyp, enlarged; 1 b, cells of surface, at summit, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species resembles ihepalmata, but is smaller, with the branches not thinner above, and separated by intervals of but a third of an inch ; the surface, moreover, is quite strongly scabrous. The clump in the collections is about four and a half inches across and three high. GENUS III.— SERIATOPORA.— LAMARCK. Favositidce tenuiter ramosce ; ramis ramulisque teretibus, polypis verti- caliter plus minusve seriatis. Corallum cellis obsolete radiatis, non profundis et infra solidescentibus. Slenderly ramose ; branches and branchlets terete, polyps vertically more or less seriate, cells of corallum obsolescently rayed, not deep, and becoming filled and solid internally. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 519 The Seriatopores form hemispherical clumps, and are remarkable for their slender graceful branches, and seriate polyps. The coralla are nearly or quite solid within, owing to the obliteration of the cell internally by solid calcareous secretions. The polyps resemble those of the Sideropora, but are sometimes of a rose or bright-red colour. The rays of the cell are scarcely distinguishable ; yet there is often a distinct columella within, as in the Sideroporse ; and the upper mar- gin of the cells, which is a little prominent, has a minute spinulous edging. The branches are sometimes acute, and often, appear faintly winged at summit, owing to a slight prominence of the interstices between the adjoining series of cells. The seriate character is most regular towards the summits of the branches, and is often quite lost below. It is important to observe that the outer or lower branches of a hemispherical clump are often quite divaricately branched, inas- much as the branches have room to spread; while those of the body of it are closely furcate. These species are confined to the coral-reef seas, and have been found only in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. They graduate into the Sideropores on one side, and into the slender Pocillopores on the other; the latter frequently have the same solid texture, though less regularly terete and not distinctly seriate in their polyps. The genus Seriatopora was instituted by Lamarck, for a part of the old genus Madrepora ; but as it contained several unallied species, it was afterwards restricted to its present limits by Blainville, who assumed the Seriatopora subulata, the first of Lamarck's species, as the type of the genus. Arrangement of the Species. 1. S. subulata. *4. S. octoptera. *2. S. lineata. *5. S. caliendrum. *3. S. hystrix. 1. SERIATOPORA SUBULATA. (Lamarck.) S. ramis validiorilus (2'", et basi totidem 4'"), raro coalitis ; polypis septis ramorum apice acutis. Cespitose, alive for 3 or 4 inches ; branches broad flabellate, some- times 2 inches broad, \ thick, and short-lobed or digitate at apex ; below often coalescing, lobes compressed, £ to 1 inch long, obtuse, occasionally elongate and terete. Corallum somewhat fragile ; cells superficial or slightly excavate, small (half a line) ; septa about the upper parts of the branches acute. Plate 54, fig. 3, corallum, natural size; 3 a, cells, enlarged. Sooloo Sea, East Indies. Exp. Exp. Occurs in large clumps much crowded and anastomosing below. Only a dead specimen was obtained, and this was partly covered with the variety mucronata of the nigrescens, from the same locality. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 559 10. PORITES LEVIS. (Dana.) P. cespitosa, 6" vel plures animata ; ramis elongatis, furcatis, subtere- tibus, vix compressis, irregulariter inftatis; infra, 1-1 J" crassis, apice obtusis et 3-4'" latis ; polypis brevissimis, brunneis, tentaculis minutis, apice albidis. Corallum subrobustum ; cettis omnino super- faialibus, vix conspifuis. Cespitose, alive for 6 inches or more; branches long, furcate, sub- terete, scarcely compressed, irregularly inflated, below, 1— 1J inches thick, obtuse at apex and 3 to 4 lines broad ; polyps very short, brown; tentacles minute, with whitish tips. Corallum rather firm, surface smooth ; cells wholly superficial, scarcely distinguishable. Plate 54, fig, 5, part of zoophyte, natural size ; 5 a, 5 b, polyps, en- larged ; 5 c, surface, enlarged ; 5 d, cross section, ditto. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The Madrepora porites, of Esper, as figured on his plate 21, is near the above species. It is a branched stem, five inches high, nearly an inch broad below, subcompressed, obtuse, and often bilobate above, with superficial cells, and alive throughout. The stars as figured are more distinct than in the levis ; in the enlarged figure (fig. 2), six points are represented surrounding a central one. 11. PORITES CYLINDRICA. (Dana.) P. cespitosa, 1-2" animata; caulibus erectis creberrimis, sape coalitis, bene cylindricis, inferne £-£" crassis, apice scepe furcatis, rotundatis, ramulis 1" longis et J" crassis. Corallum subrobustum; cettis omnino super Jicialibus, inconspicuis. Cespitose, alive for 1 to 2 inches; branches erect and very much crowded together, often coalescing, neatly cylindrical, below £ to § of an inch thick, often furcate at apex, and rounded ; branchlets 1 inch long and £ of an inch thick. Corallum rather firm; cells wholly superficial, indistinct. Plate 54, fig. 4, corallum of part of a clump, natural size. Feejee Islands (?). Exp. Exp. 560 ZOOPHYTES. Forms very closely crowded clumps of erect stems, six inches or more high, very slightly flexuous or straight, and neatly cylindrical. It is peculiar in being alive only for an inch or two, and in its indis- tinct stars without any appearance of cells. It has the general habit of the conferta, but differs in its more regular stems and in the ab- sence of excavate cells. B. Ramis plicatis aut crispis. 12. PORITES CONTIGUA. (Esper.) Dana. P. cespitosa, crebro ramosa, superne conveza, 2 J" animata ; ramis com- pressis, lobatis-crispis, et angulatis, apice 1^—3'" crassis, obtusis. Co- rattum robustum, cellis nullis, pord minutissima inconspicud (lynceo inspecta) per granulas subtilissimas sex drcumdata, granulis aliis sparsis. Cespitose, crowdedly ramose, above convex, alive for 2i inches ; branches compressed, crispate, lobed and angular, 1£ to 3 lines thick at summits, obtuse. Corallum firm ; cells none, a very minute indistinct pore (seen by a lens), surrounded by six granules, other granules scattered. Plate 54, fig. 6, part of clump of corallum, natural size ; 6 a, surface, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. Forms low even-top clumps, a foot broad or more, and ten inches or so high, very crowdedly branched; the branches are angular, nodosely subdivided, and often subflabellate and plaited above. It resembles the Psammocora obtusangula (Pavonia of Lamarck), but differs in its less neatly plicate branches, and fundamentally in the six points which surround the polyp-pores of the corallum, and prove its connexion with the Madrepore family. Mad. contigua, Espcr, Fortsetz. i. 81, Pavonia plicata, Lamk., ii. 378, No. 6. tab. 66. , Blainville, Man., 365. T R I B E I I I. — M A D R E P O R A C E A. 56 I C. Glomeratce, aut lobato-glomcrata;. I. Cellis excavatis. 13. PORITES ASTR^OIDES. (Lesueur.) P. incrustans, undato-gibbosa, crassa ; polypis sulphureis ; tentaculisbrun- neis, apice flavis punctura nigra notatis. Corallum robustum, cellis majuscutis, subangulatis, aut orbiculatis, cylindricis et profundis, lamellis radiatis 12 verticaKbus, centra columella brevissimd, septis sub- acutis. Incrusting, undate arid somewhat, gibbous, polyps sulphur-yellow ; tentacles brown, yellow at tip, with a black puncture at the extre- mity. Corallum firm, cells rather large, subangular or circular, cylindrical and deep, with 12 radiating lamellse, nearly vertical and narrow, and at centre a very short colurnella. Guadaloupe, West Indies. Lesueur. The incrusting plates are thin when small, but often become quite thick, and have an irregularly undulate or subgibbous surface. The cells are peculiar in being distinctly 12-rayed, with the rays narrow and vertical. Porites astrceoides, Lesueur, Mem. du Mus., , Blainville, Man., 395, pi. 61, fig. 5 ; vi. 287, pi. 16, fig. 15. a recognisable figure. Porites astrceoides, Lamk., ii. 435, No. 3. 14. PORITES CONGLOMERATA. P. subglobosa, gibboso-glomerata. Corallum cellis angulatis paulum excavatis, plano-conicis, vix majusculis (§'") ; septis tenuissimis, acutis. Subglobose, gibboso-glomerate. Corallum having the cells angular, quite shallow, flat-conical, rather small (§ of a line) ; septa very thin and acute. Plate 55, fig. 3, corallum, natural size; 3 a, cell, enlarged. The Pacific and Indian Oceans. — Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. 141 562 ZOOPHYTES. The above description is taken from a Feejee specimen, having a nearly globular form with an uneven or monticulose surface, and very shallow piano-conical cells, with acute interstices. There are about nine cells to half an inch. The Poritcs conglomerata of Lamarck and others includes all the massive species of this genus. The name is applied to the above on the ground of Esper's fig., tab. 59 A. The Porites conglomerata, of Ellis and Solander, tab. 41, fig. 4, which is usually re- ferred to this species, has more resemblance to a dried Alcyonium, as was suggested by Ehrenberg. The P. conglomerata of Quoy and Gaymard (Voy. de 1'Ast., iv. 249, pi. 18, fig. 6-8), is some other species; but which, is not determinable from the indifferent figure and description. The P. conglomerata of Ehrenberg, from the Red Sea, may be the above : " Semipe- dalis, et subpedalis, glomerata, globosa, gibbosa, sublobata, cellis parvis (5'" latis) obso- lete hexagonis, contiguis, arenoso-scabris." " Esperi Icon. tab. 59, A. congruit." The Madrepora solida of Forskal (Icon. p. 131), is one of the massive Porites. 15. PORITES LOBATA. (Dana.} P. lobato-glamerata, crasso-lamellosa et gibbosa. Corallum robustum cellis angulatis, paulum excavatis, plano-conids, majusculis (fere'%"}; septis tenuissimis, acutis. Lobato-glomerate, very thick lamellar, and gibbous. Corallum having the cells angular, piano-conical, rather large (nearly f of a line) ; septa very thin and acute. Plate 55, fig. 1, corallum, natural size; 1 a, 1 b, cells, enlarged. Sandwich Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is very similar in its cells to the conglomerata, and may prove to be only a variety of that species. It, however, grows in deeply divided glomerate forms, not spheroidal, and sometimes rising into broad lamellar lobes or plates, an inch or more thick, or forming subcylindrical branchlets, half to one inch long. The mass below often consists of broad, compressed, coalescing plates, one to three inches thick. There are eight or nine neatly polygonal cells to a half inch, separated by very thin septa. TRIBE III. — MADKEPORACEA. 563 16. PORITES FRAGOSA. (Dana.) P grandis, arrecto-glomerata, super jide subangulata et crasse monticu- losa. Corallum robustum, cellis subangulatis, paulum ezcavatis, vix majusculis (§'"), fundo planis; septis obtusis. Erect glomerate, with- the surface subangular and coarsely monticu- lose Corallum having the cells subangular, shallow, rather small (| of a line broad), plane at bottom ; septa obtuse. Plate 55, fig. 9, surface of corallum, natural size ; 9 a, cells enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The general form of this species is nearly that of the conglomerata, though higher in proportion to the breadth ; the cells differ in being flat at bottom and separated by septa sometimes one-fourth the breadth of the cell. One specimen from the Feejees measures a foot in height and seven inches in diameter. There are nine or ten cells to half an inch in breadth. The interior is very finely compact, and evenly so, without more compact layers at intervals. 17. PORITES LIMOSA. (Dana.) P. gibboso-subglobosa. Corallum robustum cellis paulum excavatis, grandioribus (!"' fatis), fundo planis ; septis obtusis, tenuibus. Gibboso-subglobose. Corallum having the cells shallow, large ( I of a line broad), plane at bottom ; septa obtuse, but thin. Plate 55, fig. 2, corallum, natural size ; 2 a, cells, enlarged. The Feejee Islands, in shallow waters, near the shores, where often muddy. Exp. Exp. The cells of the corallum, though resembling those of the fragosa, are much larger, about seven occupying an interval of half an inch. The six points around the centre of the cell are quite prominent. The specimen in the collections is a disk-shape mass, three inches thick, and eight in diameter, with lobed sides, and having the upper 564 ZOOPHYTES. surface dead, arising from the lodgment of dirt upon it, which had led to its growing laterally, without upward increase. The species appears to grow in more impure waters than most others of the genus. 18. PORITES FAVOSA. (Dana.) P. crasso-columniformis, superfaie subgibbosa, apice truncata. Coral- lum robustwn cellis profundis, majusculis, conicis ; septis acutis. Stout columniform, surface subgibbous, summit truncate. Corallum having the cells deep, rather large, conical; septa acute and durable. Plate 55, fig. 4, corallum, natural size; 4 a, cells, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species resembles the mordax in its deep conical cells (as deep as their breadth), and strong acute interstices, and differs in this cha- racter from either of the preceding massive species. There are seven or eight cells to half an inch. The specimen in the collections is four inches in height, and three by two in breadth ; it was alive throughout. 19. PORITES CRIBRIPORA. (Dana.) ' P. incrustans et glomerata, margine crasso et involute, superfaie gibbo- suld. Corallum robustum cellis parvuKs, punctiformibus, seu conicis ; septis obtusis. Incrusting and glomerate, margin of the incrusting mass stout, and involuted or folded under ; surface small gibbous. Corallum having the cells quite small, punctiform or conical ; septa obtuse. Plate 55, fig. 5, corallum, natural size ; 5 a, cell, enlarged. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. Incrusts dead coral, with a layer one-fourth to half an inch thick. The thick involuted margin and small puncture-like cells (about twelve to half an inch), are important characters. It has some resem- blance to Ellis's figure 4, tab. 41. TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 565 II. Cellis omnino super ficialibus. 20. PORITES INFORMIS. (Dana.) P. arrecto-glomerata, gibbosa-lobata et parce erosa ; polypis Jlavescentibiis et brunneis, tentaculis obsoletis. Corallum cellis nullis, stellis non con- spicuis, pord centrali minutissimd, inconspicua, sex granulis circum- datd, exteriaribus duodedm sparsis. Stout erect glomerate, gibbons lobed, and sparingly erose ; polyps pale-yellow, surrounded by brown, tentacles obsolete. Corallum without cells, stars scarcely distinguishable, central pore very minute, and surrounded by six granules; the outer 12 granules scattered. Plate 55, fig. 6, corallum, natural size ; 6 a, polyps and surface of zoophyte, enlarged ; 6 b, cells and surface of corallum, enlarged ; 6 c, part of transverse section. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species differs from the erosa, in not growing in flat-top colum- nar forms, and also in its cells. The specimen is an irregular mass, three inches through, with a few nodular elevations. 21. PORITES EROSA. (Dana.) P. arrecto-glomerata, columniformis, 2£" animata ; apice plano-truncata, erosa et profunde incisa; super -fide laterali parce monticulosd et raro subcarinata. Corallum cellis nullis, stellis paulum conspicuis, ad summitates inconspicuis, granulis sex et duodedm regularibus. Stout erect glomerate, columniform, alive for 2^ inches ; truncate at summit, erose and deeply incised ; lateral surface sparingly monti- culose, and rarely subcarinate. Corallum without cells, stars rather distinct, except at apex, circles of 6 and 12 granules regular. Plate 55, fig. 8, corallum, natural size ; 8 a, cell, enlarged. Sooloo Sea. Exp. Exp. 142 566 ZOOPHYTES. The columnar masses are lobed above, and deeply erose. The spe- cimen in the collections is three inches high, and four in diameter, with a nearly flat summit. The sides are much less uneven than in the monticulosa, the summits more flat, and the granules of the inter- vals between the stars are not similar to the granules of the cells. 22. PORITES MONTICULOSA. (Dana.) P. arrecto-glomerata, cohmmiformis, et lobata, apice rotundato-truncata ; superjicie undique angulatt erosd out monticulosd, monticulis laterali- bus crebris scepe subtriangulatis et ascendentibus, nunquam in carinas digestis, apicalibus paulo minoribus ; polypis brunneis, labris semilu- nate lutescentibus, tentaculis obsoletis albidis. Corallum cettis nullis, stettis vix conspicuis, pord centrali minutissimd. Stout erect glomerate, columniform or erect lobed, apex round-trun- cate ; surface every where angularly erose or monticulose ; lateral monticles crowded, often subtriangular and ascending, never coa- lescing into carinate ridges, the apical a little smaller ; polyps brown, the lips semilunate and yellow, tentacles whitish, obsolete. Co- rallum with no cells, stars scarcely distinguishable, central pore very minute. Plate 55, fig. 7, corallum, natural size ; 7 a, polyps, enlarged; 7 b, cells, enlarged ; 7 c, part of a transverse section, ditto. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen in the collections is five and a half inches high, and four and a half by three in breadth at base. The columniform lobes are one to three inches in diameter, and two inches or so long, and have nearly rounded summits. D. Tenuiter incrustantes. 23. PORITES LICHEN. (Dana.} P. incrustans, J" crassa, undulata, margine subacuto, scepe revoluto, et paulum libero, superficie infernd levi aut obsolete plicatd. Corallum TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 567 cettis paulo excavatis, vix §'" latis,fundo plan-is, septis tenuibus, filifor- mibus, scepe superne productis (super -fide itaque reticulata). Incrusting, | of an inch thick, undulate, margin subacute, often flexed upward, and free for a third of an inch ; under surface smooth, or obsoletely plicate. Corallum having the cells shallow, and often prominent in minute, thin ridges, which give the surface a reticu- late appearance. Plate 56, fig. 2, corallum, natural size. • • Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. 24. PORITES RETICULOSA. (Dana.) P. incrustans, undukita, margine vix libero, superficie mammillata, sen tuberosa. Corallum porosissimum, cellis bene angulosis, paulum ex- cavatis, grandioribus (%'"), f undo plants, septis tenuibu.s, scepe superne productis. Incrusting, undulate, margin scarcely at all free, surface mammillate and tuberose. Corallum very porous, cells neatly angular, shallow, rather large (| of a line), plane at bottom, septa thin, and often pro- minent in thin ridges, like the lichen. Plate 55, fig. 1, corallum, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. 25. PORITES ARENACEA. (Lamarck.) Incrustans, simplicissima. Corallum cellis super ficialibus, subconcavis, perparvis. Incrusting, quite simple. Corallum having the cells superficial, sub-- concave, very small. The Red Sea, incrusting the Mytilus margaritiferus. Lamarck. 568 ZOOPHYTES. Madreporaarenosa(l.),'L\\in.,e&.x\{., 1276; Forties arenacea, Lamk., ii. 435, No. 4. " M. composita, stellis contiguis, planius- , Blainville, Man., 395. culis, subarenaceis." The Mad. Forties arenacea, of Ehrenberg, is described as follows : " Quadrilinearis, lineam alta, suborbicularis, effusa, incrustans, simplex, membranacea, stellis contiguis, •J'" latis, immersis, interstitiis spinuloso-hispidis (detritis granulosis?). In Pinna turgida Maris Rubri. An pullus alius?" — Gen. Ixx., sp. 20. — A Manopora? NOTE. — The Madrepora punctata, of Linnaeus, is an imperfectly described species, possibly of some other genus. It is stated to come from the European Ocean, and is de- scribed as follows : " M. composita, punctis stellaribus confertis, conflatis e punctis denis." The M. punctata, of Esper, tab. 70, is a true incrusting Porites, with shallow cells, and wide granulous interstices. It comes from the Moluccas. The M, Forties punctata, of Ehrenberg (Gen. Ixx., sp. 17), appears to be a different species, having much resemblance to the P. lichen. The following are some of its characters : " Stellis semilinearibus, margine non lamellosis, interstitiis venoso-turgidis, poroso-punctatis, denticulis nullis, stellularum lamellis basi denticulo columellam tenuem punctiformem reddente auctis." " An. M. Porites conglomerata juvenilis ?" Locality unknown. M. Forties arnuita, H. and Ehrenberg (Gen. Ixx., sp. 19): "Pollicaris, effusa, in- crustans, stellularum semilinearium interstitiis scabris, nee lamellosis, singulo stellula- rum margine, dente crenato armato, columellce vestigio obsolete." Red Sea. Probably a Sideropora. M. Porites stromatopora, H. and Ehrenberg (Gen. Ixx., sp. 21) : " Semipedalis, effusa, 2" alta, stratum super stratum exstruendo pulvinata, stratis horizontalibus, I'" altis, dis- cretis distinctisque (hinc exesa margine scalariformis evadit), stcllulis singulis linea inino- ribus, parum profundis, lamellis 12, subsequalibus, ad centrum usque productis, interstitiis stellularum contiguarum minimis porosis." Locality uncertain. A Manopora near the effusa? GENUS II.— GONIOPORA.— QUOY & GAYMARD. Poritidce arrecto-glomeratce, lobatce ; polypis l6-24:-tentaculatis, 1-2'" latis. Corolla omnino kviter porosa ; cellis subprofundis, aut super- faialibus, intus granulosis. Erect glomerate, and lobed ; polyps with 16 to 24 tentacles, and 1 to 2 lines broad. Coralla throughout light porous; cells scarcely as deep as their breadth or superficial, granulous within. The Goniopors resemble the Porites in habit and texture, but are TRIBE III. — MADREI'ORACEA. 569 less finely porous, and have larger polyps and cells. The species often grow in club-shaped masses or rude cylinders, which become lobed above by furcation, and, like many Porites, only the top for one to three inches is alive. These cylinders grow to a height of two feet or more. The species are confined to the coral-reef seas, and have been found only in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. This genus was proposed by Quoy and Gaymard, by whom the polyps were first examined. The name alludes to the angular form of the cells, and is derived from ym\>, an angle. 1. GONIOPORA PEDUNCULATA. (Quoy $ Gaymard.) G. glomerata ; polyjris 2-3'" salientibus, kete virentibus ; tentaculis ob- longis, obtusis. Corallum porosissimum ; cellis parvulis (!'" latis), polijgonis ; margine granulatis seu inaqualiter denticulatis. Glomerate; polyps 2 to 3 lines salient, bright green; tentacles oblong, obtuse. Corallurn very porous; cells small (1 line broad), poly- gonal ; margin granulate, or irregularly denticulate. Port Dorey, New Guinea. Quoy <$f Gaymard. This species is described by Quoy and Gaymard, as occurring in hemispherical masses as large as the fist. It may also grow erect like the following species. Goniopora pedimculata, Quoy and Gay- 27. " A. glomerata, superficie reticulata, mard, Voy. de 1'Ast., iv., 218, pi. 16, cellis subpentagonis, contiguis, calyci- figs. 9-11. formibus, ad parietes striatis, fundo pa- , Blainville, Man., 395. pillis senis substellatis." Referred here Astrcea cahjcularis (?), Lamk., ii. 416, No. by Quoy and Gaymard. 2. GONIOPORA COLUMNA. (Dana) G. erecta, 1—2" alta, compresso-cylindrica, et subclavata, 2—4" crassa ; apice rotundata, et divisa, 2-3" animata ; polypis cylindricis, 2-3"' salientibus, pallide purpureis, 1 8-24-tentaculatis. Gorallum porosis- simum ; cellis angulatis, excavatis, !£"' latis ; margine acutis, granu- latis; infra cellis obsoletis. 143 570 ZOOPHYTES. Erect, 1 to 2 feet high, compressed cylindrical, and subclavate, 2 to 4 inches thick; summits rounded, furcately subdividing above; alive for 2 to 3 inches ; polyps cylindrical, 2 to 3 lines salient, of a pale lilac tint, tentacles 18 to 24 in number. Corallum very porous ; cells angular, excavate, 1£ lines broad ; margin acute, granulate ; cells below obsolete. Plate 56, fig. 5, zoophyte, natural size ; 5 a, polyp, enlarged ; 5 b, part of summit, showing the cells, natural size. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species is near the preceding, yet the form of the polyps, judg- ing from Quoy and Gaymard's .figures, is quite different, the cells larger, and the mode of growth is peculiar. The large columns grow to a height of two feet or more, but only the tips for two or three inches are alive; the part below is incrusted with Nullipores, sponges, and various shells. The lower cells, or those towards the limits of the live portion, are quite superficial. No distinct lamella are seen in any of them. NOTE. — G. Savignii. Savigny's figure 2, tab. 5, (Desc. do 1'Egypte,) has much of the appearance of a Goniopora, and some resemblance to the preceding, though smaller. It represents a single stout stem, with several ascending clavate lobes, somewhat com- pressed, and two to four inches broad, with a subtruncate top. The whole clump is seven inches high, and has nearly the shape of an inverted cone. The cells are nearly circular, contiguous, or planulate, and about one-eighth of an inch broad. The summits are alive for about two inches. Ehrenberg refers to this figure, with a query, under his Astrcea planulatu. TRIBE M A DREPORACEA: — APPENDIX. The animals of the following genera are unknown ; and the species are so imperfectly understood, that their connexion with the tribe Ma- dreporacea is uncertain. ERRINA.— GRAY. Ramosce ; ramis muricatis, caliculis prominulis et inferne longitudina- liter jissis ; Milleporce habitu affines. TRIBE II I. — MADREPORACEA. 571 Ramose; branches covered with calicles; calicles tubular, a little prominent, having a longitudinal fissure below ; near Millepora in habit. This genus was instituted by Gray for the Milkpora asperaof Esper and Lamarck. ERRINA ASPERA. (Esper.) Gray. E. ramosa, 4" alta; subcompressa,pauloflabellata, ramulis brevibus, suba- cutis, caliculis ad apices et undique sparsis (superficie itaque asperata). Ramose, 4 inches high; subcompressed, somewhat flabellate; branch- lets short, subacute ; calicles scattered every where, even over the summits, the surface, therefore, throughout rough. Mediterranean Sea. Lamarck. Esper. . densl surculosa, &c., Gualt. Ind. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 546. Test., back of tab. 55. Errina aspera, Gray, Zool. Soc. Trans., y, aspera, Linn., ed. xii., 1282. 1835, 85 ; Gray suggests, that the Mille- , Esper, Fortsetz. i. 106, tab. Mill., 18. pora tubulifera and pinnata of Lamarck, , Lamk., ii. 308, No. 4. may belong to this genus. CERIOPORA.— BLAINVILLE. Pumilce; glomerate aut lamelloscB. Corolla stratis concentricis in- structa; cellis orbiculatis, minutissimis, irregulariter sparsis. Minute; glomerate or lamellose. Coralla consisting of concentric beds; surface covered with very minute circular cells, irregularly scattered. This genus, as originally instituted by Goldfuss, on the ground of a stratified structure and minute cells, contained various species not properly related. The genus Chrysaora, of Lamouroux, embraces a large part, characterized by their angular or polygonal lobato-ramose forms, uneven surface, and pore-like cells, with nothing of a columnar structure. The species are minute, and may be Bryozoa. Blain- 572 ZOOPHYTES. ville instituted the genera Spinopora, Ceriopora, Heteropora, and Pustulopora, from the remainder, placing, at the same time, some of the species with the Alveolites of Lamarck. The genus Ceriopora, as restricted, has the circular cells of a Millepora, and the coralla consist of " concentric and enveloping" beds. The species referred by Blainville to the genus, are all from the chalk. The genus Spinopora, of Blainville, comprises small glomerate spe- cies, having a spino-tuberculous surface, and minute irregular pore- like cells scattered over the intermediate spaces. The existence of tubercles is hardly a character of generic importance. The species reported to it are from the chalk. The genus Heteropora is referred to under Heliopora, page 539. The Heteropora of Ehrenberg cor- responds to the Madrepora of other authors. Ceriopora, Goldfuss, Petref., 32. Ceriopora, Blainv., Man., 413, pi. 70, fig. Chrysaora, Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., 83, 2; Goldf., 33, pi. 10, figs. 4, 6, 7. pi. 81, figs. 6, 7 ; Goldf., tab. 11, figs. , Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 313. 5—11. Spinopora, Blainv., Man., 415, pi. 70, fig. , Blainville, Man., 414. 3 ; Ceriopora mitra, Goldf., 39, pi. 30, , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 315. fig. 13. NOTE. — The genus Tiksia, of Lamouroux, is but imperfectly known ; it is supposed to fall near the above. The small coralla are ramose, with the branches cylindrical and verrucose, and having minute circular pore-like cells collected in polymorphous groups, with the intermediate surface smooth. The only species described is a fossil from near Caen. (Lamouroux, Exp., Meth., 42, tab. 74, figs. 5,6. — Blainv., Man , 415, pi. 63, fig. 5. — Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 316.) Lamouroux's description of the genus will apply nearly as well to his Theonea (q. v.) TEREBELLARIA.— LAMOUROUX. Pumilce; ramosce, ramis elongate conicis, et spiraliter annulatis ; cellis minutis ovalibus, subtriangulatis, in quincuncem dispositis. Quite small ; ramose ; branches oblong conical, and spirally annulate; cells minute, oval, orsubtriangular, and arranged in quincunx order. The branches have a depression running spirally around from the base to the summit. This genus, established by Lamouroux, is ar- ranged near the "Alveolites," by Blainville. He states that the cells TRIBE III. — MADREPORACEA. 573 are not subtubular, as the figures appear to represent. The species referred to the genus are from the coral limestone at Caen. Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., 84, pi. 82, fig. I. Lamarck, 2d ed., ii., 318. Blainville, Man., 409, pi. 67, fig. 5. APSENDESIA.— LAMOUROUX. Pumilce. Corolla laminis aggregatis cristiformibus instructa, margine cettiferis ; cellis minutis, poriformibus, subangulatis, irregulariter sparsis. Quite small. Coralla consisting of aggregated crest-like plates, having the margin celliferous ; cells minute, pore-like, subangular, irregu- larly scattered. This genus was instituted by Lamouroux, and afterwards more cor- rectly defined by Blainville. The species referred to the genus are from the Jurassic and tertiary limestones. The structure of the A. cerebriformis, as described by Milne Edwards, appears to be similar to that of the Stenoporse. Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., 81, pi. 80, figs. Blainville, Man., 408, pi. 65, fig. 3. 12-14. Lamarck, 2d ed., ii., 289. PELAGIA.— LICHENOPORA. The genus Pelagia, of Lamouroux, as more correctly described by Blainville, is a free disk-shape zoophyte, smooth and low conical below, and having the upper surface stellate, with small ridges or crests, which are covered above with minute subangular cells. The only known species is a fossil half an inch in diameter. Blainville places it near " Alveolites," and compares the upper surface to that of the Lichenoponc. Whether it have or not the internal structure of the Favositidoc, is not ascertained. Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., pi. 79, figs. 5-7. Blainville, Man., 410, pi. 69, fig. 13. Defrance, Diet, des Sci. Nat., t. 38. Lamarck, 3d ed., ii., 289. 144 574 ZOOPHYTES. The Lictienopora, according to Blainville, have a subturbinate form, with minute an- gular cells over the upper surface ; this surface is concave, and covered with small, ridge- like prominences, stellately arranged, as in the Pelagia. Blainville, after an examination of the fossils upon which the genus was founded by Uefrance, suggests that they are pro- bably young forms of Retepores. He added a Mediterranean species (L. Mediterranea) to the genus, but without describing it, only mentioning that it was a Retepore in struc- ture, and near the genus Frondijxtra. Michelin has described an incrusting species, of uncertain locality, which, from the character of the cells, and its small stars of verruca;, he has referred to Defrance's genus, calling it Lichenopora glomerata. It occurred around the axis of a dead Antipathes, forming an incrustation three-fourths of an inch long, and nearly half an inch thick ; the stars of verrucas are two to three lines in diameter, and the whole surface is covered with minute, contiguous, subangular cells, which, according to the figure, are hardly a twenty- fifth of a line in diameter. Michelin states that the cells are prolonged to the axis of the group. From this last character, and the size and appearance of the cells, it is pos- sible that the species may be congeneric with the fossils of the genus Constellaria, men- tioned under Favosites. Lichenopora, Defrance, Diet, des Sci. Nat., Lichenoporn, Lamk., 3d ed., ii., 284. xxvi., 257. L. glomerata, Michelin, Guer. Mag. de Zool., , Blainville, Man., 407, pi. 68, fig. 4. 1840, Zooph., pi. 1. TRIBE IV.— ANTIPATHACEA. Actinaria sex-tentaculata ; gemmipara, gemmatione inferiore. Actinaria having 6 equal tentacles; gemmiparous, with the gemma- tion inferior. FAMILY L— ANTlPATHIDjE. Zoophyta ajfixa, caukscentia et scepius ramosa ; secretiones corallica: internets nullas, sed basi epidermicas ramorum axem elaborantia. TRIBE I V. — A N T I P A T II A C E A. 575 Attached zoophytes, caulescent, and usually ramose ; forming no coral secretions, except epidermic foot-secretions, which constitute the axis of the branches. The Antipathidse, like many Gorgonidae, secrete a corneous axis, which is surrounded by a fleshy covering of polyps; and on this ac- count the two groups have hitherto been placed together. An exami- nation of the animals -of two species has led to an arrangement of them among the Actinoidea, as the tentacles have the naked character peculiar to this suborder, and the polyps closely resemble those of the Madreporae in appearance and habit. The existence of genital lamella? within the visceral cavity has not yet been proved by dissection, and as this is the deciding character, the propriety of the present arrange- ment, cannot be considered as fully established. GENUS ANTIPATHES. AntipathidcB axe cornea spinulosce, polyporum crusta omnino carnosd. Antipathidse having the corneous axis spinulous, and the polyp- covering wholly fleshy. The Antipathes grow either in long stems, or branched in imitation of trees, spreading shrubs, or in fan-like fronds. The horny axis is covered with minute spinules, which character distinguish them from the axes of Gorgoniae. Though common in the tropics, they also occur in the temperate zone ; they are not unfrequent in the Mediterranean, and have been found in the seas of Norway. Arrangement of the Species. I. Quite simple. *1. A. spiralis. *2. A. anguina. II. Simple, with lateral pinnules. 3. A. larix. 4. A. eupteridea. 576 ZOOPHYTES. III. Branching in a plane. 1 . Brunches pinnate. 5. A. pectinata. 7. A. subpinnata. 6. A. myriophylla. 8. A. reticulata. 2. Not pinnate. 9. A. flabellum. 10. A. ericoides. IV. Not branched in a plane. 11. A. mimosella. *17. A. corticata. 12. A. pinnatifida. 18. A. lacerata. *13. A. cupressus. 19. A. pyramidata. 14. A. pennacea. 20. A. Boscii. 15. A. scoparia. 21. A. alopecuroidesv 16. A. foeniculum. • *22. A. arborea. I. Caulibus simplicissimis. 1. ANTIPATHES SPIRALIS. A. simplicissima, subspiralis, polypis elongate rostratis ; axe corneo mi- nute spinuloso, spinulis confertis, aciculatis. Quite simple, somewhat spirally twisted, polyps with a long beak; the minute spinules of the axis acicular and very numerous. The Mediterranean, and Indian Ocean. Palmiuncus anguinus, Rumphius, Amb., , Esper, Pflanz. ii. 154, tab. 8 ; a iv. 202, tab. 78, fig. C. copy of Ellis's figure. Antipathes spiralis, Pallas, Zooph., 217, , Lamour., Pol. flex., 373; Exp., 31, No. 141. pi. 19, figs. 1-6 ; Encyc., 68. , Gmelin, Linn., 3795. , Schweig., Handb., 432. , Ellis and Solander, 99, tab. 19, figs. Cirrhipates spiralis, Blainv., Man., 512, 1-6. pi. 88, fig. 2. 2. ANTIPATHES ANGUINA. (Dana.} A. simplicissima, paulum spirali-flexuosa, polypis viridescentibus vix rostratis, tentaculis basifuscis ; axi corneo longe subarticulato, spimdis subremotis, compressis, subacutis. TRIBE IV. — ANTIPATHACEA. 577 Quite simple, somewhat spirally flexuous; polyps greenish, scarcely beaked ; tentacles fuscous at base ; axis with faint articulations at long distances; spinules rather remote, compressed, subacute. Plate 56, fig. I, extremity of zoophyte, natural size; 1 o, axis; 1 b, 1 c, polyps, enlarged ; 1 d, section of axis, enlarged. From the reefs off Mathuata, Venua Lebu, Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. This species resembles the preceding, but the polyps are not pro- perly beaked, and the spinules of the surface are more distant, stouter, and hardly acute. Moreover, distinct nodes are apparent in the axis, every three or four inches, towards the upper extremity of the zoo- phyte. The whole stem was six feet long, and grew in five feet water, yet it was so twisted as not to reach the surface. The polyps were very sluggish in their motions (as the figures indicate), and about a sixth of an inch in diameter. It is probable that this is the Palmiuncus anguinus, of Rumphius, and perhaps also the Cirrhipates Sieboldi, of Blainville (Man., 512). II. A. simplices, lateraliter longe pinnuliferis. 3. ANTIPATHES LARIX. (Esper.) A. simpkx, pr&longa, ramulis longissimis (2-4"), undique spar sis, ramu- lorum axe setiformi. Simple, very long ; branchlets very long (2 to 4 inches), pointing every way, and having a setiform axis. The Mediterranean, Gulf of Venice. Lamarck. Antipathes larix, Esper, Pflanz., ii. 147, Antipathes larix, Lamour., Pol. flex., 374 ; tab. 4. Encyc., 70. — , Lamk., ii. 482, No. 11. , Blainville, Man., 511. 4. ANTIPATHES EUPTERIDEA. (Lamarck.) A. simpkx, pinnata, pinnulis simplidbus eleganter incurvis ; caulis axe subtriquetro, pinnularum setaceo. 145 57S ZOOPHYTES. Simple, pinnate, pinnules simple, elegantly incurved ; axis of the stem nearly triangular, of the pinnules setaceous. Coast of Martinique. Lamarck. Lamouroux. Antipathes eupteridea, Lamarck, ii. 483, une belle plume de paon decolorec et No. 19. brunnatre." , Lamour., Encycl., 71 ; " Resemble a III. In piano ramosce. 1. Ramis pinnatis. 5. ANTIPATHES PECTINATA. (Lamarck.} A. flabellata, 9" alta; ramis pinnato-pectinatis ; ramorum axe com- presso, ramulorum filiformi, subulato; spinulis paucis. Flabellate, 9 inches high; branches pinnato-pectinate, axis of the branches compressed; of the branchlets filiform, subulate; spinules few. Antipathes pectinata, Lamk., ii. 480, No. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 381 ; Encyc., 6. — Locality not given. 72. 6. ANTIPATHES MYRIOPHYLLA. (Pallas.} A. grandis (18-20" alta}, late ramosissima, incurvata, in piano pani- culata, subtripinnata, pinnulis brevibus (vix |"), crebris ; pinnularum axe selaceo, scabro. Large (18 to 20 inches high), much and spreading ramose, incurvate, paniculate in a plane, subtripinnate, pinnules short (^ of an inch or less), much crowded ; axis of the pinnules setaceous, scabrous. Indian Ocean. Ellis. Lamouroux. Myriophyllum Indicum ramosissimum, Antipathes myriophylla, Esper, Fortsetz., Pettiv. Gazoph., tab. 35, fig. 12. i., tab. 10. Antipathes myriophytta, Pallas, Zooph., , Lamk., ii. 481, No. 9. 210. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 378; Exp., 32, , Ellis and Sol., 102, tab. 19, figs. 11, pi. 19, figs. 11, 12 ; Encyc., 71. 12. — From the Moluccas. , Blainv., Man., 510, pi. 87, fig. 2. TRIBE IV. — ANTIPATHACEA. 579 7. ANTIPATHES SUBPINNATA. A. ramosa, pinnata, pinnulis alternis, vix 1' longis,aliis interdum trans- verse positis ; pinnularum axe setaceo. Ramose, pinnate, pinnules alternate, scarcely an inch long, a few at right angles with the others ; axis of the pinnules setaceous. Mediterranean Sea. Lamourouz. Antipathes subpinnata, Ellis and Solander, , Lamouroux, Pol. flex., 379 ; Exp., 101, tab. 19, figs. 9, 10. 32, pi. 19, figs. 9, 10 ; Encyc., 72. , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 484, No. 20. , Blainville, Man., 511. 8. ANTIPATHES RETICULATA. (Esper.) A. in piano ramosa, ramis inordinate ascendentibus, crebris, scepe bipin- natis, interdum coalitis, pinnulis divaricatis, 1 £"' remotis, brevibus et incequalibus ; ramorum ramulorumque axe filiformi et setaceo. Branching in a plane, branches irregularly ascending, crowded, often bipinnate, pinnules sometimes coalescing, divaricate, about l£ lines distant, short and unequal ; axis of branches and branchlets very slender, and of pinnules setaceous, scabrous. East Indies (?). Antipathes reticulata, Esper, Fortsetz., i. 183, tab. 11 : "A. explanata, ramis inor- dinate ascendentibus. ramulis clathratis, scaberrimis." 2. Ramis non pinnatis. 9. ANTIPATHES FLABELLUM. (Pallas.) A. flabellata, ramosissima, spatiose reticulata ; axe striato, ad later a compresso, subspinoso. Flabellate, much branched, coarse reticulate ; axis striated, laterally compressed, somewhat spinous. Indian Ocean. 580 ZOOPHYTES. Flabellum marinum planum (?), Rumph. Atnb., vi. 205, tab. 79. Antipathes flabettum, Pallas, Zooph., iii., No. 136 : " Tenerrima scabritie his- pidum." , Lamarck, No. 16 : " Grande et belle espece, tout-a-fait flabelliforme et reti- culee ;" Lamarck refers to Esper's Ant. flabellum, tab. 1 , which is not scabrous, and is probably a decorticated Gorgonia (G. Esperi ?). Antipatlies flabellum, Lamouroux, Polyp, flex., 382 ; Encyc., 73. 10. ANTIPATHES ERICOIDES. A. Jlabellata, ramosissima, intertexta ; ramorum ramulorumque axe filiformi, hispidulo; ramulis brevibus, setaceis. Flabellate, much branched, interwoven ; axis of branches and branch- lets filiform, finely hispid ; branchlets short, and setaceous. Indian Ocean (?). Esper. Lamarck. and A. ericoides, ibid., tab. 6 ; the figure has some resemblance, in the slender axis, to that of thereticulala, but it is not pinnate branched, and has fewer branch- lets. Antipathes ericoides (?), Pallas, Zooph., 208. , Lamarck, 482, No. 13. , Lamouroux, Polyp, flex., 381 ; En- cyc., 72. Antipathes myriophylla, Esper, ii. 150, NOTE. — The following flabellate species, judging from Esper's descriptions and figures, to which Lamarck refers, may be decorticated Gorgonioe. A. RADIANS (Lamarck). Subflabellate, much branched, subspinous, branches divari- cately radiating. Mediterranean. — A. fceniculacea, Esper, ii. 152, tab. 7 ; A. radians, Lamk., ii. 482, No. 14; Lamour., Pol. flex., 380, and Encyc., 72 ; Blainv., Man., 511. A. CLATHRATA. Flabellate, much and intricately branched, branchlets often coa- lescing, and hence coarse reticulate, the smaller quite short and subsetaceous. Indian Ocean (?). — Antipathes clathrata (?), Pallas, Zooph., 212; A. clathrata, Esper, ii. 141, tab. 2, according to whom the surface is smooth and shining ; Lamarck, ii. 483, No. 15 ; Lamour., Polyp, flex., 382, and Encyc., 72. A. LIGULATA (Esper). Flabellate, much branched, coalescent and delicately reticu- late; axis of the branches compressed ; of the branchlets ligulate, resembling somewhat the axis of a Gorgonia flabellum; A. ligulata, Esper, ii. 149, tab. 5; probably a decorti- cated Gorgonia flabellum or clathrus; Lamk., ii. 483, No. 17; Lamour., Polyp, flex., 381, and Encyc., 72. IV. Non jlabellatce, nee in piano ramosee. 11. ANTIPATHES MIMOSELLA. (Lamarck.) A. ramosissima, 2' alta, paniculata, expansa ; ramis patentibus, alter- TRIBE IV. — ANTIPATHACEA. 581 nis decomposito-pinnatis ; pinnulis distichis ; pinnularum axe. setaceo, hispido. Much branched, 2 feet high, paniculate, spreading, branches open, alternate, decompound-pinnate, pinnules distichous; axis of the pinnules setaceous, hispid. East Indies. Antipathcs mimosella, Lamarck, ii. 481, flex., 377 ; Exp. Meth., 31, pi. 19, figs. No. 8. 7, 8 ; Encyc., 70 ; Lamouroux describes — , Lamouroux, Encyc., 71. the idex as follows: "A ramosissima, Antipatltes ulex (?), Ellis and Sol., 100, ramis sparsis, patentibus, hispidissimis, tab. 19, figs. 7, 8 ; and Lamour., Pol. attenuatis." 12. ANTIPATHES PINNATIFIDA. (Lamouroux.} A. ramosa, 2' alta, ramis patentibus, alternis, pinnatifidis, ramulis ramusculisque distichis vel subsparsis, rectis, antice projectis ; ramus- culorum axe rigido, echinato. Ramose, 2 feet high ; branches open, alternate, pinnatifid, branchlets and pinnules distichous, or somewhat scattered, straight; the axis of the branchlets rigid, echinate. East Indies. A>itipiit/iespinnatifida,Ija.mour.,Po\. flex., Antipathes pinnatifida, Lamarck, 2d ed., 377, pi. 14, fig. 4 ; Encyc., 70. ii. 481, No. 8 a. 13. ANTIPATHES CUPRESSUS. (Pallas.) A. elongate arborescens, ramulis lateralibus brevibus, creberrimis, paulum recurvatis, bipinnatis. Elongate arborescent, lateral branchlets quite short and crowded, a little recurved, bipinnate. Ciipressus marina, Seba, Thes., iii. tab. A. citpressina, Pallas, Zooph., 213. 106, fig. 1 ; a specimen sixteen inches , Esper, Pflanz., ii. 143, tab. 3 ; a bad high, and three and a half broad. figure. Rumphius, Amboyn., tab. 80, fig. 2. A. cupressus, Ellis and Solander, 103. 146 582 ZOOPHYTES. A. cuprcssus, Lamarck, ii. 481, No. 10. by Lamarck. Its mode of growth is , Lamour., Polyp, flex., 380 ; Encyc., similar, but its form is much broader, 72. the lateral branches being three or four Esper's A. panimlata (Fortsetz. i. tab. 12), inches long, and stouter. It is described is referred with a query to this species, by Esper, as ovato-paiiiculate. 14. ANTIPATHES PENNACEA. A. ramosa, subincurva ; pinnulis creberrimis ; pinnularum axe setaceo, hispido. Ramose, somewhat incurved; pinnules much crowded ; axis of the pinnules setaceous, hispid. Indian Ocean. Lamarck. Humph., Amboyn., vi. 209. Antipatlies pennacea, Bosc., vers. iii., 40. Antipathes pennacea, Pallas, Zooph., 269. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 379; Encyc. 71. , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 483. 15. ANTIPATHES SCOPARIA. (Lamarck.} A. parce ramosa, sitperne paniculato-corymbosa ; ramis ramulisque elongalis gracilibus ; ramulorum axejiliformi, hispidulo, scabro. Sparingly ramose, above paniculate-corymbose ; branches and branch- lets long and slender; axis of branchlets filiform, finely hispid, scabrous. Mediterranean Sea. Marsilli. Antipathes scoparia, Lamk., ii. 480, No. 7. Antipathies scoparia, Lamour., Pol. flex., , Esper, Fortsetz., ii. tab. 14. 376 ; Encyc., 70. 16. ANTIPATHES FCENICULUM. (Lamarck.} A. ramosissima, laxa, subpaniculata ; ramorum axe inferne subcom- presso, spinoso, ramulorumque ultimorum setaceo, levigato. Much branched, lax, subpaniculate ; axis of the branches somewhat compressed, spinous, of the terminal branchlets setaceous, smooth. TRIBE IV. — ANTIPATHACEA. East Indies (?). Lamarck. Antijiat/iesfceniculucea (?), Pallas, Zooph., A. fceniculum, Lamour., Pol. flex., 379 ; 207. Encyc., 71 ; states that it grows to a Rumph. Amboyn., vi. 208, tab. 80, fig. 3. height of seven or eight inches. A.fceniculum, Lamk., ii. 482, No. 12. , Blainville, Man., 511. 17. ANTIPATHES CORTICATA. (Lamarck.) A. caule parce ramosa, 15" alta, corticata, spinis numerosis echinata ; corticis poris nullis. Stern sparingly ramose, 15 inches in height, corticate, echinate, with numerous spines; cortex without pores. Indian Ocean. The cortex is merely a thin animal coating, and its existence is not an essential characteristic. Antipathes corticata, Lamk., ii. 480, No. 3. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 374 ; Encyc. 69. 18. ANTIPATHES LACERATA. (Lamarck.) A. caule ramosa, fere 2' alta, ramusculis spiniformibus echinata ; ramis sarmentosis, tortuosis, sensim attenuatis ; ramulis lateralibus, tenui- bus, sublaceris. Stem ramose, nearly 2 feet high, echinate with spiriiform branchlets ; branches sarmentose, tortuous, gradually attenuate; branchlets lateral, very numerous, slender, sublacerate. Indian Ocean (?). Lamarck. Antipathes lacerala, Lamarck, ii. 430, Encycl., 70. " Ses branches s'entortil- No. 4. lent les unes avec les autres comme pour Ant. lacera, Lamouroux, Pol. flex., 377 ; se soutenir." 19. ANTIPATHES PYRAMID ATA. (Lamarck.) A. caule rigida, indivisa ; ramulis lateralibus, creberrimis, quaquaverstm UHI7BRSIT7 584 ZOOPHYTES. spar sis, in pyramidam dispositis, dichotomis ; axe nitidulo, olivaceo- lutescente. Stem rigid and undivided ; branchlets lateral, much crowded, scat- tered, and pointing every way, forming together a pyramid, dicho- tomous ; axis a little shining, yellowish-olive. East Indies (?). Lamarck. A. pyramidata, Lamarck, ii. 480, No. 5. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 375; Encyc., 69. 20. ANTIPATHES Boscn.. (Lamouroux.} A. flexuosa, ramosa, ramulis numerosis divaricatis ; ramulorum axe setaceo. Flexuous, ramose, branches numerous and divaricate ; axis at sum- mits setaceous. Shores of Carolina. Bosc. Antipathes Boscii, Lamour., Pol. flex., 375, pi. 14, fig. 5; Encyc., 69. Grows to a height of four inches, and its scattered branches have numerous very divergent branchlets. , Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 484. 21. ANTIPATHES ALOPECUROIDES. (Ellis.} A. ramosa; ramis arete paniculatis ; ramorum axe hispido; ramulorum setaceo, fragili. Ramose, branches close paniculate ; axis hispid, .setaceous, brittle. Shores of South Carolina. Ellis. Lamouroux. Antipathes alopecuroides,E\\\s,Zooph.,W2. rameaux assex nombreux, en forme de , Lamour., Pol. flex., 375; Encyc., 69. panicule serrce, presque semblable & la " Elles se divisent, et se sous-divisent en queue de renard." 22. ANTIPATHES ARBOREA. (Dana.} A. arborescens, laxe ramosa, patens, maxima (3' alta}; ramis sub- TRIBE IV. — ANTIPATHACEA. 585 JJc.ruosis ; axe undique hispido, ramulorum elongate setiformi, fragili ; polijpis flavidis, ore prominente, ramulorum plerumque uniseriatis. Arborescent, lax and spreading ramose, very large (3 feet high) ; branches subflexuous ; axis throughout hispid, of branchlets, long and slender setiform, fragile ; polyps brownish-yellow, mouth pro- minent; on branchlets, nearly in a single series. Plate 56, fig. 2, part of a branch, with the expanded polyps, natural size ; 2 a, polyp, enlarged; 2 b, part of trunk, natural size. Sandalwood Bay, Feejees, in ten fathoms. Exp. Exp. This species appears to have much the habit of the dichotoma of the Mediterranean, but is more spreading in its branches. In the secund position of the polyps, it also appears to be near that species. The trunk at base is nearly half an inch thick. It gives off stout branches, and subdivides above quite irregularly. The Antipathes compressa, of Esper, (Fortsetz., i. tab. 13,) has the habit of this spe- cies, as far as figured. APPENDIX. — Antipathes dichotoma, (Pallas.} This species is de- scribed from the figure and account by Marsilli (Lith., No. 9, fig. 101, tab. 21), who obtained his specimen near Marseilles, in one hun- dred and forty fathoms. It is rather sparingly branched, with the branches elongate and slender, and not in a plane. He describes it as two feet in height and one and a half lines thick at base ; it was covered with minute globes on one side, when first obtained, which were the partially closed polyps. (Pallas, Zooph., 216. A. dichotoma, Lamour., Pol. flex., 374; Encyc., 69.) The Antipathes glaberrima, of Esper (ii., tab. 9), may be a decorti- cated Gorgonia. It is described by Esper as follows: "A. dichotoma (raro reticulatim coalita), incurvato-flexuosa et contorta, ligno atro, extus glaberrimo, nitidissimo." It is a large stout species, having the stem at base a third of an inch thick. The figure, in form, resembles his compressa. 147 586 ZOOPHYTES. Dsn II.— ALCYONARJA. Zoophyta aut omnino carnosa, aut corattigena, gemmipara. Polypi octo-tentaculaii ; tentaculis cequalibus papillosis, papillis apice perfo- ratis. Plica, viscerales octo. Secretiones coraltigenas pedibus inte- gumentisque internis, sed non plicis visceralibus, elaborantia ; internis, cakareis ; e pedibus, corneis aut cakareis, raro siliceis. Zoophytes wholly fleshy or coralligenous, gemmiparous. Polyps having the tentacles 'eight in number, papillose, with the papillae perforate at apex. Visceral lamellse eight. Coral secretions formed from the foot of the polyps, or by the internal tissues, but never by the visceral lamellse ; the foot-secretions, for the most part, either corneous or calcareous, rarely siliceous; the tissue-secretions cal- careous. The general characteristics of this division of zoophytes have been given on pages 42 to 50. The eight tentacles, furnished with a fringe of perforate papilke, and the eight lamellse of the visceral cavity, con- stitute the prominent characters of the polyps.* These eight lamellse are sometimes part spermatic and part ovarian; but instances are also given of eggs being produced from all; and in a Veretillum figured by Milne Edwards, in the illustrated edition of Cuvier (pi. 91, fig. 1), the same lamella? are spermatic above and ovarian below, in analogy with a Gynandrous plant in the vegetable kingdom; yet in this species, as in the Tubipora examined by the author, the spermatic cords were confined to six of the eight lamellae. The animals vary in size from a third of a line to nearly an inch. They appear to affiliate with the Actinaria through the Lucerna- riae, which have a four or eight-lobed summit. Yet the occurrence of only eight visceral lamellse, corresponding to eight papillose ten- tacles, and alternating with them, forms a wide line of demarcation * Many of the published figures of the polyps of Alcyonarm, are drawn from the purtly expandcd zoophyte, in which state, the papilla- of the polyps are very short, or are not at all apparent. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 587 (see p. 123). The coralla are sometimes tubular, and when so, the tubes are peculiar in being smooth within, without lamellar rays or stria3. The Alcyonaria differ in being either free (or simply buried at base), or attached by growth. The former species constitute the family PennatuUda, and the latter the remaining families. It may be ques- tioned, however, whether this distinction should not require the insti- tution of the two groups as equivalent tribes. The attached species form either tissue-secretions alone, or separable foot and tissue-secre- tions. These last are the Gorgonidce ; the others, when the coral secretions are disseminated grains or spicules, belong to the family AlcyonidcB ; and when they form tubular coralla, to the families Cor- ni//'iridce and Tubiporidce. These families may be briefly charac- terized as follows : — 1. PENNATULID^;. — Free, or with the base buried. 2. ALCYONID.E. — Attached ; no coral secretions, or only calcareous spicula within, and no axis. 3. CORNULARID^E. — Attached ; coralla tubular, corneous. 4. TuBiPORiDvE. — Attached ; coralla tubular, calcareous. 5. GORGONID^E. — Attached ; a separable axis to the branches. FAMILY L-PENNATULID.fi. Alcyonaria nunquam ajfixa, sive libera sive bast defossa. Unattached Alcyonaria, either free or with the base buried. These zoophytes are either flat plates, simple stems, or plume-like fronds. The polyps occur on one or both sides of the stem or branches, and in a single genus form a cluster at the extremity. The base of the zoophyte is often somewhat enlarged, and some species, by means of it, are planted in the mud. The greater part of them secrete a slender solid axis along the main stem or midrib of the frond, which is either cartilaginous or calcareous. The polyps have the o-eneral characteristics of the Alcyonia. 588 ZOOPHYTES. This family may be subdivided as follows : SUBFAMILY I. PENNATULIN^E. Polyps retractile. G. 1. Rcnilla. Free, explanate, unifacial (reniform). 2. Veretillum. Very stout, oblong cylindrical, simple, with scattered polyps. 3. Virgularia. Slender virgate, with very short pinnules or none. 4. Pennatula. Pinnate and stout, or plumiform, with long pinnules. SUBFAMILY II. PAVONARINX. Polyps not retractile. 5. Pavonaria. Virgate, polyps secund. 6. Umbellularia. Virgate, polyps in a terminal cluster. SUBFAMILY I.— PENNATULIN^. Polypis retractilibus. Polyps retractile. GENUS I.— RENILLA. Liberce, explanata, unifrontes ; polypis sparsis retractilibus. Free, explanate, unifacial; polyps scattered, retractile. 1. RENILLA AMERICANA. (Ellis.) R. reniformis, margine acuto ; postice caudata, cauda subtus longitudi- naliter sulcata. Reniforrn, margin acute ; behind caudate, with the caudal appendage, below, longitudinally sulcate. West Indies. — Off Rio Janeiro. Exp. Exp. Resembles a thick reniform leaf, with a stout pedicel. In the con- SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 589 traded state the upper surface is sprinkled with minute white dots, and larger substellate spots, ahout three-fourths of a line in diameter : the former, under the microscope, consist of eight points, and are, probably, young budding polyps; the larger are the adult polyps, and are about a line apart. The general surface is filled with very minute calcareous spicula, seen only under a magnifier. Below, the zoophyte is venosely striate ; and the caudal appendage is longitudinally sulcate and transversely fine rugate. The usual size of the specimens from the West Indies and Carolina coast, is about an inch in breadth, with the caudal appendage two-thirds of an inch long. Specimens, probably of this species, were obtained by the Expedition at Rio Janeiro. They were collected by J. P. Couthouy, and figures I, I a, plate 57, are from his drawings. The expanded polyps have the rays light yellow, with a row of red dots along the margin, at the base of the fringe of long papillaB. The general colour of the zoophyte is a dull reddish-purple. Only a more thorough examination of the polyps of the R. americana, will determine the identity of these species. The author has examined a specimen from Rio, in alcohol, but it was in too imperfect a condition to decide the question. Akyonium agaricum, Linn, Gmel., 3811. , Schweigger, Beobacht. pi. 2, figs. 10, Pennatula reniformis, Ellis and Sol., 65. 11 ; giving dissections ; and Handb.,435. , Pallas, Elenchus Zooph., 374. , Blainville, Man. d'Actin., 518. — , Shaw, Miscell., iv., tab. 139. , Ehrcnberg, op. cit., G. xxxiv., sp. 1. Renilla americana, Lamarck, ii. 646. The Rcnilla violncea, of Quoy and Gaymard, may be a different species, but the only distinguishing character hitherto given is an emarginate or concave front margin. The polyps were of a yellow colour, with a very short fringe, and perhaps were not fully ex- panded. (Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de 1'Uranie, pi. 86, figs. 6—8. Regne Animal, Paris, 1837, pi. 91, fig. 3; a copy of Quoy and Gaymard's figure; Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. xxxiv., sp. 2.) GENUS II.— VERETILLUM.— CUVIER. PennatulidcB crassce, oblongo-cylindricce, non ramosce ; polypis sparsis, retractilibus. Stout cylindrical, and not branched ; polyps scattered, retractile. 148 590 ZOOPHYTES. The stout non-ramose form, and scattered polyps, distinguish the Veretilla from the species of the following genera. The eight polyps are fringed with papillae, as in other Alcyonaria. 1. VERETILLUM CYNOMORIUM. (Pallas.} Cuvier. V. aurantiacum, crasso-cylindricum, stipite subgranulosum ; polypi* albicantibus ; axe tenui. Orange-coloured, stout cylindrical (£ an inch in diameter) ; base sub- granulous, polyps whitish, axis very slender. Mediterranean Sea. Pallas. Lamarck. Edwards. Pcnnatida cynomorium, Pallas, Zooph., , Ehrenberg, G. xxx., sp. 1. 373 ; Misc. Zool., tab. 13, fig. 1, 4. , Milne Edwards, Reg. Anim., Cuvier, , Ellis, Phil. Trans., liii., 434, tab. 21, 1837, pi. 91, fig. 1 ; the animals from figs. 3-5. nature. , Lamk., ii. 639, No. 2. The Vcretillum lateum, of Quoy and Gay- , Blainv., Faune franfaise, Zooph., pi. mard (Ann. des Sci. Nat., 1827, x. 188, 2, figs. 1 and 2 ; Man., 518, pi. 89, fig. 2. pi. 9, fig. 4), is described as six inches , Rapp, Nova Acta, Goes. Leop. Car. long, and an inch and a half in diameter, Nat. Curios., t. 14, pi. 38. of an orange colour, with whitish polyps. 2. VERETILLUM PHALLOIDES. (Pallas.) Cuvier. V. cinerascens, viz digiti crassitie ; fere 6" longum, cylindri^im, sub- davaium ; axe subulato, quadr angular i. Cinereous, scarcely as large as the finger, nearly 6 inches long, cylin- drical, subclavate ; axis subulate, quadrangular. East Indies, near Amboyna. Pennatula phalloides, Pallas, Zooph., 373; Veretillum phalloides, Lamarck, ii. 638, Misc. Zool., 179, tab. 13, figs. 5-9. No. 1. Veretillum phalloides, Cuvier, Reg. Anim., , Blainville, Man., 518. 2d ed., iii. 319. , Ehrenberg, G. xxx., sp. 3. APPENDIX. — The Pennatula stellifera, of Miiller (Zool. Dan., i. 133, No. 67, tab. 36, figs. 1-3), is referred with a query to the genus Um- bellularia, by Blainville, to Funiculina by Lamarck, and to Vere- SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 591 tillum by Ehrenberg. It is filiform, three inches long, a line wide, five-flowered, with an oblong and slightly bulbous base, and a terete, clavate axis. It comes from the coast of Norway, where it is said to have been found implanted in the mud. Veretillum clavatum is the name of a new species described by Leuckart, an account of which has not been seen by the author. (Leuck., Zool. Bruchst, ii. 120.) GENUS III.— VIRGUL ARIA.— LAMARCK. PennatulidcE elongate filiformes, pinnulis polypiferis brevibus aut obso- letis ; axe sublapideo. Long filiform Pennatulidce, having short or obsolete polypiferous pinnules; axis somewhat stony. The Virgularise are near the Pennatulse in general character; but have a slender form, and also very short pinnules, which embrace the stem and often half encircle it in preserved specimens, though spreading when alive. There are also no calcareous spicules in the fleshy portion. The polyps are in a single series along one margin of the pinnules, and have the eight fringed rays of other Alcyonaria. They usually occur with the base buried in the mud, and have been found both in the tropics and in the seas of Norway. This genus was instituted by Lamarck, and named from the Latin virgula, a little rod, in allusion to the form of the species. 1. VIRGULARIA MIRABILIS. (Miitter.} Lamarck. V. fliformis, 0-12" longa, pinnulis obliquis, arcuatis, laxis, alternis ; axe cakareo, albido, terete, fragih. Filiform, 6 to 12 inches long; pinnules oblique, arcuate, lax, mostly alternate ; axis calcareous, white, terete, fragile. Seas of Norway and Britain. 592 ZOOPHYTES. This species is shorter and stouter than the following, with the pin- nules, when uriexpanded, imbricately crowded, and longer than the breadth of the rachis, and full three times this breadth when alive and expanded. Pennatula mirabilis, Miiller, Zool., Dan., tab. 11, figs. 1-3. , Linn. Syst. Nat., 1322. — , Ellis and Solander, 63. , Sowerby, Brit. Misc., 51, pi. 25. Virgularia mirabilis, Lamk., ii. 647, No. 1. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 780. , Grant, Edinb. Jour, of Sci., No. 14. , Ehrcnberg, op. cit., G. xxvv., sp. 1. , Johnston's Brit. Zooph., 179, pi. 24. , Cuvier, Reg. Anim., 1837, pi. , figs. 8 «, 8 b. Lamarck refers same after contraction in alcohol, ac- this figure to the spinosa. cording to Esper. Poma marina grisea, Bohadsch, Mar., , Lamk., 2d cd., ii. 644, No. 3; also 109, tab. 9, fig. 1,2. P. spinosa (?), No. 4. Grey Sea Pen, Ellis, Phil. Trans., liii , , Blainv., Man., 516, pi. 89, fig. 1 . 1764, tab. 21, figs. 6-10, and P. syti- and Faune Francaise, Zooph., pi. 1. nosa, Ellis and Solander, 62. , Delle Chiaje, Anim. scnza vert., iii., Pfnnatula grisea, Linn., ed. xii., 1321. pi. 31, figs. 1-3. 4. PENNATULA ARGENTEA. (Ellis ) P. angusto-lanceolata, prcdonga, (interdum \\'}, pinnulis creforrimti, imbricatis, brevibus, dentatis, argenteis. Narrow lanceolate and very long (sometimes a foot and a half); pin- nules crowded imbricate, short and dentate, silvery in appearance. East Indies. Pemtatula argentea, Ellis and Solander, , Esper, Pflanz., iii. 94, tab. 8. 66, tab. 8, figs. 1-3. The foot, as re- , Lamarck, ii. 645, No. 5. presented, is about a third of the whole , Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., 90, tab. 8, length, and the greatest breadth about a figs. 1—3. twelfth of the same. It is brilliantly , Shaw, Misc., iv., tab. 124. phosphorescent. Penn. elongata, Blainv., Man., 517. APPENDIX. — Ehrenberg describes another species, under the name Pennatula grandis, as distinct from the argentea of Lamarck, and elongata of Blainville, and refers with a query to a figure in Shaw's Miscellanies, which appears to have been copied from Ellis. It is cha- racterized by him as follows, from an imperfect specimen in the Royal SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 597 Museum at Berlin. " Subbipedalis,. vexillo sesquipedali, stipite 3£'' longo (brevitate insigni), pinnulis apicern versus longis, basin versus minimis, ibique longe distantibus, nee imbricatis, stipite basi bulboso et coronato." In its very short foot, and remote non-imbricate pin- nules, it appears to be peculiar. No locality is given. SUBFAMILY II.— PAVONARIN^. Polypis non retractilibus. Polyps not retractile. GENUS V.— PAVONARIA.— CUVIER. Pennatulidce, virgatce, secundce, polypis non retractilibus. Virgate Penuatulidse, having the polyps along one side of the stem, and not retractile. The polyps of the Pavonariae are confined to a single side of the stem, and cover it crowdedly. This genus was established by Cuvier, but afterwards restricted by Blainville, to those in which the polyps were not retractile. There is but a single species known, and this was arranged with the Funicu- linse, by Lamarck and Lamouroux. PAVONARIA QUADRANGULARIS. (Pallas.} Blainville. P. elongata (2'), gracilis, polypis confertis, longitudinaliter 3-seriatis, et in quincuncem dispositis. 150 599 ZOOPHYTES. Long (2 feet), and slender ; polyps crowded in three longitudinal series, arranged in quincunx order. Mediterranean Sea. Bohadsch, Mar., tab. 9, fig. 4. Funiculina tetragona, Lamarck, ii. 641, Pennatula qua/lrangularis, Pallas, Zooph., No. 2. 372. , Lamour., Encyc., 423. Pennatula antennina, Linn., Gmel., 3865. Pavonaria antennina, Cuvier, Reg. Anim., , Ellis and Solander, 63 ; Phil. Trans., 2d ed. iii. 319. liii. 431, tab. 20, fig. 4. Pavonaria quadrangitlaris, Blainv., 516, , Ehrenberg, G. xxxi. pi. 90, fig. 1 ; and Diet. d'Hist.Nat.,pl.61. GENUS VI.— UMBELLULARIA.— CUVIER. Pennatulidcs virgatce, polypis terminalibus, non retraclilibus. Virgate Pennatulidse, having the polyps terminal, and riot retractile. Only a single specimen of this genus has hitherto been met with. The polyps, as figured by Ellis, closely resemble the other Alcyonaria in their fringed tentacles, and general form. They constitute a sessile umbel at the extremity of a long slender stem. UMBELLULARIA GREENLANDICA. (Lamarck.) U. longissima (6'), supernt attenuata, polypis in umbeUam congestis. Very long (6 feet) attenuate above ; polyps forming an umbel. Seas of Greenland. Zoophyton granlandicum, Mylius, Besch- , Linn., Gmclin., 3867. reib. gronl. Thierpfl. 1753. Umbcllularia gmnlantlmi, Lamk.,2d cd., Tsis encrinus, Linn., ed. x., 800 ; Vorti- ii. 677. cellaencrinus, ibid., ed. xii., 1317 ; Ellis's , Esper, Pflanz., iii. 366, tab. Vort. 2. Corallines, 96, tab. 37, figs, a, b, c; Phil. , Blainv., Man., 513, pi. 90, fig. 2. Trans., xlviii. 305, tab. 12; liii. 427. Umltellularia encrinus, Cuvier, Reg. Anim. Pennatula encrinvs, Cluster -poly jte, Ellis iii. and Solander, 67, No. 10. , Ehrcnb., G. xxxii., sp. 1. SUBORDER AI.CYONARIA. 599 FAMILY II.— ALCYONIDJE. Akyonuria affixa, carnosa, penitus scepe calcareo-spicuttgera. Attached Alcyonaria, fleshy, often containing disseminated calcareous spicula. The Alcyonida? are fleshy zoophytes, and grow in clumps of short branches, or broad plates, spreading over the rocks. When alive, the whole is a mass of flowers, with fringed petals ; but they are no sooner touched than the blossoms disappear, and nothing remains but clusters of pale grayish branches, — "dead men's fingers" as one spe- cies has been significantly called. Some species, of rich colours, form long pendant clusters in the coral grottoes. Though a retraction and disappearance of the polyp-flowers usually take place when disturbed, there are a few species in which this is not the case. The scattered granules of lime are so abundant in many species as to give considerable firmness to the zoophyte, and the natives of the South Sea Islands often use them in place of sand-paper for polish- ing their war-clubs. These zoophytes abound in the tropics, and some species are found in the seas of Northern Europe. This family includes the following subfamilies and genera : SUBFAMILY I. XENINJJ. Texture carnose. Polyps not retractile. G. 1. Rhizozenia. Polyps attached in lines which are often reticulate. G. 2. Anthelia. Forming spreading plates. G. 3. Xenia. Forming thick lobed or subramose masses. SUBFAMILY II. ALCYONIN.E. Texture carnose. Polyps partly or wholly retractile. 1 . Polyps semi-retractile, leaving u-art-like prominences or verruca. G. 4. Ammothea. Ramose or fruticulose, verruca? unarmed. G. 5. Sympodium. Effuse, not stipitate, verrucoc unarmed. G. 6. Nephthya. Verrucsc armed with calcareous spicula. 2. Polyps wholly retractile. G. 7. Alcyonium. Lobed or branched ; fringe of tentacles short. SDBFAMILY III. SPOGGODIN.E. Texture membranous, and very open cellular within ; polyps minute, not retractile, in clusters of calcareous spicula. G. 8. Spoggodia. 600 ZOOPHYTES. SUBFAMILY I.— XENIN^E. Carnosce; polypis non retractilibus. Carnose, and surface not harsh ; polyps not retractile. GENUS I.— RHIZOXENIA.— EHRENBERG. Alcyonida carnosce, polypis non retractilibus, per stolones filiformes gem- mantibus. Carnose Alcyonidae ; polyps not retractile and budding by means of creeping filiform shoots. This genus was instituted by Ehrenberg for the Zoantha thalas- santhos, of Lesson, an imperfectly described species, and probably a Cornularia, or near Quoy and Gaymard's Clavularice. Philippi has instituted the genus Evagora, with the same characteristics, pro- posing (we think unnecessarily) to substitute this name for Eliren- berg's, on the ground of the uncertainty with regard to the characters of Lesson's species. The name Rhizoxenia, is from |i£a, a root, and Xenia, the name of a following genus, allied to this in its polyps. 1. RHIZOXENIA THALASSANTHA. (Lesson.) Ehrenberg. R. corpore claviformi, lonyitudinaliter striato, tentaculis Jiliformibus pinnatis. Body claviform, longitudinally striate, tentacles filiform, pinnate. This species is referred to the genus Cornularia, by Blainville and Milne Edwards, with the species of which it agrees nearly in habit. It also resembles Quoy and Gaymard's Clavularia viridis. SUBORDER ALCYONARI A. 601 Zoautha tludasscmthos, Lesson, Voy. do , Milne Edwards, Lamk., 5Jd ed., ii. la Coquille (1825), Zooph., pi. 1, fig. 2. 129. Cornularia lludassianttwidea, Blainville, Rhizoxenia ttiafassantJui, Ehrenb., G. xxii. Man., 499 ; and Diet. d'Hist. Nat., 463. " An bene observata ? Forsan Anthelia fuit." 2. RHIZOXENIA ROSEA. (Philippi.) Dana. R. polypis paucibus (6-10) consociatis, 2'" longis, roseis, tentaculis fim- briatis. Polyps of the zoophyte few (6 to 10), each about 2 lines long ; colour rose-red ; tentacles fringed with papillse. Near Naples, incrusting barnacles, &c. Philippi. ra rosea,, Philippi, Wagner's Archiv., viii. 36. 3. RHIZOXENIA PRIMULA. (Dana.) R. pallide rosea aut lilacina, polypis 4-5'" altis, tentaculis non fimbriatis, fere l^'" longis, papittis sparsis, obsolescentibus, verruciformibus. Pale rose or lilac; polyps 4 to 5 lines high, tentacles not fringed, each nearly 1J lines long, papillae scattered, obsolescent, verruciforra. Plate 57, fig. 2, polyps, natural size ; 2 a, one of them, enlarged. Ovolau, one of the Feejee Islands, along the shores, in shallow water. Exp. Exp. This is a very neat species, and when fully expanded, the star of tentacles is over a fourth of an inch in diameter. The tentacles are peculiar in having, instead of a fringe of oblong papilla3, a few scat- tered verruciform prominences. The stolon uniting the polyps was not observed, and I am not satisfied that the polyps were not solitary, as was my impression when the drawings were made. 151 602 ZOOPHYTES. GENUS II.— ANTHELIA.— SAVIGNV. Akyonidce carnosce, explanato-gemmata ; polypis non retractilibus. Carnose, explanato-gemmate Alcyonidae; polyps not retractile. The Anthelise cover the rocks, or any solid support at hand, with thin fleshy plates, which consist of an aggregation of polyps united by their bases. They differ from the Xenise in budding only at the base, which gradually spreads outward by the process, producing finally the incrusting plate. I. ANTHELIA GLAUCA. (Savigny.) A. glauca, ccerulescens ; polypis infra subventricosis, interdum coales- centibus. Glaucous, pale bluish ; polyps subventricose below, sometimes be- coming coalescent. Red Sea. Savigny. Anthelia glauca, Savigny, Egyp. Polypes, AntMia glauca, Schweig., Handb., 41 1. pi. 1, fig. 7. , Blainv., Man., 524. , Lamk., ii. 623, No. 1. , Ehrenberg, G. xxi., sp. 1. , Lamour., Exp. Meth., 70. 2. ANTHELIA STRUMOSA. (Ehrenberg.} A. glauca; polypis sub ore inftatis, strumosis, pollicaribus. Glaucous; polyps inflated below the mouth, strumous, an inch in height. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. Anthelia strumosa, Ehrenb., G. xxi., sp. 2. , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 623. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 603 3. ANTHELIA PURPURASCENS. (Ehrenberg.) A. extus e violaceo allricans ; tentaculis intus violaceo-purpurascentibus, papillis utrinque 3-seriatis. Exterior pale violet; tentacles purplish violet within ; papillae on each side in three series. , Red Sea. Ehrenberg. Anthdia p/irpitrascens, Ehrenberg, G. xxi., sp. 3. Savigny's pi. 1, fig. 5, Erff. quercus folium, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxiv., Gorg. dilatata? Esper, Fortsetz. ii. 25, sp. 5. tab. 51, 56. 648 ZOOPHYTES. 2. G. PTEROGORGIA ANCEPS. (Linn.) Ehrenb. — Violaceous, and also yellowish with purple margins; two feet high, paniculate; branches long linear, generally two to two and a half lines wide and often a foot long, two-edged or sometimes three to four winged, with a single series of oscules along the edge : axis black, slightly compressed, in the branchlets wax-yellow. West Indies. Hans Sloane's Jamaica, tab. 22, fig. 4. Gorgonia anceps, Linn., ed. xii., 1292. , Pallas, Zooph., 183. , Ellis and Solander, 89. , Esper, ii. 38, tab. 7. , Lamarck, ii. 494, No. 18. , Fleming's Brit. Animals, 512. — , Blainville, Man., 505. Pterogorgia anceps, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxv., sp. 6. The Gorgonia anceps, plate 25, figure 3, of Johnston's Zoophytes, appears to be -, Lamour., Pol. flex. ,395; Encyc., 437. the citrina. 3. G. PTEROGORGIA CITRINA. (Esper) Dana. — Low (four inches); sulphur-yellow, with the margin dotted with purple; subpinnato- ramose and nearly flabellate ; branches two-edged, branchlets one to two inches long and one line broad ; polyps marginal in a single series; axis of branches black, of branchlets yellowish. Near Cape Florida, West Indies, Bost. Nat. Hist. Soc. — British Coast? Gorg. citrina, Esper, ii. 129, tab. 38, " G. ramosa, subplana, ramis compressis brevibus, cortice flavescenle, poris mar- ginalibus vix prominulis." The figure and description agree with specimens seen by the author. The cortex is usually bright sulphur-yellow with a single row of purple dots along the margin of the flat pinnules, about twenty- four of them to an inch in length. The surface is smooth without a sulcus. Sea Willow, Ellis's Corallines, 68, tab. 27, fig. g, mentions purple as well as yellow specimens. Gorg. anceps, Johnston's Brit. Zooph., 184, pi. 25, fig. 3; from Ellis. The Gorgonia citrina, Lamk., ii. 494, No. 19, is another species. — " G. humilis, ramosissima ; ramulis cylindraceis, obso- lete depressis, granulatis ; cortice albido- flavescente, osculis prominulis." Lamou- roux, Pol. flex., 412 ; Encyc., 444. 4. G. PTEROGORGIA FASCIOLARIS. (Ehrenberg.) — Low (five inches high and ten broad), sparingly ramose; branches erect, simple, much compressed and flat, throughout four and a half inches long, and one and a half lines broad ; margin thin and uniseriately dotted with red, the polyps being uniseriate. West Indies. Ehrenberg. Pterog.fasciolo.ris, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxv., sp. 4. A variety of the citrina ? — It is described us having the h;ibit of the j.ecl/'/iata. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 649 5. G. PTEROGORGIA THOMASIENSIS. (Ehrenberg.) — Low (four inches high), violaceous; sparingly ramose; branches simple, two-edged, erect, uniformly three inches long, less than a line broad at apex. Island of St. Thomas, West Indies. Ehrenberg. Ptcrogorgia Sancti Thonife, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxv., sp. 5, states that it differs from the pinnata in not being pinnate, and has the habit of the fasciolaris ; moreover, there is a third series of polyps. % 6. G. PTEROGORGIA ACEROSA. (Esper.) Ehrenberg. — Yellowish; ra- mulous, nearly flabellate, pinnate; pinnules subopposite, compressed, one to one and a half lines broad ; polyps arranged seriately along the margin, in either single or double series; oscules very minute (hardly one-fourth of a line long), and crowded ; axis of branches and branch- lets nearly black. This species, though very similar to the setosa in its pendulous habit, when full grown, has its branchlets much more flattened. The polyps on the pinnules are sometimes nearly regularly uniseriate, and often in two distinct series. The oscules are minute and much crowded, three of them hardly occupying a line in length. The pin- nules are very crowded, occurring every two to four lines, and are about a line wide and a third of a line thick. West Indies. Gorgonia acerosa, Esper, ii. 106, tab. 31. Pterogorgia acerosa, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxv., sp. 2. "Quadripedalis, flava, ramuloso- pinnata, pinnis strictiusculis, flexuosis, nee planfe oppositis, 6-7" longis, 1'" latis, com- pressis, planis." Gorgonia pinnata, in part, of Lamarck, Lamouroux, and Blainville (see the setosa}. 7. G. PTEROGORGIA PINNATA. (Ellis.) Yellowish, ramulous, pin- nate, pinnules subopposite, much compressed and complanate, one to one and a quarter lines broad, not pendulous, four to six inches long ; polyps marginal, in one or two series, large; axis of branchlets of a very pale yellowish colour. The branches as well as branchlets are very much flattened, more so than in the acerosa; the polyps are much larger than in that species, three in the same series, in the specimen examined by the author, occupying a length of nearly two lines. The axis of the branchlets is capillary and nearly colourless. Gorg. pinnata, Ellis and Solander, 87, tab. ciently crowded, a little too broad, and 14, fig. 3. The branchlets are not suffi- the polyps rather too distant. 163 650 ZOOPHYTES. Gorg. americana, Gmelin, 3799. sp. 3. " Bipedalis, et tripedalis, 9" lata, Gorgonia pinnata, in part, of Lamarck, flava, pinnata, stricta, valida, pinnis 6" Latnouroux,andBlainville(seethesetosa). longis, strictis, rarioribus, 1'" latis, com Pterogorgia stricta? Ehrenb., G. Ixxxv., planatis." 8. G. PTEROGORGIA PETECHIZANS. (Pallas.) Dana. — Yellow, with the margin dotted with purple; one to two feet high; flabellate and ramuloso-pinnate ; pinnules numerous, short (one to two inches), a line broad, nearly parallel, compressed ; polyps scarcely prominent, mostly marginal, but not generally in regular series. Atlantic and Coast of Africa. Lamarck. Gorg. petechizans, Pallas, Zooph., 196. Gorg. abietina, Ellis and Sol., 95, tab. 16. , Esper, ii. 55, tab. 13. Coast of Africa. , Lamk., ii. 491, No. 10. Gorg. sanguinoknta? Pallas, Zooph., 175. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 398; Exp. Meth., " G. depressa, ramosissima, dichotomo- 33, pi. 16 ; Encyc., 440. pinnata, corticis flavi poris distichis pur- , Blainv., Man., 505. pureis." , Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxiv., sp. 9. 9. G. PTEROGORGIA PATULA. (Ellis.) Dana. — Deep red; eight inches high ; ramose, subpinnate, tortuous ; branches compressed, not crowded ; polyps subdistichous; axis fuscous. Mediterranean Sea. Gorgonia patula, 88, tab. 15, figs. 3, 4. Gorgonia patula, Lamour., Pol. flex., 399; The branches and branchlets are flat- Exp. Meth., 33, tab. 15, figs. 3, 4 : tened, not crowded, 1—1 5 lines wide, and Encyc., 440. 3 lines below ; the polyps are not con- , Lamk., 2d ed., ii, 499, No. 35 a. fined to the margin. II. Branchlets terete, or but slightly compressed. A. Pinnate or ramose in a plane. 10. G. PTEROGORGIA SETOSA. (Linn.) — Purple; very large, often five feet high ; ramose and very densely ramulous ; pinnules nearly opposite or somewhat scattered, subterete, very long filiform (two to six inches in length), and hardly one line thick, longitudinally faint sulcate along the middle, becoming pendulous when adult, not verru- cose ; polyps subseriate, the opposite series often double ; axis black. Figure 32, page 72, extremity of a branch. West Indies, where it is common. — Var. sericea, West Indies. Bost. Nat. Hist. Soc. This is the large purple pendulous species of the West Indies. When young, the branchlets are erect or nearly so, and the pinnate SUBORDER ALCYONARI A. 651 character is less distinct than in adult specimens. There are either one or two rows of polyps on the opposite sides of the branchlets. The main branches towards the summits are often somewhat winged. Gorg. sctosa, Linn., ed. xii., 1292. G. , in part, Lamour., Pol. flex., 396; teres, pinnata, ramulis sparsis, cortice Exp. Meth., 32 ; Encyc., 439. purpurascente. , Blainville, Man., 505. , Gmelin, Syst. Nat., 3807. Pterogorgia setosa, Ehrenb.,G. Ixxxv. ,sp. 1. , Esper, ii. 66, tab. 17. Lamarck and Lamouroux include with this Gorg. acerosa, Pallas, Zooph., 172. species the pinnata, of Ellis, and the Gorg. pinnata, in part, Lamk., ii. 493, sanguinolenta, of Pallas. No. 17. 11. G. PTEROGORGIA TURGIDA. (Ehrenberg.) — Yellow, with the habit of the acerosa; eight inches high, and seven broad; pinnules turgid, narrower and shorter (two inches long), with a double series of pores on the sides furnished with red papillae. St. Thomas, West Indies. Ehrenberg. Pterogorgia turgida, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxv., sp. 7. 12. G. PTEROGORGIA VIOLACEA. — Violaceous; ramose in a plane, pinnate ; polyps arranged for the most part in four series, and the branches therefore quadrangular; verruca nearly obsolete, contiguous. American Seas. Gorg. violacea, Pallas, Zooph., 176. G. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 408 ; Encyc., depressiuscula, ramoso-pinnata, cortice 443. violacea, poris prominulis quadrangulo. Pterogorgia violacea, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxv., , Esper, ii. 54, tab. 12. sp. 8. , Lamarck, ii. 497, No. 27. 13. G. PTEROGORGIA LAXA. (Lamarck.) Lax ramose, flabellate; branches somewhat depressed, smooth; branchlets crowded, a little curving ; polyps submarginal. Gorg. laxa, Lamk., ii. 490, No. 7 ; Milne Edwards adds that the polyps are lateral in several irregular series, with a naked medial space on opposite sides, but no sulcus along the principal stem. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 98 ; Encyc., 440. 14. G. PTEROGORGIA ROSEA. Rose-red ; dichotomously branched, in a plane ; branches subpinnate; branchlets terete, unequally ascend- ing; polyps subser i ate. Mediterranean, and Atlantic Ocean. Lamarck. 652 ZOOPHYTES. Gorg. rosea, Lamarck, ii. 494, No. 20. Marsilli, Lith. quatrieme (?), tab. 19, fig. 83; from near Marseilles, in forty fathoms water, and having the polyps scattered ; colour red ; greatest height two feet, and very slender; thickness at base hardly an eighth of an inch. , Lamouroux, Pol. flex., 401 ; Encyc., 441. Gorgonia Ceratophyta (?), Linn., ed. xii., 1290, and Pallas, Zooph., 117 ; Esper, ii. 78, tab. 19. (?), Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxiv., sp. 8 ; " 9" lata, 8" alta, roseo aut cinnabarino-pur- purea, valde gracilis, depressa, laxe dichotomo-rarnulosa, virgato-divaricata, ramis seta- oeis, supra •£-£'" fere crassis, apice subverrucosis, polypis niveis." 15. G. PTEROGORGIA FUSCO-PURPUREA. (Ehrenberg.} Dana. — Dark brownish-purple, dichotomously branched, flabellate ; branchlets pa- rallel, compressed, the summit branchlets nearly terete (three-fourths of a line thick), flexuous at base, long before branching, and virgate; polyps forming two lateral bands. G.fusco-purpurea, Ehrenberg, op. cit., G. Ixxxiv., sp. 7. 16. G. PTEROGORGIA SULCIFERA. Reddish-yellow; very tall, and branching in a plane; branchlets mostly secund, ascending, obsoletely verrucose, every where with a medial sulcus; cortex thin. Indian Ocean. Gorg. sulcifera, Lamk., ii. 497, No. 30. Gorg. suberosa (?), Esper, Fortsetz., i. 170, , Lamour., Pol. flex., 412 ; Encyc., tab. 49. 444. 17. G. PTEROGORGIA PECTINATA. Reddish; one to one and a half feet high and broad ; stem dichotomising and bearing above nearly simple erect branchlets, long and pectinately arranged, one and a half lines thick, nearly terete, subverrucose ; polyps sublateral, with a flat medial area naked. The East Indies. Lamarck. Seba, Thes. iii., tab. 105, fig. 1 a. Gorgonia pectinata, Lamk., ii. 498, Gorgoniapectinata,Gmel.,Syst. Nat., 3808. No. 31. , Pallas, Zooph., 179. — , Lamour., Pol. flex., 416; Encyc., , Ellis and Solander, 85. 446. 18. G. PTEROGORGIA OCHROSTOMA. (Ehrenberg.) Dana. — Rose-red, with the margin yellow ; very densely branched; branchlets flexuous, not coalescing, subflabellate, rather rigid, branchlets compressed, shorter, a little broader, and with somewhat larger polyps than in the G. fldbellum. Gorg. ochrostoma, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxiv., sp. 2. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 653 19. G. PTEROGORGIA LKUCOSTOMA. (Ehrenberg.} Dana. — Rose-red, with a whitish margin; a foot high and nine inches broad; densely rarnulons, subflabellate, not coalescing, rigid; branches flexuous, nearly terete, half a line thick, margin polypiferous. Gorgonia Icucoslom z, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxlv., sp. 3. B. Not pinnate, nor ramose in a plane. 20. G. PTEROGORGIA SARMENTOSA. (Esper.) — Pale yellowish ; large ; lax paniculate, branchlets slender (half a line), and flexuous, nearly terete, often sulcate ; polyps lateral, often in a single series, margin of branchlets uneven, with obsolescent verruca? ; cortex thin. Mediterranean. Esper. Gorgonia sarmentosa, Esper, ii. 85, tab. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 415 ; Encyc., 21. and Fortsetz., 165, tab. 45; charac- 445. teristic figures. , Blainville, Man., 500. , Lamk., ii. 498, No. 32. 21. G. PTEROGORGIA SETACEA. (Pallas.} — Whitish ; simple, rigid, rarely with a single branch; surface subverruculose, verruculre minute (one-third of a line) and obsolete, numerous and crowded, mostly on two opposite sides, with a narrow naked interval between. The American Seas. Pallas. — Laguayra, S. A. Z. Collins. A specimen of this species in the collections of the Academy of Natural Sciences, at Philadelphia, deposited by Z. Collins, is a simple rigid terete stem, not over two lines thick, four and a half feet long, with the axis pale brownish, the cortex thin, white and very persistent, and the minute verrucas scarcely at all prominent ; the narrow naked line is distinct. The polyps are in general hardly half a line apart. Go/'gonia sctacea, Pallas, Zooph., 182. Gorgonia sctaceu, Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 502, , Lamouroux, Polyp, flex., 421 ; En- No. 35 n. eye., 447. NOTE. — The Gorgonia sanguinolenta of Esper (tab. 22) is a closely branched species, resembling in its habit, the stoutness of its branches, and thickness of cortex, the Gorgonia ardijmtlics, the branchlets being over one and a half lines thick near their summits. It is represented of a yellow colour, with two or more series of polyps on opposite sides of the branches, and is said to come from the American seas. The Gorgonia ceratophj/t.a of Ellis nnd Solandcr, tab. 12, is nearly as stout, with a somewhat similar habit, and a deep medial longitudinal furrow separating the polyps of the two sides. It was from the West Indies. The branches are full twice the diameter of the ceratophyta of Pallas. 161 654 ZOOPHYTES. The Gorgonia pustulosa of Lamouroux appears to belong with the Pterogorgirc, and is described as follows : — Branches scattered, with verruca: in two sublatcral series, sepa- rated by a slightly prominent line ; colour yellowish-red or miniaceous ; axis round. Pol. flex., 411, pi. 15; Encyc., 445. — According to Lamouroux's figure, the pustuliform verrucas are rounded and unequal, and many are a line in diameter. It is eight to ten inches in height. SUBGENUS II.— GORGONIA. Polypis retractilibus ; retractis, zoophytarum super ficie sive levi sive verrucosd, verrucis non armatis. Polyps retractile; when retracted, surface of zoophytes either smooth or verrucose, with the verruca?, when any, unarmed with spicula or scales. Arrangement of the Species. A. Cortex thin, less than half a line in thickness. Polyps closely scattered. I. Flabellate, throughout reticulate, without any free branchlets. *22. G. flabcllum. *25. G. umbella. *23. G. clathrus. 26. G. vcntilabrum. *24. G. reticulum. *27. G. verriculata. II. Flabellate; in part reticulate or not at all so — not pinnate. *28. G. umbraculum. *34. G. tuberculata. *29. G. cancellata. 35. G. granulata. *30. G. venusta. *36. G. flexuosa. *3l. G. stricta. *37. G. verrucosa. 32. G. retellum. 38. G. apiculata. 33. G. tamarix. 39. G. nivea. III. Flabellate; pinnate, not reticulate. *40. G. flammea. IV. Not flabellate ; verrucee none or very short. •41. G. virgulata. 44. G. graminea. 42. G. miniacea. *45. G. Bertolonii. *43. G. sanguinea. 46. G. sasappo. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 655 *47. G. humilis. 51. G. juncea. *48. G. furcata. *52. G. suffruticosa. 49. G. flavida. 53. G. ramulosa. 50. G. elongata. *54. G. spicifera. B. Subflabellate or not at all so ; polyps few and at distant intervals on the branches, subalternate. *55. G. trichostemma. 56. G. exserta. C. Cortex (including verrucfs) thick — half a line or more. I. Surface smooth or short verrucose. — (Plexaurce.) *57. G. antipathes. *61. G. quincuncialis. *58. G. homomalla. *62. G. dichotoma. *59. G. anguiculus. *63. G. vermiculata. 60. G. olivacea. *64. G. crassa. II. Verruca prominent. — (Eunicaa^) *65. G. papillosa. 69. G. plantaginea. 66. G. clavaria. 70. G. lima. *67. G. pseudo-antipathes. 71. G. mammosa. *68. G. madrepora. D. Unarrangcd species. 72. G. purpurea. 76. G. coccinea. 73. G. Richardii. 77. G. rhizomorpha. 74. G. penna. 78. G. alba. 75. G. moniliformis. A. Cortex thin, not exceeding half a line in thickness, polyps crowded. I. Throughout reticulate, with no free branchkls. 22. GORGONIA FLABELLUM. — Large, yellow or red ; flabellate, and throughout finely reticulate; spaces one to two and a half lines in area, branchlets flattened, three-fourths to one and a half lines wide, sometimes very prominently winged ; verrucse obsolete, except about the margin of the frond, where they are often distinct but minute. West Indies. This common species grows to a large size; the fronds are some- times two feet high and nearly as broad. The size of the spaces and flattened branchlets, and the absence of verrucaB, except upon the ex- treme branchlets, distinguish this species from those allied. Flat or rounded processes sometimes grow from the branchlets at right angles with the frond, which at times stand out one-fourth of an inch. The branchlets are generally much compressed, and the spaces are sometimes very small. The colour varies from an ash to a bright yellow, and is occasionally red. The polyps are every where scat- 656 ZOOPHYTES. tered, except where the wing-like processes commence to grow from the surface, and in that case they become lateral. Gorgoniaflabellitm, Linn., xii. 1293. , Lamour., Pol. flex. ,403; Encyc.,441. , Ellis and Sol., 92.—F/abellum vene- , Blainville, Man., 505. ris, Ellis, Coral., tab. 26, fig. A. , Ehrcnb., G. Ix.xxiv., sp. 1. , Pallas, Zooph., 169. , Johnston's British Zoophytes, figure , Lamk., ii. 488, No. 1. p. 161 — reduced drawing. GOHGONIA CLATHRUS (23). — The Gorgonia clathrus, of Pallas, characterized by terete branchlets, may be only a red variety of the flalx.llu.rn, and this view is strengthened by their similarity of form, and by the occasional occurrence of red and yellow colours in the same specimen. Yet in some specimens with terete branchlets, examined by the author, the main branches are more regularly ascending than usual in the flabellum, and the polyps are more or less seriate, with the medial line of the branchlets bare. The cortex sometimes appears smooth, with even the oscules indistinct ; and again, a series of granules (about eight to half an inch), range along each side of the medial space, as if the surface were minutely verruculose. These different appearances arise from the dif- ferent states of retraction in the polyps at the time the zoophytes were dried, the latter condition being due to a partial retraction only. A yellowish-white specimen, of similar character, without verrucse, but with the polyps in four series, belongs to the Nat. II 1st. Society collections of Boston. (G. dathrus, Pallas, Zooph., 168; Lamarck, 2d ed.^ ii. 501, No. 35 h; Lamour., Pol. flex., 405; Encyc., 442.) 24. GORGONIA. RETICULUM. (Pallas.) Lamarck. — Red, much branched, flabellate ; throughout reticulate, branchlets nearly terete, decussately coalescent, obsoletely granulous. Indian Ocean. t Milne Edwards adds that the oscules are in some parts seriate, but generally scattered. There is much confusion in the books with regard to the reticulum of Pallas. Pallas (Elcnch. Zooph., 167) thus describes the species. " G. reticulata, ramulis creberrimis, teretibus, cortice rubro verrucoso." The figure given by Esper (tab. 44) is reli-rred by Lamarck to the fexuosa ; Ellis's reticulata is Lamarck's verriculata ; Ehrenberg's reti- culum (Eunicea) is stated to correspond with Esper's tab. 44, but appears to l>c a dif- ferent species, with free branchlets (" omnibus liberis"). Lamarck mentions Kspcr's tab. 1, Gorgonia ventalina, as possibly the reticulum. (See G. ventilabrum.) 25. GORGONIA UMBELLA. (Esper.) — Red; flabellate, sometimes with the surfaces proliferous, height exceeding the breadth (twelve inches by nine), finely reticulate, spaces two to two and a half lines in area; branchlets subterete, nearly one line broad, irregularly rough, and sometimes appearing a little contorted, owing to the scat- tered verruca3, which are unequally prominent and minute (one- fourth of a line) ; axis pale wood-brown. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 657 East Indies. Esper. This species, of which a specimen is contained in the collections of the Boston Natural History Society, has larger and more irregular branchlets, verruca?, and spaces, than the dathrus. The branchlets are «ften very uneven, owing to the unequal scattering of the larger verruca? ; and the spaces are generally oblong upward, and many are half an inch in length. Gorgonia umbella, Esper, Pflanz. Fortsetz., ii. 30, tab. 53; the general habit is brought out ; but the branchlets are a little too slender. 26. GORGONIA VENTILABRUM. (Pallas.) — Deep red, reticulate, branches compressed, verrucose. East Indies. This imperfectly described species is said to have the general habit of the flabellum. Its verrucose surface appears to distinguish it from that species, while the compressed branches separate it from the reti- culum and umbella. Go/-goniave?itilabrum,Poi\\as,Zooph., 165. with the ventilabntni of Pallas, is, as re- , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 500, No. 35 f. presented by him, a small reddish species, Gorgonia ventalina, Gmelin, Linn., 3808. broader than high, with a verrucose sur- ,Lamour., Pol. flex., 404, and G. ven- face, and the spaces rather large (mostly tilabrum, Encyc., 442. a fourth to a tliird of an inch long). The Gorgonia ve/ttalina of Esper (Pflanz., The branchlets are not compressed, and ii. 20, tab. 1), which he makes identical about half a line thick. 27. GORGONIA VERRICULATA. (Esper.) — Whitish; flabellate, large, throughout coarsely reticulate; spaces mostly six lines broad, branch- lets subterete, nearly one line thick, verrucose and uneven. Indian Ocean. Gorgonia reticulala, Ellis and Solander, G. verriculata, Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 489, tab. 17. No. 3. Gorgonia verriculata, Esper, ii. 124, tab. , Lamouroux, Polyp, flex., 404; Exp. 35. Meth., 33, pi. 17 ; Encyc., 442. NOTE. — The Plexaura reticulata of Ehrenberg, appears to belong to this division of the Gorgonias. It is thus described : " Quadripollicaris, alba, densissime ramulosa et re- ticulata, irregulariter flabellata, parva, tenuis, rigida, ramulis sursum curvatis, flexuosis, compressis, 1'" crassis, cortice albo, undique poroso." (Op. cit., Gen. Ixxxiii., sp. 4.) II. Flabellate, subrcticulate, or not at all reticulate ; branches not pinnate. 28. GORGONIA UMBRACULUM. (Lamarck.) — Frond red ; flabellate, nearly circular and densely ramulous, subreticulate, ribbed with sub- flexuous or nearly straight branches, about one-third of an inch apart ; 1G5 653 ZOOPHYTES. branchlets two-thirds to one line thick, subterete; everywhere short verrucose. The East Indies. The frond is without any prominent midrib; the numerous branches are directed upward and outward, and lie at nearly even distances from one another, though somewhat flexuous and irregular ; and are much united by branchlets, many of which are free. Coalescence takes place at intervals of one-fourth to two inches. Ffutex lignosus, planus, instar ventilabri, Gorgonia umbraculum, Ellis and Solander.v ramulis inter se concrctis crusta tartarea 80, tub. 10. rubra. Cape of Good Hope and African , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 489, No. 4. Coast. Seba, Thes. iii., tab. 107, No. 6. , Lamour., Exp. Meth., 34, tab. 10. 29. GORGONIA CANCELLATA. (Dana.} — Whitish; flabellate, nearly circular, very much branched throughout, for the most part coalescent. ribbed with nearly straight parallel branches, which are one-fourth to one-third of an inch apart, and are united at intervals of one-half to two inches by flexuous branchlets; branches and branchlets one to one and a half lines thick, every where small verrucose. A frond of this species, seen by the author, measured a fool in height. The parallelism of the branches and the reticulation of the whole by means of cross flexuous branchlets, but few of which are free, are well represented by Esper. The branches in the specimen were a little closer than in his figure, though otherwise similar. The cortex is rather thick, and the verruca? are quite small and scattered closely over the surface. The coalescence is rather more general, and the branches and branchlets stouter and more even, than in the umbraculum. Gorgonia psewlo-a>itipathes, Esper, Pflanz. Fortsetz., ii. 32, tab. 54; and Antipathd, flabeUum, ii., Antip., tab. 1. 30. GORGONIA VENUSTA. (Dana.) — Red or ochreous ; flabellate and much reticulate, spaces often three lines long, but usually very much larger; branchlets terete, one line thick ; cortex thick, and throughout entirely smooth; oscules scattered. East Indies. Esper. — Isle of France. J. S. Phillips. Gorgonia sasappo, Esper, ii., tab. 9 A. The smooth branches and branchlets and thick cortex are like those of the specimens examined by the author, in the collections of J. S. Phillips, of Philadelphia; but the fronds are much more closely reticulate, though very irregularly so. There is no proper midrib to the frond; and the stem at K about one and a half lines thick. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. (359 31. GORGONIA STRICTA. (Lamarck.) — Red, flahellate, subreticulate, branches crowded and close, lateral branchlets short, and rather spreading; polypiferous granules minute, much crowded; cortex thin. 1'iitin stricta, Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 489, Gorgonia stricta, Lamouroux, Pol. flex., No. 0. 408; Encyc., 443. 32. GORGONIA RETE'LLUM. (Lamarck.} — Whitish ; flabellate, subre- ticulate; lateral branchlets short, subtransverse, granulous. Indian Ocean? Lamarck. Gorgonia retellum, Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 489, No. 5. Gorgonia furfuracea ? Esper, Fortsetz., i., tab. 41. This figure, which Lamarck refers here with a query, represents a closely-branched frond, a little broader than its height, sparingly coalescent, without a prominent midrib, having the lateral branchlets along the main branches subdivaricate, mostly free, scarcely three-fourths of an inch long, and a line or a little more in diameter; the cortex is rather thick, the oscules numerous, and the surface is somewhat granulous. Muriceafurfuracea, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxi., sp. 6. 33. GORGONIA TAMARIX. (Ehrenberg.) — Isabella yellow ; a little higher than broad ; much branched, slender, subflabellate ; branches flexuous, thin, short, setaceous, subreticulate, but mostly free; margin of the summit branchlets crenated, owing to slightly prominent verrucse. Emdcea tamariz, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxii,, sp. 13. 34. GORGONIA TUBERCULATA. (Esper ?} Lamarck. — Yellowish ; fla- bellate, subreticulate, ramose, very large ; branchlets lax, tortuous, often coalescing ; tubercles scattered, unequal. Mediterranean Sea. Milne Edwards describes a gigantic specimen of this species, of which the trunk is as large as the arm ; the verrucaB are large and depressed, and very unequal. Gorgonia tuberculata, Lamarck, ii. 491, , Latnour., Pol. (lex., 409; Encyc., No. 11. 443. — , Esper, ii. 127, tab. 37 (?). " G. sub- — , Blainville, Man., 505. reticulata, plana, ligno depresso fusco, The Eunicea arbuscida, of Ehrenberg, has corticc albido, poris sparsis inrcqualibus, many characters in common with the G. hcmisphcricis, et tuberculatis." Figure 2, tuberculata of Lamarck, but appears to represents u part of a branch enlarged, be a distinct species, with more slender and if of natural size, it would answer and even branchlets. " Tripedalis, ele- well for the tuberculata, of Lamarck. gantissima, isabellina, 2£' lata, frutes- 660 ZOOPHYTES. cens, flabellata, ramosissima, subreticu- lata, ramulis tenuissimis, laxis, flexuosis, verrucis £'" longis et |'" latis ;" more slender than the papillosa, with thinner cortex. Op. cit., G. Ixxxii., sp. 11. 35. GORGONIA GRANULATA. (Ehrenberg. ) — Yellowish; flabellate, higher than broad (nine inches by four), much branched, subreticu- late, slender, branches fragile, branchlets three-fourths of a line thick, verrucose; verruca? one-third of a line broad, and one-fourth high ; axis fuscous. Eunicea gramilata, Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixxxii., sp. 9. 36. GORGONIA FLEXUOSA. (Lamarck.} — Orange; flabellate, much branched, branches and branchlets dichotomously divaricate, flexuous, remotely coalescing, verrucose. Indian Ocean. Esper. Lamarck. Esper's figure (tab. 44), to which Lamarck refers, represents an irregularly branched frond, with branches spreading widely and irregularly bent, and the branchlets coalescing at intervals of a half to two inches, leaving large open spaces. A specimen closely resembling Esper's figure was obtained and figured by the author, at the Kingsmill Islands, and is represented on plate 60, fig. 2. The coalescence is rather less frequent than is represented by Esper, but the flexuous irregular branching is similar. The specimen was of a deep crimson colour, ten inches broad, and six high. The polyps were ochreous yellow, with the tentacles dis- tinctly fringed (fig. 2 a), and the verructe are but little prominent. Gorgonia flexuosa, Lamk., ii. 490, No. 8. , Esper, Fortsetz. i. 161, tab. 44. Ehrenberg makes of Esper's figure a distinct species, considering it the rcticulum of Pallas ; but his description does not agree with the figure, nor with Pallas's descrip- tion : "Octopollicaris,violaceo-incarnata, 4" alta, densissime ramulosa, fruticulosa, irregulariter flabellata, parva, subtilissimfe pruinosa, nee furfuracea, ramulis saepe oppositis, flexuosis, omnibus literis, ra- mulosis, summis apicibus distiche, mediis ubique, polypiferis, ?'" latis et altis; axe corneo, fusco" (Eunicea reliculum, Eh- renb., G. Ixxxii., sp. 6). Tab. 79, of Rumphius, Amb., vi. 206, may be this species ; the figure is fourteen inches high by twelve broad. The Gorgonia wnbratica of Esper, has something of the habit of the jlexuosa; the figure is brownish-ash, a little higher than broad, openly branched, with no midrib, the branches more ascending, sparingly coalescenf, a little compressed, hardly a line wide, and every where crovvdedly short verrucose. Esper's spe- cimen was from the East Indies. It has V some resemblance to the verrucosa, but is more coalescent. — Euniccea umhralica, Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixxxii., sp. 10. SUBORDERALCYONARIA. 66 1 37. GORGONIA VERRUCOSA. — Whitish, flabellate, about six inches high and broad, loosely and sparingly ramose ; branches flexuous, one to one and a quarter lines thick, rarely coalescing, verrucose, verrucse one-half to two-thirds of a line broad. Mediterranean, and seas of America. Giirgonia verfticosa, Linn., ed. xii., 1291. rather few, and branchlets full one and a , Kills and .Snlander, 89. half lines broad. Another species? , Laink., ii. 491, No. 12. The Gorgoniaverrucosaof the British coast , Blainv., Man., 505, pi. 87, fig. 3. (Johnston's Brit. Zooph., 182, pi. 25, fig. , Esper, Pfianz., ii. 61, tab. 16. 1), is represented by Johnston as twelve , Bertolonii, Amain. Ital. 260 ; " albis- inches high, by fifteen or sixteen broad, simo, undique exquisite et inoequaliter and branched in a plane, with a midrib, verrucoso ;" refers to Marsilli, tab. 21, and the branchlets often coalescing ; axis fig. 97. black, with a snow-white pith at centre. Eunicea verrucosa, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxii., sp. Gorgonia viminalis, Sowerby, Brit. Misc., 4 ; Espor's figure is referred to as good. 81, pi. 40 ; Fleming's Brit. Anim., 512 ; Seba, fig. 3, tab. 106, which Lamarck refers Borlase, Cornwall, 238, tab. 24, fig. 1 ; here, represents a large verrucose species, it has more of the habit of the flexuosa, fourteen inches high by eleven broad, ar- but is more closely reticulate, borescently branched in a plane ; branches 38. GORGONIA APICULATA. (Ehrenb.} Dana. — Ash-coloured ; flabel- late, three inches high and five broad ; very densely ramulous, branches and branchlets nearly parallel, sometimes coalescing, often free, one-half a line broad ; verrucaB conically acute, one-fourth to one-third of a line high, and broad, crowded. Eunicea apiculata, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxii., sp. 8. 39. GORGONIA NIVEA. (Ehrenberg.) Dana. — Snow-white; flabellate, six inches, branchlets flexuous, opposite or alternate, subcompressed, one line thick at apex, with the verrucse scattered, rather large, a line broad, and half a line high. Eunicea nivea, Ehrenb., op. cit., Gen., Ixxxii., sp. 14. NOTE. — The G. humosa of Esper (tab. 6) is arborescently branched in a plane; branches not crowded, terete or subcompressed, one and a half to throe lines in diameter, surface verrucose. It may be the G. placomits, yet as figured and described, has not the spicules of that species. Probably from the West Indies. The Eunicea antipathes of Ehrenberg, is a flabellate species, described as follows : " Pedalis nigricans, dichotoma, ramosa, flnbellata, valida, flexuosa, reticulata, caulibus a latere compressis, ramis subteretibus, poly pis magnis, undique sparsis, contractis 1'" fere longis, £"' fete latis, complanatis. Esperi Icon (tab. 28) hujus formam bene refert. An hue Esper, tab. 6 ?" The Gorgonia palma of Esper, tab. 40, may be \\tcjlammea; but the form is simple 106 662 ZOOPHYTES. flabcllate, the branches are digitntcly arranged, scarcely subdivided, and three to six inches long ; they are much compressed and two to four lines wide ; colour white, oscules scattered and numerous. III. FlaJjellate, subpinnate. 40. GORGONIA FLAMMEA. (Ellis.} — Scarlet or purple; very large; arborescently flabellate, lax ramose, subpinnate, branches compressed, branchlets one and a half to two lines broad, not verrucose, polyps scattered. Cape of Good Hope. G. flammea, Ellis and Sol., 80, tab. 11. , Lamk., ii. 490, No. ». , Lamour., Exp. Meth, 33, tab. 11 ; Pol. flex., 399 ; Encycl., 440. Gorgonia pa/ma, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxiv., sp. 4. , Esper, Pflanz., ii., tab. 5. IV. Not flabellate ; cortex thin; verruca. 9to?ie, or nearly obsolete. 41. GORGONIA VIRGULATA. (Lamarck.} — Bright yellow, orange, or crimson; sparingly ramose and often nodding; branches long, (often a foot or more long,) even virgate, one to one and a half lines thick, often obsoletely compressed ; polyps crowded, sometimes subseriate, verrucse none, oscules minute and linear. West Indies. The branches are long and very slender without verruca?, and pass- ing off at a small angle they appear rather crowded together ; they are often a foot or more in length, and become somewhat nodding when thus long. cit., G. Ixxxiii., sp. 1), appear to have been described from specimens of La- marck's virgulata. The viminaMs, of Pallas, is described as ramoso-subpinnate, with divaricate, setaceous, branches, and distichous, somewhat prominent, oscules. Corallina fruticosa, &c., Catesby's Caro- lina, 13, pi. 13, red variety. Gorgonia viminalis, Esper, Pflanz., ii. 51, tab. 1 1 vthe yellow variety. The branches as represented are too short. Gorgonia virgulata, Lamk., ii. 495, No. 21. The Gorgonia viminalis, of Lamouroux (Exp. Meth., 34, and Encyc., 445), and Plexaura viminalis, of Ehrenberg (op. The Mediterranean is given by him as its locality. Esper's cerataphyta, tab. 19, answers nearly to the description. See also Pterogorgia rosea. NOTE. — 42. Gorgonia miniacea (Esper). — This species is thus described by Ehrenberg, who names it Plexaura miniacea. " Sesquipedalis, miniacea, subflabellaio-divisa, ramis virgatis, parce dichotomis, nutantibus, leviter compressis, dense polypifcris, pedem fere longis." At base, three lines thick ; summits a line. Op. cit., G. Ixxxiii., sp. '2. Esper's specimen was from the East Indies. He describes it as subsecund in its branches, and ramose nearly in a plane. Pflanz., ii., tab. 36. — The figure by Rumphius, tab. 83, Am- SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 663 boyn., vi. 223, has the habit of the virgulata, but is from the East Indies, and may be- long to this species. Seba's No. 3, tab. 107, represents an allied Gorgonia, received by him from the Cape of Good Hope ; he says, " Cujus ramuli prcclongi, tenues, parnmque divisi, crusta rubra obtecti simt." " Crusta tartarea prtecipue circa summitates tubercu- lis minutisque veluti porulis conspicua est." 43. GORGONIA SANGUINEA. (Lamarck.} — Purple; ramose, subfas- tigiate ; branches erect, tereto-setaceous, polyps of the branchlets sub- seriate, of the branches every where scattered ; axis nearly black. Isle of France. Gorgonia sanguinea, Lamk., ii. 495, No. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 400; Encyc., 441. 22. , Ehrenb., G. Ixxxiv., sp. 6. 44. GORGONTA GRAMINEA. (Lamarck.) — Whitish; ramose, branches erect, subfasciculate, slender, terete, rush-like; pores oblong, scattered. Mediterranean Sea. Lamarck. Gorgonia graminea, Lamk., ii. 496, No. 23. 45. GORGONIA BERTOLONII. (Lamouroux.) — Whitish; near the virgulata in habit, branches closely collected together, long and often nodding, rather stouter (one and a half lines), terete, and every where subverrucose. Mediterranean Sea. Lithophyte premier, Marsilli, Phys. de la Go/'gonia Bertolonii, Lamour., Pol. flex., Mer, tab. 16, fig: 80; specimens obtained 414; Encyc., 445. in eight to thirty fathoms, near Marseilles. Gorgonia stricta, Bertolonii, Amsen. Ital., Colour ash, becoming white on drying. 260. Gorgonia viminalis, Esper, ii., tab. 11, A. Eunicea Berlolonii, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxii., Gorgonia graminea, var. subtuberculosa, sp. 5. Lamarck, ii. 496, No. 23. 46. GORGONIA SASAI>PO. (Pallas.} — Red; sparingly ramose; branches terete, long virgate, often five inches long and nodding, close dichotomous, one and a half lines thick, surface every where subpilose and very slightly verrucose, polyps crowded, throughout scattered. Indian Ocean. Pallas. Esper. (itifufiiiia sasappo, Pallas, Zooph., 188; Gorgonia sasappo, Esper, ii. 46, tab. 9. Susappo is the Malayan name of this , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 500, No. 35 d. Gorgonia. 47. GORGONIA HUMILIS. (Dana.) — Whitish; two to three inches high, and short fruticulose, with the branches crowded, flexible, 664 ZOOPHYTES. branchlets short (one to six lines), one and one-third lines thick, not attenuate, surface verrnculose, polyps crowdedly scattered. West Indies? Forms a small crowded clump, with the branches somewhat droop- ing, and the branchlets very short and uneven or short verrucose. Eunicea tuberculata, Ehrenberg, Gen. Ixxxii., sp. 15. 48. GORGONIA FURCATA. (Lamarck.) — White; low, lax ramose, dichotomous; branches terete, slender, variously curved, obsoletely verrucose. The Mediterranean (?). Lamarck. Gorgoniafurcata, Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 493. Gorgoniafurcata, Blainville, Man., 505. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 410; Encyc.,444. 49. GORGONIA FLAVIDA. (Lamarck.) — Yellow; crowded cespitose, subpinnate; branchlets terete, numerous; polyps crowdedly scattered, cortex thick, not verrucose. West Indies. Seba. Mauger. Keratophytan ramulis lateralibus brevibus conjugatis, crusta obscurl luted tectum. Locus Natalis Nova Hispania, Seba, Thes. iii., tab. 107, fig. 8. The pinnules are about a line thick, and nearly an inch long, and the surface is scattered over wilh oscules. The whole specimen is about five inches in height. Gorgoniaflavida, Lamk., ii. 496, No. 2(>. , Lamour., Pol. flex. ,402; Encyc.,441. 50. GORGONIA ELONGATA. (Pallas.) — Reddish ; very tall (often four feet); branches few, dichotomous, very long, short verrucose; axis pale. West Indies. Ellis. Esper. Gorgonia dongata, Pallas, Zooph., 179. G. elongata, Esper, Fortsetz., ii. 35, tab. 55. , Ellis and Solander, 98. 51. GORGONIA JUNCEA. (Pallas.} — Colour subminiaceous; stem quite simple, very long, terete; surface crowdedly short-verrucose. Indian Ocean. Pallas. Esper. — Amboyna. Seba. Kerataphyton simplex, tantum conslat vi- mine indiviso — crusta untliquaque tar- iarea nodosa ; rubra utcumque in luteum vergente, Seba, Thes. iii., tab. 105, fig. 1 a. Palmjuncus albus, Rumph. Amb. vi. 226 : Rumphius states that it is sometimes eleven feet long, and as thick as the fin- ger. His name, albus (white), alludes to the pale colour of Ihe axis ; the crust is described as red. Gorgonia juncea, Pallas, Zooph., ISO: " Simplicissima, attenuata, siibflexuosa, cortice crasso rubro verrucoso." , Esper, Fortsetz. ii., 26. tab. 52. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 665 Gorgonia juncea, Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 499, bone (axis) is of a dark-coloured horny No. 34. consistence ; this is covered with an The Gorgonia juncea of Ellis, was from the orange-coloured flesh, full of longish little West Indies, where it was " found by Mr. mouths." (Ellis and Solander, 81 ; Gmel. Greg." It was three feet long, "a single Linn. Syst. Nat., 3801.) rounded stem, smaller at each end. The 52. GORGONIA SUFFRUTICOSA. (Dana.} — Ash-coloured; fruticulose, very crowdedly ramulo'us ; branches and branchlets flexuous •and irre- gular, mostly terete, some nodose; branchlets one-half to one and a half inches long and one line thick; cortex rather thick, smooth, with punctiform oscules, minute and throughout crowdedly scattered ; polyps quite small, yellowish, with the tentacles fringed and short. Plate 59, fig. 7, part of zoophyte, natural size ; 7 a, polyp, enlarged ; 7 «', same, natural size. The Feejee Islands, Mathuata reefs. Exp. Exp. This is a rough-looking species with a Plexaura habit, very crowd- edly and closely branched, and having the branches often bent and uneven. To add to its squarrose appearance, there are occasional tubercles a fourth of an inch in diameter, containing each a barnacle. There is not the slightest trace of verrucae. 53. GORGONIA RAMULOSA. (Ehrenberg.) Dana. — Yellow; eight inches high and five broad, erect, dichotomous; branches virgate, densely subverticillate, with simple or sparingly divided branchlets, nearly an inch long, and one line thick; surface densely polypiferous, smooth, with the oscules like minute points. West Indies. Ehrenberg. Eunicea ramulosa, Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixxxii., sp. 18. 54. GORGONIA SPICIFERA. (Dana.) — Ash-coloured; eight inches high, subdichotomous; branches on all sides densely ramulous, with simple, rigid branchlets, one and a half to two inches long and nearly aline thick, terete, finely, crowdedly, and obsolescently verrucose; axis fuscous, cortex rather thick. West Indies (?). Boston Nat. Hist. Soc. The oscules are minute punctures, and are situated on the upper side of the small obsolescent verrucaa. Successive branchlets on the main stem, are scarcely one-fourth of an inch apart. B. Polyps few, remote; zoophytes sometimes siibfiabellute. 55. GORGONIA TRICIIOSTEMMA. (Dana) — Brown, summits flesh- 167 66g ZOOPHYTES. coloured; low, and sparingly ramose in a plane; branches coarsely nodulous, one to three lines thick; polyps few, very distant, tentacles long firabriate, the papilla being capillary and recurved ; verruca? irregularly tuberculiforrn, somewhat alternate, stout, suberose, above obsolescent. Plate 59, fig. 3, natural size, polyps expanded ; 3 a, one of the polyps, enlarged ; 3 b, a papilla, more enlarged. Feejee Islands, in ten fathoms. Exp. Exp. The specimen consists of a few simple branches, having the surface rather distantly tuberculate, the rounded, suberose tubers being large (two lines or more), and belonging to separate polyps. At the summits, which are but a line thick for an inch or so, and pale flesh-coloured, the verruca are small and short, and two to three lines apart. The habit of the species is very peculiar, and may be the type of a new genus, distinguished by the long fringe of papillae to the tentacles. NOTE. — The Gorgonia nodulifera of Lamarck, appears to be near the above species. It is thus described : " Rnmoso-paniculata, planulata, ramis ramulisquc alternis, noduli- feris; carne aurantia, squamrnulosa ; nodulis alternis, albis, subspongiosis." — Seas of New Holland, Peron and Lesueur, 2d ed., ii. 496, No. 25 ; Lamouroux, Pol. flex., 416 ; Encyc., 446. 56. GORGONIA EXSERTA. (Ellis.)— Whitish ; low, sparingly ramose ; branches alternate, a line thick; polyps few, and three or four lines remote, alternate; verruca tuberculiform, but little prominent, a line broad ; axis corneous, fuscous. American seas. Ellis. This species has the distant polyps and habit of the trichostemma, and the specimen figured by Ellis resembles much the extremities of the branches in that species. Gorgonia exserta, Ellis and Sol., 87, pi. figures 1, 2; Pol. flex., 408; Encyc., 15, figs. 1,2. 443. , Lamouroux, Exp. Meth., pi. 15, — , Lamk., 3d ed., ii. 501, No. :r> /. C. Cortex (including the verruca? when present) exceeding half a line in thickm-s-;. I. Surface smooth or very short vcrrucose* 57. GORGONIA ANTIPATHES. — Very large (three feet); paniculato- ramose, branches terete; cortex thick, smooth; oscules large; axis * This division corresponds to the genus Plexaurn, of Lamouroux. The G. suflruti- cosa (No. 52), G. spicifera (54), and probably also the ('.. ramulosa (53), arc near them in habit. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 667 black, flexuously striate, of branchlets setiform, of base often one to two inches thick. Indian Ocean. This species has been confounded with a smaller one from the West Indies. The Eunicea antipathes, of Ehrenberg, is described by him from a specimen there obtained, and Esper's tab. 23 may be from the same region^ Its very stout trunk and much larger size are the only distinguishing characters which can be drawn from the de- scriptions given. The upper branchlets are very slender. A specimen belonging to Dr. Gould, at Boston, answers well to the characters of the above. It is between three and four feet high, with the axis at base nearly two inches thick, and in the upper branchlets, which are six to eight inches long, slender setiform. The axils in the axis, as in Seba's figure, are not broad ; the cortex is cinereous, and the size of the branchlets covered with it is one-eighth of an inch, six inches from the summit. The oscules are minute points, in which it agrees with Esper's account of his tab. 24, though not with Pallas, who describes them as large. C',,i-ii/!iniii nigntm, Rumph., Amb., 2016, Gorgonia antipathes, Linn., ed. xii., 1291. tab. 77. From the Moluccas. , Pallas, Zooph., 193. " Oceanus Pruii'x mai'inits, jircegrandis, &c., Seba, Indicus solus." Thes. iii., tab. 104, No. 2. "From — , Esper, ii. 90, tab. 24, 25. Amboyna and the Moluccas." Crust , Lamk., ii. 502, No. 36. nsh-coloured or reddish, and very de- Plezaura antipathes, Lamour., Pol. flex., ciduous. The figure represents a den- 434 ; Encyc., 380. droid specimen, with nearly erect branch- lets, and even top, about two feet high. 58. GORGONIA. HOMOMALLA. (Esper.) — Much branched; branches terete, dichotornous, ascending and somewhat nodding ; cortex thick, oscules scattered. Mediterranean? Esper. — West Indies. Lamarck. In Esper's figure (tab. 29), the branch is curved and the branch- lets are crowded on the inner side of it ; the size of the branchlets is three to four inches in length, and one. and a half to two lines in thick- ness ; the cortex is black, and the oscules are round points. 13. cinerea. Reddish, yellowish, or ash-coloured, and nearly or quite erect, branches and branchlets much crowded, of the same size as above-mentioned, with the oscules similarly small punctures and crowded ; axis of the branchlets retiform and yellowish-brown; axils compressed ; cortex thick and caducous. 668 ZOOPHYTES. Gorgonia homomalla, Esper, Pflanz., ii. 104, tab. 29. , Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 497, No. 28. Plexaura Iwmomalla, Lnmouroux,Pol. flex., 430. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 629. , Blainville, Man., 509. The var. cinerea is common in the West Indies. It is the Lithophyton America- num maximum cinereum, cortice punc- tato of Tournefort, Mem. del'Acad. Roy. des Sci., 1700, fig. p. 34, and Inst., p. 574 ; also Frutex cornece natures, Seba, Thcs. iii., tab. 107, No. 4 ; and Plcxuiira antipathcs, Ehrcnberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixxxiii., sp. 3; probably, also, Esper, Pflanz., ii. 90, tab. 23. Lamarck al- ludes to the West India specimens as a reddish and ash-coloured variety of the G. homomalla. 59. GORGONIA ANGUICULUS. (Dana.} — Fulvous; ramose dichoto- mous; branches terete, branchlets one and a half to two lines thick, long ; surface scarcely smooth, a little pitted ; oscules very much crowded, nearly circular, quite small ; axis fuscous, of the branchlets, very slender ; axils compressed. West Indies. This species is rather more slender than the vermiculata, and has very much smaller and more numerous oscules. The branches, although terete and without verrucas, have a slightly and minutely uneven surface, owing to the fact that the oscules are either situated in a slight depression of the cortex, or have the inferior side a little prominent. The length of the branchlets is often six inches. One specimen seen by the author had a dull fulvous colour, and another was purplish. Plexaura flexuosa, Lamouroux, Exp. Melh., 35, tab. 70, fig. 1 ; a fragment or young specimen, giving imperfectly the characteristics of the species. Eunicea furcata, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxii., sp. 2. 60. GORGONIA OLIVACEA. (Lamouroux.} Lamarck. — Much branched ; branches scattered or subpinnate; branchlets one to one and a half lines thick; cortex thick, olivaceous, oscules scattered. East Indies. Lamouroux. Plexaura olivacea, Lamouroux, Pol. flex., Plexaura olivacea, Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 431, pi. 16 ; Deslongch., Encyc., 629. 504, No. 39 b. 61. GORGONIA QUINCUNCIALIS. (Ehrenberg.} Dana. — Dark ash or reddish; two feet high; dichotomously branched, branches suberect, flexuous, crowded, one and a half lines thick at summits, terete; sur- face a little verrucose (and therefore rough), verrucee appressed, open- ing upward, two-thirds of a line long, and about one-third of a line broad ; axis fuscous. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 669 West Indies. This species has the habit of the flexuosa, but its branches, though of nearly the same diameter, are longer, and the surface is more de- cidedly verrucose. Lithophyton longe racemosum, &c., Catesby's Carolina, ii., tab. 21. Eunicea quincuncialis, Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixxxii., sp. 16. 62. GORGONIA DICHOTOMA. (Esper.} — Furcato-dichotomous, two feet high, axils arcuate; branches terete, slightly attenuated; branchlets often a foot long, two to three lines thick; oscules linear, numerous; cortex a line thick, axis wood-brown and not flexible. West Indies. The axis of the branches is not slender setiform, as in the antipathes and hamomatta, and at apex, even, is not flexible. Gorgonia dicfwtoma, Esper, ii. 59, tab. 14 ; the axis of a specimen, wood-like in ap- pearance, incrusted in part by an Alcyonium and a Millepora. , Lamarck, ii. 503, No. 37. 63. GORGONIA VERMICULATA. (Lamarck.) — Ramose, one to two feet high, dichotomous ; branches erect, long, terete ; above nearly two to three lines thick ; surface smooth, oscules large and round ; axis black, axils not compressed. West Indies? East Indies? Lamarck. This species is a little larger than the homomalla, with the upper branchlets often longer and a little stouter, and having large round oscules. Though the size of the upper branches is scarcely larger than in the dichotoma, the axis which they contain is one-half smaller, and is flexible. Gorgonia vermiculata, Lamarck, ii. 497, full a fourth of an inch thick, with the No. 29. oscules large. The axis, a foot from the Gorgonia friabilis (?), Lamouroux, Exp. summit, is about a line in diameter. An- Meth., 35 ; East Indies. other from the West Indies, in the col- Gorgonia porosa (?), Esper, ii. 49, tab. 10, lections of the Boston Natural History East Indies ? Society, has the upper branches often a Esper's figure represents a specimen sup- foot long, about two lines thick above, posed to be from the East Indies, with and three at base. the large round oscules of the above, but There are probably two species here in- the upper branchlets four to six inches eluded, one from the West Indies, and long, three to four lines thick at base, another from the East Indies ; the latter and one and a half lines at apex. is the Plczaura friabilis of Lamouroux, A specimen in Peale's Museum, has long and the Gorgonia porosa (tab. 10), of branches, nearly cylindrical, and above, Esper. 168 670 ZOOPHYTES. 64. GORGONIA CRASSA. (Ellis.) — Sparingly ramose, dichotornous, branches five to six lines thick, and often five inches long, nearly cylindrical ; surface nearly smooth, oscules scattered, large and round, under margin sometimes prominent; axis corneous, pale fuscous. West Indies. Ellis. Gorgonia crassa, Ellis and Solander, 91. Ellis describes his specimen as of a purplish colour, and mentions that the polyps have eight fringed tentacles. He refers to no figure, but it seems quite probable that his figure 3, tab. 18, which is represented with the ex- panded polyps, and of which he has given no description, was drawn for this species. Very similar specimens from the West Indies have been seen by the author ; one of a purplish colour, with the oscules wholly immersed, and another with the under margin slightly prominent. The cortex is about as thick as the diameter of the axis, and the whole from one-third to one-half an inch in diameter. Gorgonia multicauda, Lamk., ii. 503, No. 38. Plexaura crassa, Lamour., Pol. flex., 429 ; Deslongchamps, Encyc., 628. The Plexaura friabilis of Lamouroux (Pol. flex., 430, and Deslongchamps, Encyc., 608), is stated by him to come from the East Indies, and to have a dull fulvous colour : but he refers to Ellis's tab. 18, fig. 3, as a representation of it. Lamouroux adds, as probable synonyms, Lamarck's vermiculata, and Esper's porosa, tab. 10. The Gorgonia hcteropora of Lamarck, is made identical with the multicauda by Milne Edwards (Lamarck, 2d ed., 503, No. 39) ; the oblong form of the oscules, and the smooth surface, being attributed to the more complete retraction of the polyps. It is characterized as follows by Lamarck : G. ramosa, dichotoma, crassa ; ramis cylindricis, raris ; cortice crasso, poris oblongis, varie sitis, pertuso. A specimen seen by the author in the collec- tions of the Academy of Natural Sciences at Philadelphia, consisted of a few stout finger-like branches, four to five lines thick, and two and a half inches long, with the surface smooth and the oscules three-fourths of a line long, lying in every position. Eunicea turgida, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxii., sp. 22. II. — Verruca, prominent (Eumcece). 65. GORGONIA PAPILLOSA. (Esper.} — Whitish or yellowish ; flabel- late, branches flexuous or incurved, upper branchlets mostly two to two and three-fourths lines thick ; surface crowdedly verrucose, ver- rucse three-fourths of a line long and half a line broad. West Indies? Gorgonia papillosa, Esper., Fortsetz., tab. 50; also, possibly, G. papillosa, ii. 105, tab. 30 (on the plate it is named, by mis- take, as Esper says, G. suberosa). — Esper compares the surface in the last species to that of the " Madrepora muricata," which agrees well with a specimen examined by the author, in which the crowded verruca? open upward and are subnarilbrm, and the branchlets terminate in a large polyp; the verrucas are unequal. Eunicea papillosa, Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. Ixxxii., sp. 3. " Esperi icon (tab. 50)bona; ramis ultimis cum polypis 2-2j."' crassis, verrucis ?"' longis, 5'" latis, papilla ter- minal! superstructis." SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 671 E"tiin'ii micro/held, Lamouroux, Pol. flex., mammillis conicis subeminentibus, cortice 435; Deslongchamps, Encyc., 380: "E. friabili cretaceo." ramosa, sul)pinnata, ramis incurvatis ; NOTE. — The Eitnicca sulerosa of Ehrenberg is described from a West India specimen and reference made at the same time to Esper's tab. 30. " Semipedalis, isabellina, dicho- toma, ramulosa, ramis brevibus, vix bipollicaribus, summis apice 1 j'" crassis, ibique tur- gidulis, basi curvis, polypis dense sparsis, superficiem verruculosam reddentibus." He adds that the axis is corneous, and the cortex is two-thirds of a line thick and purplish within. It is not the Gorgonia snberosa of other authors, and appears to be the Gorgo- nia calyculata of Ellis, which is thus described : " G. dichotoma, ramulis crassis, arrectis ; papillis truncatis ; carne cinerascente, intus purpurea, osculis majoribus, calyciformibus, confertis, sursum spectantibus ; polypis octotentactilatis, cirratis ; osse corneo subfusco." 66. GORGONIA CLAVARIA. (Lamouroux.) Edwards. — Somewhat fus- cous; ramose, very stout; branches subterete, clavato-elongate, five to ten lines thick ; verrucse unequal, aperture one line broad. AVest Indies. Lamouroux mentions a specimen of this species seven inches high, having the branches about an inch thick. The verrucse in Ellis's figure are one and one-fourth lines broad and the same in length. Ellis and Solander, tab. 18, fig. 2. , Blainville, Man., 507. Ett/iiceaclavaria, Lamour., Pol. flex., 437; , Ehrenb., G. Ixxxii., sp. 20. Exp. Meth., 36, pi. 18, fig. 2; Encyc., Gorgonia clavaria, Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 505, 381. No. 42 a. 67. GORGONIA PSEUDO-ANTIPATHES. (Lamarck.) — Somewhat fus- cous; one foot in height ; ramose, dichotomous ; branches ascending, four to five lines thick, terete, not attenuate; surface of cortex verru- cose, verrucfe stout, one line long, and two-thirds broad, opening up- ward, outer lip prolonged and often a little incurved. West Indies. The verruca? are set on the branches like the calicles of a Madre- pore. The cortex is about a line thick and very dark brown in the dry state. The axis is black. The branches are often nearly in a plane. Gorgonia pseudo-antipalhes, Lamk., ii. Gorgonia succincal Esper, Fortsetz., i. 504, No. 40. 163, tab. 46. Resembles a flabellate Eunicca pseudo-antipalhcs, Lamour., Pol. specimen seen by the author, except that flex., 437 ; Encyc., 381. it is a little more slender, and the ver- Eiii/icea succinca, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxii. sp. ruca? appear in the figure to open out- 21. ward instead of upward. 68. GORGONIA MADREPORA. (Dana.) — Pale, five inches high ; 672 ZOOPHYTES. sparingly ramose ; branches four to five lines thick, elongate, with the surface strongly verrucose, verrucse numerous, subcylindrical, standing nearly erect upon the surface, three-quarters of a line thick, and one to one and a quarter long; cortex very thick; -the corneous axis hardly a line broad, black. West Indies. Philad. Acad. Nat. Sci. The perpendicular verrucse distinguish this species from the pseudo- antipathes ; the summit-polyp is much broader than the others. 69. GORGONIA PLANT AGINEA. (Lamarck.) — Fuscous; ramose, stout, erect; branches terete, echinulate ; cortex spongy, verrucse conical, erect, much crowded. West Indies ? Lamarck. Gorgonia plantaginea, Lamk., ii. 505, No. inollis, Lamour., Pol. flex., 436; Encyc., 381. "E. teres, dichotoma, ramis flex- uoso-recurvatis, implexis ; cortice spon- gioso, fusco; mammillis numerosis, mar- ginibus laceris." Mediterranean. 41. Gorgonia succinea? Esper, Fortsetz., i. 163, tab. 46. Gorgonia mottis? Gmel., Syst. Nat., 3799. Olivier, Zool. Adriat., 233. Eunicca 70. GORGONIA LIMA. (Lamarck ) — Whitish; ramose, dichotomous; branchlets two and a half lines thick ; verrucose, verrucse slender, very densely crowded ; axis corneous, black, compressed at the axils. West Indies. Tournefort. Lamarck. LitJurphytum Americannm, &c., Tourne- Eunicca limiformis, Lamour., Pol. flex., fort, Mem. de 1'Acad. Roy. des Sci., 1700, p. 34, plate 1 ; also, Inst., 574. Gorgonia muricata, Esper, ii., tab. 8. Gorgonia lima, Lamk., ii. 505, No. 42. 436; Exp. Meth., 36; Encyc., 380; figure 1, plate 18, in Exp. Meth., we have referred to the M. placomus. 71. GORGONIA MAMMOSA. (Lamouroux.} Edwards. — Eight inches; ramose, subdichotomous ; verrucas terete, one to three lines long, im- bricate. West Indies. Eunicca mammosa, Lamour., Pol. flex., Gorgonia mammosa, Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 438 ; Exp. Meth., 36, pi. 70, fig. 3 ; En- 506, No. 42 b. eye., 381. Gorgonia muricata (?), Esper, tab. 39 A. , Blainv., Man., 507, pi. 87, fig. 4. D. Unarranged species. 72. GORGONIA PUHPUREA. — Violaceous, subdichotomous, branches divaricate, virgate, subverrucose.— Pallas, Zooph., 187; Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 501, No. 35m; Lamouroux, Polyp, flex., 416 ; Encyc., 446. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 673 73. GORGONIA RICHARDII. (Lamouroux.) — Yellowish, much branched; branches scattered or sublateral, a little flabellate ; axis irregular, sometimes compressed, sub- suberose, white; cortex thin, verruca: conical, half a line high. West Indies. — Lamour., Pol. flex., 407 ; Encyc., 443 ; Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 501, No. 35 i. 74. GORGONIA' PENS A. (Lamarck.) — Whitish, eight to ten inches high, lax-ramose> complanate; branches furcate, pinnate, pinnules distichous, crowded, filiform, surface remotely verrucose, verruca) ascending, bifarious. From New Holland. — Peron §• Lesueur, Lamk., ii. 508, No. 47, states that it resembles a large whitish plume-like Sertularia. Lamour.,, Pol. flex., 418; Encyc., 446. 75. GORGONIA MONILIFORMIS. (Lamarck.) — Whitish, simple, filiform, erect ; ver- ruca; prominent, umbilicate at apex, somewhat scattered; cortex very thin. From New Holland. — Lamk., ii. 496, No. 24 ; Lamour., Pol. flex.. 420 ; Encyc., 447. 76. GOHGONIA COCCINEA. (Lamourouz.) — Ramose; branches short, scattered, chla- doniiform ; cortex scarlet ; Australian seas. — Lamour., Pol. flex., 423 ; Encyc., 447 ; Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 502, No. 35 p. 77. GORGONIA RIIIZOMORPHA. (Lamouroux.') — Ramose; branches scattered, elon- gate, like the fibres of a root; cortex brown, axis subcorneous. Near Bayonne. — La- mouroux, Pol. flex., 401 ; Encyc., 441 ; Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 500, No. 35 c. 78. GORGONIA ALBA. (Lamarck.) — Ramose ; subcompressed ; branches subpinnate, erect; branchlets terete ; cortex white, oscules scattered. — Lamk., ii. 499, No. 33; La- mouroux, Encyc., 445. SUBGENUS III.— MURICEA. Go-rgonice, polypis retractis, verrucose, verrucis per spicula aut squamas armatis, fixis. Verrucose, in the retracted state of the polyps, the verrucas armed with spicula or scales, and not movable. Arrangement of the Species. \. Verrucis spicido-armatis. *79. G. Mur. spicifera. *80. G. Mur. elongata. II. Verrucis squanndo-armatis. 83. G. Mur. verticillaris. *81. G. Mur. placomus. 82. G. Mur. cerea. 84. G. Mur. myura. 79. G. MURICEA SPICIFERA. (Lamouroux.) — Pale, afoot high; fruti- cose, with the branches much compressed, and three to four lines 189 674 ZOOPHYTES. broad, and branchlets subcom pressed ; surface crowdedly covered with armed subimbricate verrucee; axis black, throughout very much flattened and two-edged, axils broad. West Indies. The axis of the branchlets is one-fourth to half a line wide, and very thin, or two-edged. The verruca are a little longer than in the elongata. Gorgonia muricata, Ellis and Solander, 82. The specimens are generally less stout , Lamarck, ii. 506, No. 43. above than represented by Lamourouxj Eunicca muricata, Lamour., Pol. flex., 439. and the verruca;, when dried, often have Muricea spicifera, Lamour., Exp. Meth., a different form. 36, tab. 71, figs. 1, 2; Encyc., 558. , Ehrenberg, G. Ixxxi., sp. 3. Gorg. muricata, var., Esper ii., tab. 39. The verruca? are a little too large, but the enlarged drawings are not unlike some specimens seen by the author. The Gorgonia laxispica of Lamarck (ii. 507, No. 44), is described as follows: " G. ramosa, ramis spicceformibus, longiusculis, laxfe muricatis ; papillis cylindricis, arrectis." Milne Edwards adds that it is very near the muricata, but with more slender verruca?, which are less decidedly armed with spicula, and have a more distinct bilabiate opening. 80. G. MURICEA ELONGATA. (Lamour oux.} — Sulphur yellow ; a foot high; fruticulose, ramulous, but not in a plane; branchlets nearly terete, one and a half lines broad, obtuse, elongate, verrucose ; verrucae much crowded, imbricate, scarcely a line long. West Indies. Muricea elongata, Lamour., Exp. Meth.,37, , Blainville, Man., 509. pi. 71, figs. 3, 4 ; Encyc., 559. Gorgonia virgata, Lamk., ii. 506. The Muricea sulphurea (?), Ehrenb., G. Ixxxi., sp. 4. A young specimen ? It is de- scribed as follows : " 5" lata, 3" alta, minor, gracilior (quam spicifera), fruticulosa, dense ramulosa, nee flabellata, sulphurea, ramis teretiusculis, papillosis, lj'" latis, obtusis, papillis paulo brevioribus, nee angustioribus, spiculis sulphureis, appressis." Locality unknown. 81. G. MURICEA PLACOMUS. (Linn.} Ehrenberg. — Cinereous or fus- cous, large, flabellate, much ramose; branches flexuous, sometimes coalescing, one and a half to three lines thick, strongly verrucose, verrucse three-fourths of a line broad and high, divaricate, and laxly arranged; surface armed, closed at summit by a calyptra made of eight convergent spicula; axis brownish, axils scarcely compressed. Mediterranean Sea (?). Norwegian Sea. The flexuous branchings, rough and uneven, from the irregularly crowded spinulous verrucse standing nearly at right angles with the surface, have a very peculiar aspect. The verruca are either coni- SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 675 cal, or nearly cylindrical ; the extremity is circular, and set about by minute spicnles, like those of the sides, which encircle the depressed calyptra, the cover to the terminal opening. Ellis and SolandCr, tab. 18, fig. 1 ; without , Latnk., ii. 492, No. 14; according description. This figure is referred by to Edwards, Lamarck's description per- Lamouroux, to the Gorgonia lima (p. tains to the G. verrucosa, and his Gorg. 672) ; yet in that species the polyps are granifera is the above species. • not, as here rep resented, 'at right angles , Lamouroux, Encyc., 443. with the stem. Espcr suggests, with much Muricca placomus, Ehrenb., G. lxxxi.,sp. 1. appearance of reason, that it may repre- The Muricea calyptrata of Ehrenberg (sp. sent this species. 2) is a doubtful species, near the placo- Gorgmtia placomus, Linn., ed. xii., 1290. mus, but with more slender branches, , Pallas, Zooph., 201. smaller polyps, and more obtuse verructe. , Esper, ii., tab. 33, 34, and 34 A. He refers to Esper's tab. 34 A. 82. G. MURICEA CEREA. (Esper.) Ehrenberg. — Low, slender, fruti- culose, subflabellate, covered every where with spreading, reddish spicula ; branches nearly terete, rather broader than a line, obtuse ; polyps densely and throughout scattered, yellow above, one-third of a line in breadth. East Indies. Esper. Goryoniu cerca, Esper, Fortsetz. i., tab. 47. Muricea cerea, Ehrenb., G. Ixxxi., sp. 5. 83. G. MURICEA VERTICILLARIS. — Ramose, flabellate, one and a half feet high; branches pinnate; pinnules setaceous; verrucose, verrucae ascending, incurved, verticillate, less than a line long. Mediterranean Sea. The verrucse are scattered or opposite on the smaller branchlets, but verticillate below, in whorls, generally of four. They are usually incurved with the extremity pointing nearly towards the branch. Ellis's Corallines, tab. 26, fig. s, t, v. , Lamk., ii. 507, No. 46. G'H-xoitid vcrt.kil/aris, Linn., ed. xii., 1289. , Lamour., Pol. flex., 417 ; Encyc., 446. , Pallas, Zooph., 177. Primnoa verticillaris, Ehrenb., G. Ixxx., , Esper, Fortsetz., i. 156, tab. 42. sp. 2. , Ellis and Solander, 83. Ehrenberg describes an allied species as follows, referring with a query, to Esper's tab. 42. " Primnoa fiabeUum. — Sesquipedalis, gracilis, dichotoma, densfe ramosa, flabelli- formis, virgata, (lavicans, polypis laxius imbricatis, verticillis ssepe irregularibus, polypis singulis quadrifarian ('() scutatis, seriebus transversis 10, ultima majore, ut in Icpadifera." Esper, in his description, states that the whorls, in his specimen, contained but six polyps. 84. G. MURICEA MYURA. (Lamarck.} — Whitish; simple, filiform, 676 ZOOPHYTES. caudate ; surface verrucose, the verruca? scattered, often bifarious, ob- long ascending, subpyriform, incurved, cortex thin. Gorgonia myura, Lamarck, ii. 508, No. Gorgonia myitra, Lamour., Pol. flex., 420 ; 48. Encyc., 447. NOTE. — Ehrenberg also refers to this genus the Gorgonia retellum. GENUS V.—PRIMNOA.— LAMOUROUX. Gorgonidce, axe inarticulate ; polypis contractis elongato-verruciformi- bus et basi Jtectentibus, latere per squamas imbricatas armatis. Gorgonida? secreting an inarticulate axis ; polyps, when contracted, long verruciform, and having motion at base; their sides armed with imbricate scales. This genus was instituted by Lamouroux on the ground of the itn- bricately squamous character of the verrucse. Ehrenberg united to the species so called by Lamouroux, others less regularly imbricate, which are here excluded, by adding as a characteristic the apparently important peculiarity, that the verruca? admit of motion at base. They are usually rerlexed upon the stem ; but Esper has figured a speci- men in which they were erect. PRIMNOA LEPADIFERA. (Linnceus.) Lamouroux. P. laxe ramosa, dichotoma, subflabellata ; verruds elongatis (2|-3'"), subpyriformibus, per valvulos octo clausis ; ramorum axe testaceo, ra- mulorum corneo. Lax ramose, dichotomous, subflabellate ; verruca? long (2^ to 3 lines), subpyriform, closed by 8 scales ; axis of the branches testaceous ; of the branchlets corneous. Seas of Northern Europe. Gorgonia lepadifcra, Linn., ed. xii., 1289. , Esper, ii. 71, tab. 18. , Ellis and Sol., 84, tab. 13, figs. 1, 2. , Lamarck, ii. 507, No. 45. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 677 -, Johnston's Brit. Zooph., 185. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 656. Gorgonia reseda, Pallas, Zooph., 204. , Fleming, Brit. Anim., 513. Primnoa lepadifera, Lamour., Pol. flex., , Blainv., Man., 510, pi. 87, fig. 6. 442 ; Exp. Moth., 37, pi. 13, figs. 1, 2. , Ehrenberg, G. Ixxx., sp. 1. GENUS VI.— BEBRYCE.— PHILIPPI. Gorgonidce axe inarticulate corneo ; polypis grandibus, remotis, non re- tractilibus. Gorgonidse having an inarticulate corneous axis; polyps large and not retractile. BEBRYCE MOLLIS. (Philippi.} B. dendroideum; polypis remote spar sis ; cortice spongioso. Arborescent ; polyps remotely scattered ; cortex spongy. Mediterranean Sea. Philippi. Bebryce mollis, Philippi, VVieg. Arch., viii. 35. The description appears to ally the species to the G. exserta of Ellis, and the G. tri- chostemma ; but the latter, and probably the former, has retractile polyps. SDBFAMILY III.— ISIN.E. • Gorgonidce axem articulatum elaborantes. Gorgonidse forming a jointed axis. 170 678 ZOOPHYTES. GENUS I. — MOPSEA. — LAMOUROUX. articulis cornets et calcareis alternis instructs, e internodiis cor- nets ramosce ; cortice tenui. Isinae having the joints alternately calcareous and corneous ; ramose, with corneous axils ; cortex thin. The Mopsese are slender fragile species, with a thin cortex. The calcareous joints are long and smooth, while the corneous, which con- stitute the axils of the branching zoophyte, are short. The formation of the latter is connected with the periodical developement of buds which occasions the branching, corneous basal secretions taking place at that time. This genus was separated from Isis by Larnouroux; but Ehrenberg first mentioned the important characteristic of the group, — the fact of the species branching from the corneous joints, instead of the calca- reous, as in the species of Isis. Arrangement of the Species. *1. M. dichotoma. 3. M. gracilis. 2. M. encrinula. 4. M. erythrsea. 1. MOPSEA DICHOTOMA. (Pallas.) Lamouroux. M. 5" alta ; ramosa, dichotoma, ramulis 1'" crassis, articulis lapideis latere compressis, aut subcylindricis ; caule 3'" crasso. Five inches high; ramose, dichotomous, branchlets 1 line thick; calcareous joints laterally compressed or subcylindrical ; main stem 3 lines thick. Indian Ocean. Hippuris corattoides cornea Capensis,geni- Isis dichotoma, Schweigger's Handl).. 434. culis limosis, Pettiveri, Gazoph., 7, Tab. , Lamk., ii. 475, No. 3. 3, fig. 10. Mopsca dichotoma, Lamouroux, Pol. flex., Isis dichotoma, Pallas, Zooph., No. 143. 467; Exp. Meth., 38. , Linn, ed. xii., 1287. , Dcs!ongchamp.s, Encyc., 558. , Esper, i. 43, tab. 5; the calcareous , Ehrenberg, G. Ixxviii., sp. 1. joints are about half an inch long. iUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 679 2. MOPSEA ENCRINULA. (Lamarck.) Ehrenberg. M. subbipinnato-ramosa, ramulis filiformibus, verrucosis, verrucis sparsis ascendentibus, interdum vertidllatis. Ramose, subbipinnatej branchlets filiform, verrucose ; verrucee scat- tered, ascending, sometimes verticillate. Seas of New Holland. Peron $ Lesueur. Isis encrinula, Lamk., ii. 476, No. 4. , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 557. Isis dichotoma, Schweig., Handb., 434. Mopsea encrinula, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxvii., Mopsca verticillata, Lamouroux, Pol. flex., sp. 2. 467, pi. 18, fig. 2 ; and Exp. Meth., 39. 3. MOPSEA GRACILIS. (Lamouroux.} Ehrenberg. M. basi ezplanata, laciniata, caulium nodis cakareis paulum crassis, ramorum dongatis, transluddis, Icevibus, albis. Explanate at base, laciniate ; calcareous joints of stem a little stout, those of the branches very long, translucent, smooth, white. The Antillas. Lamouroux. Isi.s gracilis, Lamour., Polyp, flex., 477, , Lamk., 2d ed., ii. 476, No, 6. pi. 18, fig. 1. , Blainviile, Man., 503. — , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 466. 4. MOPSEA ERYTHR^EA. (H. 4- Ehrenberg.) M. dichotoma, fruticulosa, verrucosa, coccinea; articulis cortice obductis, geniculo vix angustioribus, ramis in geniculis flexilibus ; decorticatd, articulorum lapideorum axe teretiusculo, kngitudinaliter sulcato, geni- culis paulum tumidis ; tentaculis ramulosis, niveis. Dichotomous, fruticulose, verrucose, scarlet ; joints concealed by the cortex ; scarcely narrower at the geniculations ; branches flexible at the geniculations; calcareous joints of the axis somewhat terete, 680 ZOOPHYTES. longitudinally sulcate ; geniculations a little tumid ; polyps with the tentacles ramulous, white. Red Sea. Ehrenberg. This description is from Ehrenberg. He mentions that the species is an elegant one when alive, though but two inches in height. Mopsea erythrcea, Ehrenberg, G. Ixxviii., Isis erythracea, Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 477, sp. 3. No. 7. APPENDIX. — The Isis coralloides of Lamarck may belong to this genus. It is thus described by this author (sp. 5): "I. ramosa, dis- ticho-ramulosa, rubens ; ramulis remotis, breviusculis, cortice papillis, raris, ascendentibus." From the " Austral seas." — Peron $ Lesueur. GENUS II. — ISIS. — LINN/EUS. Isince articulis cornels et cakareis alternis instructs, e nodis calcareis ramulosce ; cortice crasso, deciduo. Isinse, consisting of corneous and calcareous joints alternately ; branches proceeding from the calcareous joints ; cortex thick, deciduous. The crust of these species is so deciduous that it is rarely seen in collections, although the corals are not uncommon. This genus, as instituted by Linnaeus, contained the genus Coral- Liu m as well as Mopsea. Isis HIPPURIS. (Linnaus.) I. parce ramosa, ramis crassis, axe calcareo albo, valde sukato. Sparingly ramose, branches stout; calcareous joints of the axis white, strongly sulcate. East Indies. SUBORDER ALCYONARIA. 681 Accarbarittm album, Rumph., Amb., 6, tab. 84. Corattium cinereum, Battarra, Mus. Richt., i., 170, tab. 42, fig. 5. Corallium mxlosum, &c., Easier, Op. Sub- scev., Lib. i., 46, tab. 6, fig. 1. Isis hippuris, Linn., ed. xii., 1287. , Pallas, Zooph., 233. , Ellis and Sol., 105, tab. 3. figs. 1-5. , Esper, i., 33, tab. 1 to 3. — , Lamour., Pol. flex. ,475; Exp. Meth., 39, pi. 3 ; Encyc., 466, figs. 1-5. , Lamk., ii. 475, No. 1. , Schweig., Handb., 434. -, Blainv., Man., 503, pi. 86, fig. 1. , Ehrenb., G. Ixxix., sp. 1. Isis (?) ELONGATA. (Esper.) I. rubra, laxe ramosa, ramis teretibus, axis articulis lapideis valde elongatis, striatis, internodiis brevissimis. Red, lax ramose, branches terete ; calcareous joints of the axis much elongate, striate ; internodes very short. This is a very neat and slender species, with long joints, and short internodes. It has the general habit of a Mopsea. According to Risso's figure, the polyps are long exsert and not retractile, forming thus slender elongate verrucse. The closed polyps are represented as mostly reversed on the stem, nearly as in the Primrioa. The cortex becomes dark brown on drying. Near Naples, Mediterranean. Philippi. Frutex marinus, &c., Seba, Thes., tab. Isis elongata, Lamarck, ii. 475, No. 2. 106, No. 4. The figure represents a , Blainville, Man., 503. specimen with slender graceful branches Mopsea mediterranea, Risso Merid. Eu- nearly a foot in height. rope, 332. This species is referred here Isis elongata, Esper, i., 47, tab. 6. by Philippi. — , Lamour., Pol. flex., 477 ; Encyc., 466. GEUCS MELIT^EA. — LAMOUEOUX. articulis calcareis et suberosis alternis instructs. 171 682 ZOOPHYTES. Isinse, consisting of an alternation of calcareous and suberose joints. The species of Melitsea are mostly of bright colours, either yellow, orange, scarlet, or crimson, and all these colours are met with in the same species. They are very fragile, the branches breaking easily at the internodes, which have a texture something like cork. Arrangement of the Species. *1. M. ochracea. *3. M. coccinea. 2. M. retifera. *4. M. tenella. 1. MELIT.EA OCHRACEA. M. maxima, ramosissima, plerumque in piano fere arborescens, ramis et ramulis suberectis, non coalitis. Large, much branched, generally arboriform nearly in a plane; branches and branchlets suberect, not coalescing. East Indies. — Feejee Islands, of crimson and orange colours. Exp. Exp. This species grows to a height of three feet or more, and occurs both of crimson, pale yellow, and orange colours, the latter often having minute crimson verruca? or dots. At base the trunk is some- times nearly two inches through, while the branchlets are delicate and slender, breaking easily. Seba, Thes. iii., tab. 104, No. 1. Melitcea ochracea, Lamour., Pol. flex., 462. Isis ochracea, Linn., ed. xii., 1287. , Schweig., Handb., 434. , Pallas, Zooph., 230. _, Lamarck, ii. 472, No. 1. , Ellis, Phil. Trans., vol. xi., abridg., — , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 512. p. 109; Ellis and Solander, 105. — , Blainv., Man., 504, pi. 86, figs. 3, , Esper, i., 38, tab. 4 and 4 A, and 3 a, 3 b — not good. Fortsetz., Isis, tab. 11; represent well — , Ehrenberg, G. Ixxvii., sp. 1. the different varieties. 2. MELITjEA RETIFERA. M. Jlabelliformis, in piano ramulosa, ramis suberectis Jkxuosis, ramulis s&pe subreticulatim coalitis, creberrime verrucosis. SUBORDER A I. CYONARIA. 683 Flabelliform, much branched in a plane ; branches suberect and flexuous, branchlets often subreticulately coalescing, thickly ver- rucose. East Indies. Peron 4- Lesueur. The colours of this species are various, but mostly some bright shade of red or yellow. Isis aurantia, Esper, Forts., ii., Isis, tab. 9. nodoso, in flabellum tenuissimum expla- Melitcea retifera, Lamk., ii. 472, No. 2. nato ; ramulis numerosis, filiformibus, , Lamour., Pol. flex., 463. reticulatim coalescentibus ; catenarum an- , Blainville, Man., 504. nulis elongatis." " Austral Seas. Peron — , Ehrenb., G. Ixxvii., sp. 2. and Lesueur." See Lamouroux, Exp. The Melittea textiformis, of Lamarck (No. Meth., pi. 71, figure 5. A variety of the 3), is thus described : " M. caule brevi, retifera 1 3. MELIT^EA COCCINEA. M. pumila, in piano ramulosa, ramis gradlibus (!'"), tortuosis, divari- catis, scepe retictdatim coalitis, internodiis obsoletis ; verrucis sub- sparsis. Small, branching in a plane ; branches slender (1 line thick), tortuous, divaricate, often reticulately coalescing; internodes obsolete, verrucae rather remotely scattered. This species much resembles the retifera, but differs, according to Lamarck, in having the verruca? less prominent and not so crowded. Specimens in the Expedition collections, from New Holland, present yellow, buff, rose-red, and scarlet colours. Indian Ocean. — New Holland. Exp. Exp. Isis coccinea, Ellis and Sol., 107, tab. 12, Melitaa Rissoi, Lamour., Pol. flex., 463; fig. 5. Exp. Meth., 38, pi. 12, fig. 5. , Espcr, i., Isis, tab. 3 A, fig. 5, (copy Melitcea coccinea, Lamk., ii. 473. from Ellis), and Forts, ii., Isis, tab. , Blainville, Man., 504. 10. , Ehrenberg, op. cit., G. Ixxvii., sp. 3. 4. MELITJEA TENELLA. (Dana.) M. fruticulosa, 3" alia, coccinea; ramulosa, ramis ramulisque gracil- 684 ZOOPHYTES. timis, passim I'" minoribus, flexuosis, articulis, 3-8'" bngis ; cwtice verrucoso, verruds parvulis (£"'), et minimt ascendentibus ; polypis kete flavis; axe calcareo fere kvi. Fruticulose, 3 inches high; deep scarlet; much branched, branches and branchlets very slender, in no part a line thick, flexuous ; joints 3 to 8 lines long; cortex verrucose, verruca? small (J of a line broad), not at all ascending; polyps bright yellow ; calcareous axis nearly smooth. Sandwich Islands. This species is much more slender than the preceding, and the branches are not in a plane, and rarely coalescent. The axis is pale red. The stem at base is hardly three-fourths of a line thick, and the axis of the same is less than half a line. ORDER II. — HYDRO1DEA. 685 ORDER II.— HYDROIDEA. Zoophyta ventriculo tubuliformi simplicissimo ; ovulise lateribus externe enascentibus. Zoophytes having a simple tubular visceral cavity ; ovules growing externally from the sides. In Chapter III., the general characteristics of the Hydroidea have been stated, and in the Classification, on pages 116 to 119, the prin- cipal divisions in their arrangement are given. The characteristics of the genera are here added, and some few species described, which were obtained by the Expedition. FAMILY I.— HYDRIDE. Hydroidea, gemmis maturis deciduis ; ovulis singulis, lateralibus ; ten- taculis tubulatis. Buds deciduous when mature; ovules single, lateral; tentacles tubular. This family contains the single genus Hydra. Of all zoophytes, these were the earliest studied ; and the famous works of Trembley arid Baker have afforded perhaps more amusement and surprise to their readers than any other details in natural science ever published. Van Beneden has pointed out, as a distinguishing characteristic be- tween them and the TubularidaB, that the tentacles are tubular, and the cavity communicates directly with the internal cavity of the ani- 172 686 ZOOPHYTES. mal. These organs are somewhat warty, and, as shown by Corda, the warts, which are arranged spirally around them, are furnished with short bristles, and an exsertile dart, used, as is supposed, for securing their prey. FAMILY II.— SERTULARIDJS. Hydroidea gemmis persistentibus ; poly pis sessilibus ; ovulis pluribus vesiculo indusis, lateralibus. Buds persistent; polyps sessile; ovules included in a vesicle, lateral. The species of this family are distinct from the Campanulariae, in having the calicles without pedicels, and forming, to the naked eye, a denticulate edging to the delicate branchlets. The latter also differ in their modes of developement, in which respect they are near the Tubularidas. The following are the characteristics of the genera : I. Polyps in one series, branches therefore secund. 1. ANTENNULARIA. (Lamarck.) Not plumose. Calicles tubular or campannlate. 2. PLUMCLARIA. (Lamarck.) Plumose, pinnate, or decompound pinnate. II. Polyps in two series. a. Series uninterrupted. 3. SERTULARIA. Calicks urceolate ; attached at base, with the summits more or less free. This genus includes the Dynamene, of Lamouroux, which was instituted for spe- cies having the cells opposite, instead of alternate. 4. THUIARIA. (Fleming.) Calicles attached by one side as well as at base, not free at apex. This genus is the Biseriaria, of Blainville, a name substituted by that author for Fleming's. 5. THOA. (Lamouroux.) Calicles very short tubular or campanula^. The habit of the Those, as suggested by Milne Edwards, is much like that of the Campatnilarie, and it may belong to the following Ihmily. l>. Polyps in successive groups, arising from a periodicity in budding. 6. PASYTHEA. (Lamouroux.) ORDER II. — HYDROIDEA. 687 ANTENNULARIA cyATHiFERA. (Dana.) A. simplex, recta, semipollicaris ; poly pis subremotis, caliculis late ele- ganterque campanulatis, margine integro, dudbus caliculis interme- diis obsolescentibus. A simple, erect, filiform stem, half an inch high ; polyps subremote ; calicles elegantly broad-campanulate, with the margin entire ; two rudimentary calicles intermediate. Plate 61, figure 5, zoophyte, unexpanded, enlarged ; 5 a, same, na- tural size. Also, figure 9, page 25. Balabac Passage, East Indies. Exp. Exp. The calicles are neat goblet-shape, with the breadth nearly equal to the length, and the mouth slightly flaring. They are attached to suc- cessive joints of the stem, which are oblong, with very oblique articu- lations. Between them, there are two small appendages, resembling rudimentary calicles. Either side of each calicle there is an oblong slender process having a club-shape head standing out quite free from the polyp. The figure was made from the living zoophyte, though unexpanded. The genus Antennularia is usually characterized as having verticil- late branches; but it may be questioned whether this is properly a generic character. SERTULARIA MIMOSA. (Dana.} G. plurniformis, 3^" alta, pinnulis ferme 4'" remotis et 9'" longis, cali- culis parce prominulis ; polypis longissime exsertis, gracilibus, tenta- culorum serie valde obliquo, elliptico, tentaculis capillaribus, apice recurvis. Neat plumiform, 3£ inches high, pinnules about 4 lines distant, and 9 lines long, calicles short, and sparingly prominent; polyps very long, exsert, and slender, with the circlet of tentacles placed ob- liquely, elliptical ; tentacles capillary, recurved at apex. 688 ZOOPHYTES. Plate 61, fig. 6, zoophyte, natural size, partly in outline; 6 a, one of the polyps, expanded, and another contracted, natural size. The Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The oblique circlet of tentacles and very exsertile polyps appear to point to a different genus from the ordinary Sertularise. The outer tentacles of the circle were a little longer than those on the inner side, and the apices of the latter were hardly recurved. The breadth of the plume was about one and a half inches; the pinnules were placed alternately, and the rachis was correspondingly a little zigzag. The plate represents the zoophyte as it was figured on the spot, untouched since, as the specimen was afterwards misplaced. PASYTHEA GRACILIS. (Dana.} P. sex polyporum acervis seriatis instructa; caliculis extus spectantibus, basi non inflatis. Polyps in successive clusters of six; calicles opening outward, not inflated at base. Fig. 11, page 25, zoophyte, enlarged. Gulf-weed, Atlantic Ocean. Exp. Exp. This little species is near the quadridentata of Lamouroux, but has six, instead of four, polyps to each cluster, and the calicles are not enlarged below. It was obtained and figured by Dr. C. Pickering. FAMILY III.— CAMP ANULARID^. Hydroidm gemmis persistentibus, polypis dongato-tubulatis, caliculis pedicellatis ; reproduction, Tubularidis affinia. ORDER II. — HYDRO IDE A. 089 Hydroidea with persistent buds; polyps long-tubular, calicles pedi- cellate ; in modes of reproduction near the Tubularidae. The structure of the Campanularise has been investigated with great skill and minuteness by Van Beneden. He has ascertained their close relation to the Tubularidse, and their identity with the species of that family, in modes of reproduction, and is inclined to associate the two groups in one. The family includes two genera, as follows : CAMPANULARIA. (Lamarck.) — Polyps budding from an ascending shoot or stolon, erect, or climbing. LAOMEDEA. (Lamouroux.) — Polyps alternately arranged, and zoo- phyte having its branches usually zigzag. LOMEDEA GRACILIS. (Pickering.} L. caulibus 6-8'" altis, et stolone filiformi surrectis, optime ziczac flexuosis ; caulibus juxta axittas penduculisque annulatis ; caliculis carnpanulatis ; vesiculis elongato-ovatis, infra suprhque attenuatis, et apice tnmcatis collogue brevi terminatis. Sterns 6 to 8 lines high, and rising from a creeping stolon, regularly zigzag in form ; the stem for a short distance above the axils, and the pedicels, ringed ; calicles campanulate ; vesicles oblong-oval, tapering above and below, and truncated at apex, with a short neck. Plate 61, fig. 7, zoophyte, enlarged ; 7 a, natural size; 7 b, polyp, partly expanded. Gulf-weed, Atlantic, lat. 34° 39' N., long. 72° 01' VJ.—Exp. Exp. This species is near the geniculata; but the vesicle is not abruptly enlarged immediately below the short neck which surrounds the aperture. " The average length of the pedicels was about ^V of an inch, and of the cells T'S of an inch ; the outer shell was diaphanous and apparently entirely membranous; tentacles as many as twenty. A distinct, rapid current of globules was perceived in the main axis of one of the stems." C. Pickering. 173 690 ZOOPHYTES. LAOMEDEA SIMPLEX. (Dana.} L. caule fere recta, pedunculis non annulatis, tubulatis, calicuMs venx nuttis ; tentaculis ferme 20, rostro obconico. Stem nearly straight, erect, pedicels not ringed, tubular, no true cali- cles ; tentacles about 20, mouth projecting, obconical. Plate 61, fig. 8, zoophyte, enlarged ; 8 a, same, natural size ; 8 b, enlarged view of rostriform mouth ; fig. 6, p. 21, a wood-cut of the o same. Feejee Islands. Exp. Exp. The specimen was a minute stem, half an inch high, formed of seven polyps ; they were remarkable for having no proper calicles, the extre- mity of the tubular pedicel answering in place of it. No vesicles were observed. NOTE. — Figure 9, plate 61, represents a partially expanded Campanularia, from th<; Gulf-weed, lat. 37° N., long. 43° 30' W., figured by Dr. C. Pickering. FAMILV IV.— TUBULAUIDjE. Hydroidea, gemmis persistentibus, gemmulis oviformibus deciduis inter tentaculos nascentibus, cum aliis ovulis verts ; polypis scepius pedicel- latis ; tentaculis non tubulatis. Hydroidea giving out persistent buds; also producing deciduous ovi- form gemmules near the base of the tentacles, besides other true ova; polyps mostly pedicellate; tentacles not tubular. The larger species of Tubulariae, when unexpanded, often look like tufts of a delicate rush, with threads for leaves, each of which bears ORDER II. — HYDROIDEA. 691 a polyp-flower when expanded ; others are much branched ; and others are short clumsy polyps. The tentacles are in one or two ranges, or scattered over the summit of the animal, which is usually oblong- conical, or rostriform, with a mouth and a circle of short tentacles at the summit of the beak. Their structure has been developed with unusual fidelity and beauty, by Van Beneden, and some of the results of his investigations are given in the Appendix. The following are the characters of the genera, as laid down by him : 1. Coralligenous ; forming honn/ corolla. 1. PENNARIA (Goldfuss). Tentacles of tico kinds, the superior scattered and in •I ro/rs. — Sertularia of Cavolini, Pol. mar., 134, pi. 5. Plumularia, Delle Chiaje, Mfin., iv. 145, pi. 63, fig. 3 ; Blainville, Man., 477. Pennaria, Goldfuss; Ehrenbcrg, op. cit., Gen. xlii. 2. TUBULARIA (Pallas). Tentacles of tiro kinds, in tivo series. — Pallas, Elench. Zooph. ; Lamarck, ii. 124; Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. si. 3. SYNOOKVXA (Ehrenberg). Tentacles alike, in several scries. — Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. xxxix. Slipula, Sars. Hermia, Johnston, Mag. Zool. and Bot., ii. 326, and Brit. Zooph., 111. Coryne, Lamarck, ii. 74, and Blainv., Man. ,471. 4. CORYDEXDRIUM (Van Beneden). Tentacles alike, scattered. 5. EruKxuRiuM (Ehrenberg). Tentacles in one series. — Ehrenberg, op. cit., G. xli. II. j\bl coralligenous. 6. OOHYNA (Goertner). Tentacles alike, scattered. — Hydra, Miiller, Zool. Dan.; Cori/ne, Lamarck, ii. 73 ; Coryna, Blainville, Man., 471 ; Ehrenb., Gen. xxxviii. 7. HYDRACTINIA (Van Beneden). Tentacles in a single series. — Van Beneden, Bull, do 1'Acad. Roy. de Bruxelles, viii., 1841, 89, pi. 1-5; and Mem. de I'Ac. Roy., xvii. pi. 6; Dysmorphosa, Philippi, Zool. Beobacht., Wicgm. Arch., 1842, 33, pi. 1, figs. 2, 3; Cor- dijlopliofa, Allman, Brit. Assoc., 1843, and Ann. Nat. Hist., xiii. 328; Syniiydra, Qua- trefagcs, Ann. des Sci. Nat., Oct. 1843. TUBULARIA ORN ATA. (Couthouy.) T.fiUformis, 3-4" alta, polypis grandibus, rostro elongate subcylindrico, tentaculis externis filiformibus, apice supernis brevissimis ; ramulis gemmuliferis multiramosis. Filiform, 3 to 4 inches high ; polyps large ; beak long, subcylindrical ; external tentacles filiform, oral tentacles very short; gemmuliferous branchlets much branched, lax and pendent. Rio Janeiro. Exp. Exp. f>92 ZOOPHYTES. This species is figured of the natural size, on page 19, from draw- ings by J. P. Couthouy. Figure 1 a represents an enlarged polyp; and 1 b, a cluster of gemmules, enlarged. CORYNA CAPILLIFERA. (Pickering.) C. polypi summitate elonga to-ovata ; tentaculis fermc 20, capillaribns sparsis. Summit of polyp long-ovate; tentacles about 20, capillary, and scat- tered. Plate 61, fig. 10, polyp, enlarged. Sandwich Islands. Exp. Exp. This species was obtained and figured by my associate, Dr. Picker- ing. It was a simple polyp, about one and a half lines in height, and the summit over which the tentacles were scattered, was full half the whole length. The tentacles were like slender hairs, and were scat- tered over the oblong summit; they waved readily with the motion of the water. SUPPLEMENT TO THE DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. THIS Supplement includes the following genera of doubtful or un- determined character: Allopora, Myriozoum, Pustulopora, Coscino- pora, Receptacnlites, Tetradium, Theonea, Limaria, Stromatopora, Chaunopora, Distichopora, Orbulites, Marginopora, and Polytrema. GENUS ALLOPORA. — EHRENBERG. Cumulato-ramosa, polypis uni-gemmatis. Corallum cakareum, solidum, stellis internis nullis, caliculis prominulis, cellis profundioribus, lineam non superantibus, infundibuliformibus, margine uniseriatim ceUuloso et crenato. Cumulato-ramose, each polyp giving out, in succession, a single bud (branchlets therefore zigzag). Corallum calcareous and solid, not at all penetrated by stellate cells; calicles somewhat prominent, cells quite deep, less than a line broad, funnel-shape, margin crenate, and having a series of cellules between the crenatures. This genus was established by Ehrenberg for a coral that has the compactness of the Corallium rubrum, and appears like that to be an axis of an incrusting zoophyte, although there are distinct cells. A single species belongs to the Expedition collections, and was ob- tained in the Pacific. The Oculina flabelliformis and O. rosea, as 174 694 ZOOPHYTES. Ehrenberg states, have allied characters. The cells are described as radiated with lamellfe. But in the three species of the group seen by the author the interior of the cell is smooth, and the lamellse are barely distinguishable crenatures of the margin, formed apparently by a row of oblong depressions and pores which alternate with the elevations. These crenatures are much more prominent in a species figured by Esper, and look like lamella ; moreover, the exterior of the calicle is correspondingly striated. There is no trace of a cell within the inte- rior of the corallum. The characters here stated, as well as the minute size of the polyps, and their usual arrangement on two opposite sides only of a branch, appear to separate the species from the Oculinse, with which they have been united. In the A. bella, the number of crenatures is twenty- four; and this number of lamella? or tentacles in so small a polyp (two-thirds of a line in diameter) would be sufficient, of itself, to indi- cate that the polyps cannot be true Oculinae ; it is, therefore, altoge- ther probable that the crenatures do not correspond each to a lamella. We are unable to infer from the structure of the corallum the true nature of the zoophyte, and leave it to be determined by a discovery of the polyps. They may be related to the Distichoporse. The species occur in the tropics, and probably also towards the colder limits of the temperate zone. Arrangement of the Species. *1. A. flabelliformis. *2. A. rosea. 3. A. infundibulifera. *4. A. gemmascens. 5. A. oculina. 6. A. norwegica. 1. ALLOPORA FLABELLIFORMIS. (Lamarck.} Dana. A. 8" alta, ramosissima, fldbellata, secunda, ramulis crebris minimis, brevissimis et flexuosis. Corallum leve, caliculis minutis (I"' latis), lamellis vix perspicuis. Eight inches high, much branched, flabellate, securid, branchlets crowded, minute, and very short, flexuous. Corallum smooth, calicles minute (y of a line broad), lamellae scarcely distinct. East Indies. SUPPLEMENT. 695 T\\e flabelliformis, as the name implies, has its branches in a single plane. It is very ramulous, and the outer branchlets are very deli- cate (plate 60, figure 7). The calicles are a little prominent, or give a zigzag appearance to the branchlets ; the cells are about one-sixth of a line in diameter, and the margin is slightly crenulate, as seen under a lens. As Lamarck states, it somewhat resembles a Millepora. Corallium album, lapideiim, densum et Oculina flabeUiformis, Lamarck, ii. 457, compactum, ramis levibus, teretibus, No. 8. multuin divisis, Seba, Thes., iii., fig. , Blainville, Man. d'Act., p. 380. 10, tab. 110. The figure measures Oculina gemmascens, Ehrenberg, op. cit., seven inches by five in breadth, and Gen. xlviii., sp. 2. resembles closely a specimen in the Bos- ton City Museum. 2. ALLOPORA ROSEA. (Pallas.) Dana. A. pumila, ramosissima, Jlabellata, scepius secunda, ramis attenuatis. Corallum roseum, scepe verruciferum, caliculis minutis (vix J'"), aliis lattralibus brevissimis, aliis terminalibus, lamellis non exsertis. Small, much branched, flabellate, mostly secund; branches attenuate. Corallum rose-coloured, often verruciferous, calicles very minute (scarcely J of a line broad), some lateral and very short, others terminal, lamella not exsert. West Indies. This small and neat species seldom exceeds two inches in height. Mmlrepom rosea, Pallas, Zooph., p. 312. Oculina rosea, Lamarck, ii. 457, No. 9. , Ellis and Solander, p. 155. , Blainville, Man. d'Act., p. 381, pi. — , Esper, Pflanz., Fortsetz., i. 16, tab. 58, fig. 1, la. 36. , Ehrenberg, op. cit., Gen. xlviii. sp. 3. 3. ALLOPORA INFUNDIBULIFERA. (Lamarck.) Dana. A. ramosissima, subflaldlata ; ramulis minimis zic-zac flexuosis, s&pe coalitis. Corallum caliculis infimdibuliformibus, interne strialis; margine crenulato. 696 ZOOPHYTES. Corallum very ramose ; subflabellate, branchlets very small, flexuous in zigzag, often coalescent; calicles infundibuliform, internally striate; margin crenulate. East Indies 1 Lamarck. This description is from Lamarck. He states that the specimens resemble in shape the flabelliformis, but the cells are much larger and different in their character. Both the large and small branches are coalescent. Oculina infundibulifera, Lamarck, No. 7. , Blainville, Man., p. 380. 4. ALLOPORA GEMMASCENS. (Esper.) Dana. A. ramosa, flabellata, subcompressa, scepius secunda, ramulis extremis crassioribus, fere lineam latis. Corallum cellis £'" latis, prominulis, margine crenulatis ; tuberculis minutis asperatum. Ramose, flabellate, somewhat compressed and mostly secund ; outer branchlets quite stout, nearly a line thick. Corallum having the cells half aline broad, a little prominent; margin crenulate, surface rough with minute tubercles. East Indies. This species, as figured by Esper, is very distinct from the prece- ding in its stouter branchlets and much larger cells. (8. bella. A specimen obtained by J. P. Couthouy, in the Paumotu Archipelago, has nearly the characters of the gemmascens, in the size of the branches and calicles; yet as it differs in having the crenula- tions of the margin obsolete, it is separated as a distinct variety at least, if not a different species. The cells are nearly funnel-shape, about two-thirds of a line broad, and have a flaring aperture, with about twenty -four oblong cellules or pores arranged around the margin. The specimen is but one and a quarter inches high, and is sparingly branched and smooth, with the base nearly two lines wide, and the branches little less than a line at the apex. (Plate 60, fig. 6, natural size ; 6 a, enlarged.) Madrepora gemmascens, Esper, Pflanz. Fortsetz., i. 60, tab. 55 ; " Madrepora ramosa, subcompressa, albida, ramulis poriformibus ; stellis tubulosis, crenatis, laminibus obtusis, crassiusculis, superficie tuberculis exasperata.'^ The Oculina gemmascens, of Ehrenberg, (op. cit, G. xlviii., sp. 2), is the jlahclli- formis. SUPPLEMENT. 697 5. ALLOPORA OCULINA. (Ehrenberg.) A. pumila, ramosa, compressa, subftabellata, glabra, ramis dichotomis, 1^-2'" crassis, obtusis. Corallum cellis raris, sparsis, vix prominulis, distincte 5-9-radialis, s&pius radiis 7. Small, ramose, cornpfessed, subflabellate, smooth; branches dichoto- mous, li to 2 lines thick, obtuse. Corallum having the cells few, scattered, scarcely prominent, distinctly 5 to 9-rayed, mostly 7-rayed. Ehrenberg adds to this description the remark that it differs from the rosea in its fewer rays, the number in that species being nine to fifteen. Ehrenberg, op. cit., Fam. xvii. 6. ALLOPORA NORWEGICA. (Fabricius.) Dana. A. compressa, fere Jlabellata, ramulis brevibus; subcrassis. Corallum km, caliculis obsoletis, cellis minutis, orbiculatis out oblongis, lamettis vix minima exsertis, subcequis. Compressed and almost flabellate, branchlets very short and rather stout. Corallum smooth, calicles obsolete, cells minute, circular, or oblong, lamellae scarcely at all exsert, nearly equal. Norwegian seas. This small species has till lately been made identical with the Oculina virginea. Its cells are very much smaller, and not promi- nent, or scarcely at all so. The number of lamellae within the cell is stated at eighteen or more. It is referred to this genus with doubt. Pontoppidan, Norg. Naturl., i. 258, No. 10, tab. 14, fig. G., or English translation, London, 1754, p. 159. " Flat, with several pretty indented shoots, about a finger in length, and half as broad, but appears to have been much larger before it was detached from the body of the plant, which, when entire, must make a very beautiful appearance." Strom, Sondm., i. 144. Norske Vidensk. Selsk., iv. 56, No. 11, tab. 8, fig. 1-4. Madrcpora virginea, Miiller, Prod. Zool. Dan., 3041. Madrepora norvagica, O. Fabricius, Oken's Isis, 1 845, p. 52. 175 698 ZOOPHYTES. GENUS MYRIOZOUM.— DONATI. EHRENBERG. Affixes, ramoscK. Corolla infra nuda, supra cellis punctiformibus in- structa ; cellis simplicibus, non lamellatis, ex axe radiatis : animali- bus multitentaculatis, et operculigeris. Attached ramose. Coralla naked below, but above punctured with minute cells, not lamellate within, and radiating from the axis of the stem ; polyps multitentaculate, and having an operculum. The animals of the species here included were first figured by Donati, and afterwards with more accuracy by Cavolini. They are represented as having a funnel-shaped extremity and a circular oper- culum attached to one side. This peculiar form has much analogy to many Serpulas, and the species may belong to that group, although the branches present the compact structure and the aspect of a zoo- phyte. 1. MYRIOZOUM TRTJNCATUM. M. pumilum; dichotomum ; ramis teretibus, apice truncatis. Small; dichotomous; branches terete, truncate at apex. Mediterranean. Madrepore rameuz, &c., Marsilli, Phys., , Lamk., ii. 308, No. 5. 145, tab. 32, figs. 154-156. , Lamour., Exp., 47, pi. 23, fig. 1 to 8. Miriozoo, Donati, Hist. d. Mer. Adriat., 55, , Deslongchamps, Encyc., 546. tab. 7. , Oken's Zool., i. 63. Myriozoum, Phil. Trans., xlvii. 107, tab. Myriapora truncata, Blainv., Man., 427, 5 ; vol. x., Abridg., pi. 5. pi. 71, fig. 2. Millepora truncata, Linn., ed. xii., 1283. , Brit. Assoc., 1843, p. 151, "occurs — , Pallas, Zooph., 249. in the jEgean at a depth of 70 fathoms." , Cavolini, Pol. Mar., 59, tab. 3, figs. Myriozoum truncatum, Ehrenb., G. Ixxiv. 9-11. Tntncularia, Wiegmann (cited from Eh- -, Ellis and Solander, 141, tab. 23, renberg). figs. 1-8. Delle Chiaje, Anim. Nap., iii. 40, pi. 33, , Esper, i. 188, tab. Millep., 4. figs. 16, 17. SUPPLEMENT. 699 2. MYRIOZOUM GRACILIS. (Michelin.} Dana. M. albidum ; dichotome ramosum, ramis gracilibus, teretibus, suprh irre- gulariter inflatis, apice rotunda to-truncatis. Whitish ; dichotomously ramose, branches slender, terete, above irre- gularly inflated, round-truncate at apex. Mediterranean. Michelin. Michelin states that the branches are more slender than in the truncata (hardly a line thick in the figure), and have more rounded extremities, with the surface, where the cells are most numerous, inflated. Myriapora gracilis, Michelin ; Guerin, Mag. de Zoo!., 1842, Zooph., pi. 4. GENUS PUSTULOPORA.— BLAINVILLE. Affixes. Coralla calcarea, stratis seriatis instructa, cylindrica, autparce ramosa; cellis sparsis, prominulis out pustuliformibus, apertura wbi- culata. Attached. Coralla calcareous, consisting of a series of layers, cylin- drical or sparingly ramose ; cells scattered, a little prominent or pustuliform, aperture circular. This genus, as instituted by Blainville, appears to include species imperfectly allied. The P. madreporacea (Ceriopora madreporacea, of Goldfuss), appears to have some relation to the Myriozoum, and not to present the stratified structure above stated. Blainville, Man., 418. Goldfuss, Petref., tab. 10. Lnmarck, 2d ed., ii. 314. 700 ZOOPHYTES. GENUS COSCINOPORA.— GOLDFUSS. Affixes, cyathiformes aut incrustantes. Corolla cakarea, cellis tubufis fibriformibus composite/, ; cellis in quincuncem dispositis, immersis, infundibuliformibus ; inter stitiis angustis. Attached, cyathiform or incrusting. Coralla calcareous, consisting of fibriform tubes; cells immersed and arranged in quincunx order, funnel-shape ; interstices narrow. This genus, as established by Goldfuss, consisted, as Blainville states, of heterogeneous materials: it was consequently restricted by him to those species having the general characteristics of the Coscinopora infundibuliformis of Goldfuss, and placed with the Madrepore tribe. The above description is essentially that drawn up by Blainville. Goldfuss, Petref., pi. 9, figs, a, b, c, and pi. Blainville, Man., 386, pi. 60, fig. 5. 30, fig. 10. Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 458. GENUS RECEPTACULITES.— DEFRANCE. Coratta cakarea, cellis quadrangulatis,fere contiguis. Coralla calcareous, with quadrangular and nearly contiguous cells. The genus Receptaculites, as characterized by Blainville, includes a clypeiform species (R. Neptunii), concave below, and convex above, with a kind of mammilliform summit; cells on the upper surface round, on the under rhomboid or quadrilateral. His characters and figures were taken from Defrance's specimens and others collected from the old formations in the vicinity of Chimey, France. The quadrilateral form of the cells appears to be the most promi- nent characteristic, and in this respect it differs from all recent corals. Blainville, in view of its anomalous form and structure, suggests as a possibility, that it may be a fossil fruit, which, however, seems hardly probable. SUPPLEMENT. 701 Some of Goldfuss's Coscinoporse are represented with quadrangular cells, and belong to this group ; as his generic character, cells disposed in quincunx order, would exclude them from his genus. Defrance, Diet, des Sci. Nat., xlv., 5, and Blainville, Man., 572, pi. 68. GENCS TETRADIUM.— DANA. Coralla aggregata, tubulis cellisque quadrangulatis composita, septis parietibusve tenuissimis ; cettis lamellis angustis 4 stettatis. Coralla massive, consisting of 4-sided tubes, and cells with very thin septa or parietes ; cells stellate, with 4 narrow lamellae. This genus is near Receptaculites, but differs in having very thin parietes, and four distinct rays within the cells, one to each side. The specimen answering to the description, is a fossil of uncertain locality, in the collections of Yale College, New Haven. The cells are about half a line in breadth. The name, from the Greek four, alludes to the quadrate structure. GENUS THEONEA.— -LAMOUROUX. Pumilcs. Coralla calcarea, lobulato-glomerata, et lacunosa, lobulis par- vulis, et apice celliferis, inter stitiis tenuissimis kvibus, nudis; cettis tubulatis, lamellis nullis. Quite small. Coralla calcareous, lobulato-glomerate and lacunose ; cells opening at the summits of the prominences, tubular without larnellee ; interstices very thin, naked, and smooth. The texture of the coralla is delicate tubular, and these tubes open at the summits of the small lobules or prominences. The absence of all traces of lamellae or transverse septa within the cells, removes the species from the Actinaria. 176 702 ZOOPHYTES. Theonca, Lamour., Exp. Meth., 82, pi. 80, , Blainville, Man., 408, pi. 67, fig. 2. figs. 17, 18. , Lamarck, 2d ed., ii. 318. , Defrance, Diet, des Sci. Nat., liii. 470. Blumenbachium, Koninck. GENUS LIMARIA. — STEININGER. Pumilce, ramosce. Cor alia solida, cellis apertura subtriangulatis ; caliculis nullis. Small, ramose; coralla quite solid, cells with a subtriangular aperture; calicles none. This genus may pertain to the Bryozoa group ; but nothing certain with regard to its relations can be gathered from its very singular structure. Limaria, Steininger, Mem. S. G. F., i. GENUS STROMATOPORA.— GOLDFUSS. Aggregate. Coralla convexa, concentrice leviter rugata, cellis porifor- mibus minutissimis in sukos concentricos dispositis. Massive. Coralla convex, concentrically faint rugate, cells pore-like, very minute, situated in the concentric depressions. This genus was instituted by Goldfuss. Blainville, after an exami- nation of the specimen figured by this author, expressed his doubts as to its being a true coral. Goldfuss, Petref., tab. 8, fig. 5. Blainville, Man., 413, pi. 70, fig. 1. GENUS CHAUNOPORA.— PHILLIPS. Aggregate. Corolla stratos concentricos aut planiusculos compositis, SUPPLEMENT. 703 X tubulis parvulis vermiformibus jlexuosis, et aliis grandioribus subpar- attelis non lamelliferis (!) perforate. Massive. Coralla consisting of concentric or nearly flat beds, perfo- rated by small vermiform flexuous tubules, and others larger, nearly parallel, and non-larnelliferous (?). This genus was made by Phillips for the Coscinopora placenta, as figured by Lonsdale, which this author describes as consisting of thin beds, perforated by vermiform cavities bounded each by a white circle. The name is from xaijms, loose, alluding to its texture. Caunopora, Phillips, Pateoz. foss., 18, pi. Coscinop. placenta, Lonsdale, Geol. Trans., 10, fig. 29. New Ser., v., pi. 58, figs. 5 a, b, c, d. GENUS DISTICHOPORA. Ramosce, pumilcs, flabellatce. Coralla robusta, ramis scepe paulo com- pressis sulco cellulifero disticho. Ramose, quite small ; branched in a plane. Coralla firm ; branches often a little compressed, and with a cellular furrow on two opposite sides extending over the extremity. These delicate species grow to a height of only an inch or two. The furrow along the edges of the branches, contains a medial series of cellules, somewhat irregular, and another cellular line either side, as is shown in figure 3 a, plate 60. Nothing is known with regard to the animals. The species were separated from the MilleporaB by Lamarck. 1. DISTICHOPORA VIOLACEA. (Lamarck.) D. violacea, apice lutescens ; 2-2 £" alta ; pdrce ramosa ; ramis paulo compressis, dichotomis, 1-1 £"' latis. Violet, with the tips a little yellowish ; 2 to 2^ inches high, and ramose; branches somewhat compressed, dichotomous, 1 to 1£ lines broad. 704 ZOOPHYTES. 1 * Plate 60, fig. 3 ; corallum, natural size; 3 a, extremity of a branch, magnified. East Indies and Pacific. — Paumotu Archipelago. Exp. Exp. The specimens of this and the following species were collected by J. P. Couthouy. Millepora violacea, Pallas, Zooph., 258. , Schweig., Beob., tab. 6, fig. 61. , Gmel. Linn., 3785. Distichopora violacea, Lamk., ii. 305. , Ellis and Solander, 140, lab. 26, , Schweig., Handb., 413. figs. 3, 4. , Lamour., Exp., 46, pi. 26, figs. 3, 4. , Oken, Zool., i., 63. , Blainv., Man., 416, pi. 55, fig. 2. 2. DISTICHOPORA GRACILIS. (Dana.} D. rubida; gracittor, ramulosa; ramulis tripk angustior (apice £'"). Reddish; more slender than the violacea, ramulous; branchlets one- third as broad, at summit about a third of a line. Plate 60, fig. 4, corallum, natural size ; fig. 5, a variety ? natural size; 5 a, 5 b, views, enlarged. Paumotu Archipelago. Exp. Exp. The delicate corallum is about an inch high. NOTE. — Michelin has instituted the genus LAMINOPORA, for a recent species, which is near the Distichoporoe in structure, though somewhat different in habit. His figure re- presents a small branch, compressed, and nearly in a plane, with the surface covered with contorted laminate branchlets, one to three lines in breadth; and in the enlarged view the edges of these plates have two series of pores. Michelin describes the specimen as having pores on the lateral surface, but adds that they become filled and obliterated by age, so that they are only distinguishable along the margin. The specimen was three inches high, and the branches one and a half to nearly three lines wide. It approaches, a little, in habit, the Apsendesia of Lamouroux. No locality is given. Laminopora contorta, Michelin, Guer. Mag. de Zool., 1842, pi. 3. GENUS ORBULITES.— LAMARCK. Liber OR; orbiculatc disc/formes, supra infrnque planiusculce, super f tie utraque leviter porulosa. S U P P I- E M E N T. 705 % Free; disk-shape, circular, nearly flat above and below; both sur- faces minutely porulose. This genus was established by Lamarck, and originally named Orbitolites. It contains, beside some fossils, a single recent Mediter- ranean species (O. marginalis], which is about a line in diameter. Blainville doubts its being a zoophyte, arid suggests that it may be an internal piece from some animal. He adds that it has no proper cells, and enlarges by growth at the margin. Lamarck, ii. 302. Blainville, Man. d'Actinologie, 411. GENUS MARGINOPORA.— QUOY & GAYMARD. Liberce; orbiculate disciformes. Cor alia supra infraque planiuscula et concentrice striatula ; margine subtiliter punctata ; interne cellulosa. Free; very thin disk-shape, circular. Coralla nearly plane above and below, and concentrically faint striate; margin minutely punctate; internal texture concentrically cellular. These small disks are found unattached, and are of common occur- rence about the reefs of the Pacific. The punctations of the margin (pi. 60, fig. 9 a) do not appear to be punctures, except in worn speci- mens, and the remark of Blainville with regard to the nature of the Or- bulites, applies here with equal force. The pores of the interior, which appear as shown in figure 9 b, pi. 60, on polishing down the surface, are not enclosed cellules, as in species of Bryozoa. We distinguish, under a magnifier, concentric "calcareous lines, about a tenth of a line apart, which are connected by minute points or columns, in several ranges, above one another; and the cellules are merely the intervals thus left. A cross section in the line of a radius, shows nearly the same struc- ture as a horizontal section. It is, therefore, altogether probable that each disk belongs to a single animal, and is an internal formation, in- creasing, as in the Orbulites, by the margin. This genus was established by Quoy and Gaymard, and named in allusion to the character of the margin. They report to it a single 177 706 ZOOPHYTES. species, the Marginop&ra vertebralis, which is a simple, delicate disk, about three-fourths of an inch in diameter, and about two-thirds of a line thick. (Plate 60, fig. 8.) A singular variety (plicata] is represented in figure 9 a, b, of the same plate, which may possibly be only a more advanced state of Quoy and Gaymard's species, though very distinct in appearance. Instead of a simple flat disk, it is in part double, and the two portions are in folds, and coalesce at intervals. Many specimens of both these varieties are contained in the Expedition collections. — , Bliiinv., Man. d'Actinologie, 41, o» ^ v APPENDIX. 725 Ridge (Collis). An elevation between two cells, including, along with the septum, the lamellae which cover it. Trench (Fossa). A meandering cell in the Meandrine corals. Gyrus. A trench together with the sides enclosing it ; or, in massive species, the space between the middle of two ridges. Oririme. A small pore in the surface of the coralla of the Fungidse, situated beneath the mouth of a polyp, and forming the centre from which the lamella radiate. Dissepiments. Restricted to the septa which unite two lamellae of a cell to one another by their lateral surfaces. WORKS REFERRED TO IN THIS TREATISE. AMIR. C.ESALPINI : Tie Plantis, Libri xvi. ; Florence, 1583, 1 vol. 4to. FERRANTE IMPERATO : Historia naturale ; Naples, 1599 ; Venice, 1672, 1 vol. fol., with figures. C. CLUSIUS : Exoticorum Libri x., 1 vol. fol. ; Anvers, 1605. : Recherches et Observations d'histoire naturelle touchant le corail, la pierre etoilee; Paris, 1670, 1 vol. 12mo., with figures; Amsterdam, 1674, 1 vol. 12mo. pp. 328, with figures. PACL BOCCONE : Museo di fisica et di esperienze vari ito e decorate di osservazioni naturali, &c. ; Venice, 1697, 1 vol. 4to., with 18 plates. JOHN RAY : Historia Plantarum generalis, &c. ; London, 1686—1704, 1 vol. fol. E. LLYWD: Lithophylacii Britannici Iconographia ; London, 1699, 8vo. ; Oxford, 1760, 8vo. pp. 91, with 25 plates. J. P. TOURKEFORT : Institutiones Rei Herbaria? ; Paris, 1700, 3 vols. 4to., with figures. : Memoire sur les plantes qui naissent dans le fond de la mer., Hist, de 1'Acad. Roy. des Sci., i., year 1700, p. 17. O. E. RUMPIUUS : Amboinsch Rariteit-kamcr ; Amsterdam, 1741, fol. : Herbarium Amboinense, Dutch and Latin, Amsterdam, 1741—55, 7 vols. fol. HAXS SLOAJJE : A Voyage to the islands of Madera, Barbados, Nieves, St. Christo- pher's, and Jamaica, with the Natural History of the last of those islands, &c. ; Lou 1707-1725, 2 vols. fol., with 274 indifferent plates (" mccliocres ou mauvaises." Cuv.) : Description of a curious sea-plant, Phil. Trans. Abridg., i.x. 198. L. F. COMTE DE MARSILLI : Histoire physique de la mer ; Amsterdam, 1725, 1 vol. fol., 173 pp., 40 plates and several maps. R. A. F. DE REAUMUR: Observations sur la formation du Corail et des autres produc- tions appellees Plantes pierreuses; Memoires de 1'Acad. Roy. des Sci., an 1727. .ZV/v.v, 1729, 269-281. MARC CATESBY : The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands; 182 726 ZOOPHYTES. London, 1731, 1743, 1 vol. fol., with 220 coloured plates; Nuremberg, in German, 1751. ALBERT SEBA : Locupletissimi rerum naturalium Thesauri descriptio ; Amsterdam, 1734—1765, 4 vols. fol., with numerous plates. C. LINNAEUS : Systema Naturae ; different editions, from 1735 to 1766. The 12th, which is usually cited, in 1766. : Musamm Adolphi Frederic! regis; Stockholm, 1754, 1 vol. fol., with 33 plates. : Amfcnitates Academics ; Stockholm, 10 vols. 8vo., 1749 to 1790. THOMAS SHAW : Travels and Observations relating to several parts of Barbary and the Levant; Oxford, 1738-46, 1 vol. fol., with figures ; La Haye, in French, 1743, 2 vols. 4to. BERNARD DE JUSSIEC : Examen de quelques productions marines qui ont e!e mises au nombre des plantes, et qui sont 1'ouvrage d'une sorte d'insecte de mer ; Memoires de I'Acad. Roy. des fcsci. ; Paris, 1742, pp. 290 to 302, with figures of the animals of the Alcyonium digitatum, Tubularia indivisa, and some other species. An important memoir, establishing the animal nature of zoophytes. HENRY BAKER: A Natural History of the Polype; London, 1743, 8vo. ; Paris, in French, 1744, 8vo. ABRAHAM TREMBLEY : Memoires pour servir a PHistoire d'un genre de Polypes d'eau douce; Leyden, 1744, 1 vol. 4to., with figures. NICOLAS GUALTIERI : Index Testarum Conchyliorum, qua: in ejusdcm Museo adser- vantur, et methodice distributa exhibentur tabulis ex. ; Florence, 1744, 1 vol. fol. Rev. GRIFFITH HUGHES : Natural History of Barbadoes ; London, 1750, 1 vol. fol., with figures. VITALIANO DONATI: Saggio della storia naturale marina dclPAdriatico; Venice, 1750, 1 vol. 4to., with figures ; La Haye, in French, 1758, 4to., pp. 73 ; Halle, in German, 1753. The animals of the Myriozoum, and of a species of Caryophyllia, were first observed and figured by this author. : Discoveries on Coral, Phil. Trans., xlvii., p. 95 ; and Abridg., x., p. 154, with figures on plates 4 and 5. G. F. MYLIUS : Beschreibung einer neuen Gronlandischen Thierpflanze ; Hanover, 1753, 1 vol., in large 4to., with figures ; London, in English, 1754. JOHN ELLIS : Essay towards a Natural History of Corallines ; London, 1754, 1 vol., 4to., with figures ; La Haye, in French, 1756 ; Nuremberg, in German, 1767. : Various memoirs in the Philosophical Transactions, between the years 1753 and 1776, vols. xlviii. to Ixvi. ; and Abridg., vols. x., xi., xii. E. PONTOPPIDAJV- : Norges Naturlige Historic; Copenhagen, 1752, 1753, 2 vols. 4to. ; London, 1754. WM. BORLASE : The Natural History of Cornwall ; Oxford, 1758, 1 vol. fol., with figures. PIERRE-SIMON PALLAS: Elenchus Zoophytorum, sistens generum adumhrationes, &c., cum selectis auctorum synonymis ; La Haye, 1766, 1 vol., 8vo. ; Nuremberg, in Ger- man, with notes by Wilkens, 1787, 4to. : Spicilegia Zoologica; Berlin, 1767 to 1780, 4to. JOB BASTEH : Observationes de Corallinis iisque insidentibus polypis aliisque animal- culis marinis; Phil. Trans., vol. xli., and Abridg., vol. xi. APPENDIX. 707 JOB BASTER : Opuscula subseciva, observationes misccllaneas de animalculis et plantis quibuadam marinis eorumque ovariis et scminibus continentia ; Harlem, 1759 to 1765, 1 vol. 4to., with figures. PETER BOUDAKHT: Lyst. der Plantdieren beschreiven door der Herr Pallas mil An- merkungcn ; Utrecht, 1768, 1 vol. 8vo. G. W. KNORR and J. E. E. WALCH : Recueil des rnonutnens des catastrophes que le globe terrestre a essuyces, &c., Nuremberg, 1775, 1778, 4 vols. fol., with figures. P. FOHSKAL : Descriptiones Animalium, Avium, Arnphibiorum, Piscium, Insectorum, Vermium qua? in Itinere Oriental! observavit : Post mortem Auctoris edidit Karsten Nie- buhr; Copenhagen, 1775, 1 vol. 4to. ; and Icones rerum naturalium, &c., Copenhagen, 1776, 1 vol. 4to. O. F. MULLER : Zoologire Danicte Prodromus, seu Animalium Danice et Norwegiae indigenarum characteres ; Copenhagen, 1776, 1 vol. 8vo. : Zoologia Danica, seu Animalium Danise et Norwegian rariorum ac minus notorum descriptiones et historia, etc. ; Copenhagen, 1788, 1789, 1 vol. folio, with figures. G. CAVOLINI : Memorie per servire alia Storia de' Polipi marini. Naples, 1785, 2 vols. 4to., with figures; Nuremberg, in German, 1813. ELLIS AND SOLANDER : The Natural History of many curious and uncommon Zoo- phytes, collected, &c., by the late John Ellis, systematically arranged and described by Daniel Solander. London, 1786, 1 vol. 4to., with 63 plates. J. F. GMELIX : Linnaji Systcma Naturas, ed. xiii., aucta, reformata. Leipsic, 1788, 7 vols. 8vo. GEORGE SHAW: Naturalist's Miscellany; London, 1789-1800, 18 vols. 8vo., with numerous inditferent plates. E. J. C. ESTER : Die Pflanzenthiere in Abbildungen nach der Natur mit Farben erleuchtet nebst Beschreibungen, von E. J. C. Esper; Nuremberg, 1791-1797, 3 vols. 4to., with a supplement (Fortsetzungen) in two parts ; contains about 400 plates. ABATE GIUSEPPE OLIVI : Zoologia Adriatica, ossia catalogo ragionato degli animali del Golfo Adriatico, &c. ; Bussano, 1792, 1 vol. 4to., with figures. G. CUVIER : Tableau Elementaire de 1'Histoire Naturelle des Animaux ; Paris, 1798, ] vol. 8vo., with figures. : Regne Animal; Paris, 1817, 4 vols. 8vo., with figures; 2d ed. in 5 vols., 1929-1830; a new illustrated edition, commenced in 1837, the Zoophytes, by Milne Edwards. J. B. DE M. LAMARCK: Systeme des Animaux sans vertebres; Paris, 1801, 1 vol. -nci. : Extrait du cours dc Zoologie du Museum d'Histoire Naturelle sur les Animaux srms vertebres; Paris, 1812, 1 vol. 8vo. : Ilistoire naturcllc des animaux sans vertebres; Paris, 1815-1822, 7 vols. 8vo., 2d ed., with the Zoophytes revised by Milne Edwards, 1836.* Loris Bosc : Histoire Naturelle des Vers; Paris, 1802, 3 vols. 18mo., with figures, forming part of Deterville's Buffbn. PERON AND LESUEUR : Voyage de decouvertes aux terres Australes, pendant los annees 1800—1804; Paris, 1807—1816, 2 vols. 4to., with a volume of plates and figures. * The edition referred to in the course of this work is the 2d, by Milne Edwards. 728 ZOOPHYTES. C. A. LESUEUR : Description do plusieurs animaux appartenant aux Polypicrs lamel- liferes de M. le Chev. de Lamarck, Mem. du Museum, vol. vi., pp. 271-297. : On several species of the genus Actinia (including some Zoanthidoe and coral Zoophytes), Jour, of Acad. Nat. Sci. of Philadelphia, vol. i. pp. 149-154, and 169-189. J. C. SAVIONV : Zoologie d'Egypte; Paris, 1809, fol., with several plates. G. FISCHER : Oryctographie du Gouvernement de Moscou ; Moscoiv, 1810, 1811, 1 vol. 4to., with plates; and 1830-37, in fol., with 64 plates. J. PARKINSON: Organic Remains of a former World ; London, 1804-1811, 3 vols. in 4to., with plates. A. BERTOLONI: Amsenitates Italicac ; Bononia, 1819, 4to., pp. 472, 6 plates. A previous work appeared in 1810, entitled: Rariorum Italia; plantarum decas tertia ; accedit specimen Zoophytorum Portus Lunns; Pisa, 1810, 1 vol. 8vo. W. E. LEACH : Zoological Miscellany ; Ismdon, 1815-1817, 3 vols. 8vo., with plates. J. V. LAMOUROUX : Histoire des Polypiers flexibles ; Paris, 1816, 1 vol. 8vo., with many plates. This work was preceded by a memoir, Sur la Classification des polypiers coralligfenes non entierement pierreux ; read before the Institute in 1810, and published in the Bulletin of the Soc. Philomat., Dec. 1812. : Exposition Methodique de genres de polypiers, with the plates of Ellis and Solan- der, and twenty-one others additional, eighty-four in all; Paris, 1821, 1 vol. 4to., pp. 115. : with BORY DE SAINT VINCENT and DESLONGCHAMPS : Encyclopedic Methodique, Histoire Naturelle des Zoophytes ou Animaux Rayonnees; Paris, 1824, 4to., pp. 810. . OKEN : Lehrbuch der Zoologie ; Jena, 1815, 2 vols. 8vo., with plates. DEFRANCE: various articles in the Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles, from its origin in 1815 to 1830. A. F. SCIIWEIGGER: Beobachtungen auf naturhistorischen Rcisen,o/- Anatomisch-Phy- siologische Untersuchungen iiber Corallen ; Berlin, 1819, 1 vol. 4to., pp. 130, with 8 plates and several tables. : Handbuch der Naturgeschichte der Skelettlosen ungegliederten Thiere ; Leip- zic, 1820, 8vo., pp. 776. SAMUEL STUTCHBURY: On the mode of growth of young Corals of the genus Fungia. Linn. Trans., 1830, vol. xvi. p. 493, with plate 32. S. DELLE CHIAJE : Memorie sulla storia e notomia degli animali senza vertebre del regno di Napoli ; Napoli, 1825-29, 4 vols. in 4to., with 60 fol. plates; Naples, 1823- 25, 2 vols. 4to., with figs. EtiD. DESLONGCHAMPS : see above, Lamouroux, Encyclopedic Methodique. A. Risso: Histoire Naturelle de 1'Europe Meridionale ; Paris, 1826, 5 vols. in 8vo., with plates. ESCIISCHOLTZ : On some species of Fungiac, in Oken's Isis, for 1825, with a plate. F. S. LEUCKART: A memoir on the zoophytes of the voyage of Riippel, 4to., with figures, 1826. A. DE CHAMISSO, and C. G. EYSENIIARDT : De quibusdam Animalibus ex classe ver- mium ; Mem. Acad. Leop. Cur. Nat., vol. x. part 2. J. FLEMING: History of British Animals; Edinburgh, 1828, 1 vol. 8vo. R. P. LESSON: Zoologie de I'expedition de la Coquille; Paris, 1828-1831, 1 vol. 4to., with plates in folio. : Illustrations de Zoologie; Paris, 1832, etc., 8vo. APPENDIX. 709 II. M. D. DE BLAINVILLE : Zoophytes, in the Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles, vol. xvii., with numerous plates. — : Manuel d'Actinologie ou de Zoophytologie ; Paris, 1830-1834, 1 vol. 8vo., pp. 644, with a volume of 100 plates in 8vo. EHRENBERG : Beit rage zur Kenntniss der Corallenthiere des rothen Meeres; Berlin, Abhandlungen der koniglichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, for 1832 (issued, 1834), pp. 225-438. QUOY AND GAYSIARD : Voyage de decouvertes de L'Astrolabe, vol. iv., on Zoophytes ; Paris, 1833, 8vo., pp. 390, with folio plates. MILNE EDWARDS : Various Memoirs in the Annales des Sciences Naturelles ; Notes and Additions to the second edition of Lamarck's Systeme des Animaux sans Vertehres, Paris, 1836 ; Figures and descriptions in an illustrated edition of Cuvier's Regne Animal, Paris, 1837. GOLDFUSS : Petrefaktenkunde, folio, commenced in 1826. C. F. F. KRAUSS : Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Corallineen und Zoophyten der Siidsee ; Stuttgart, 1837, 4to., pp. 37, with a plate. GEORGE JOHNSTON : A History of the British Zoophytes ; Edinburgh and London, 1838, 1 vol. 8vo., 342 pp., with 44 plates. A second edition has been announced as in course of preparation. F. S. LEUOKART : De Zoophytis Coralliis et speciatim de Genere Fungia observationes Zoologicoc ; Friburg, 4to., pp. 60, with 4 plates. HARDOI'IN MICHELIN : Iconographie Zoophytologique, Description par localites et ter- rains des Polypiers fossiles de France et pays environnants ; Paris, 1843, 4to., with numerous plates. (Not yet complete.) 183 INDEX. The names of the Genera, adopted in this work, are here printed in SMALL CAPITALS, in order to dis. tinguish the names of received species from the synonyms ; the latter form a separate paragraph from the former. To guide in the pronunciation, the accented syllable is indicated wherever it might appear doubtful. ACERVULARIA, 359, 360 Acrop'ora cespitosa, 380 Actinantha florida, 606 Actinaria, general characters of, 45, 46 geographical distribution, 102 ACTINARIA, 121 ACTINECTA, 124 ACTINERIA, 125 Actinia, structure of, 30 analogies with a flower, 88 ACTIMA, 124, 125; achates, 142; arte- misia, 149; clavigera, 135; clematis, 130; cruentata, 138; curta, 148; de corata, 139; diadema, 133; flagillife- ra, 126; florida, 131 ; fuegiensis, 145; gemma, 147; graminea, 132; impa- tiens, 135; lineolata, 137; mollis, 141; monilifera, 136 ; nymphaca, 146 ; pa- paver, 143; paumotensis, 141; pluvia, 143; pretiosa, 137; primula, 134; puslulata, 128; reticulata, 144; rho- dora, 148; rubus, 147; tabella, 132; veratra, 129 Actinia sociata, 421 ACTIN'ID^E, 122 ACTINOUSNDBUH, 124 Actinoidea, general structure of, 30 general subdivisions of, 45 Adamsia, 126 AIJARICIA, 333 ; agaricites, 342 ; cristata, 343 ; cucullata, 339 ; fragilis, 341 ; gibbosa, 341 ; levicollis, 338 ; planu- lata, 338 ; purpurea, 340; rugosa, 336; speciosa, 337 ; undata, 336 Agaricia ampliata, 273, 324; aspera, 282; boletiformis, 328 ; crispa, 323 ; ele- phantotus, 324 ; explanata, 322 ; ex- planulata, 322 ; lima, 505 ; papillosa, 506 Alcyonaria, structure of, 45, 50, 700 secretion of corallum, 53 ALCYONARIA, 586 Alcyonella Savignii, 513 Alcyonidia elegans, 624 ALCYONIUM, 611 ; aurantiacum, 618 ; bra- chycladum, 617; confertum, 621; cy- donium, 614 ; digitatum, 613; elegans, 624; flabellum, 619; flavum, 620; flexile, 619; latum, 623; glaucum, 623; murale, 622; palmatum, 615; pauciflorum, 616; polydactylum, 617; pultno, 624; rigidum, 622 ; stellalum, 615 ; spherophora, 616 ; trichanthi- num, 620 ; viride, 618 Alcyonium agaricum,589; amicorum, 608, 621; arboreum,625,644; asbestinum, 643; botryoides, 626 ; bulbosum, 624; coriaceum, 625; exos, 614, 615; flori- dum, 626 ; imbricattim, 608 ; incrus- tans, 624 ; lobatum, 614; mammillo- sum, 424 ; massa, 615 ; ocellatum, 426 ; ramasum, 608 ; rubiforme, 625 ; rubrum, 610, 614; spongiosum, 616; terminale,607 ; tuberculosum,427,616 ALLOp'oRA,693 ; flabelliformis, 694; gem- masccns, 696 ; infundibulifera, 695 ; norwegica, 697 ; oculina, 697; rosea, 695 732 INDEX. Alveolites, 536 ALVEOP'ORA, 511 ; dedalea, 512 ; fenes- trata, 514; retepora, 512; rubra, 513; spongiosa, 513 Alveop'ora viridis, 514, 516 ALVEOPORIJSLE, 510 AMMOTHEA, 607 ; thyrsoides, 607 ; vires- cens, 608 Ammothea amicorum, 608; imbricata,608; ramosa, 608 ; virescens, 617 AMPLEXUS, 357 ANTENNULARIA, 686 ; cyathifera, 687 ANTHEA, 124 ANTHKLIA, 602; Desjardiana, 603; glauca, 602 ; purpurascens, 603 ; strumosa, 602 Anthelia rubra, 610, 614 Anthoph'ora cucullata, 516 ANTHOPHYLLUM, 398 ; astreatum, 400 ; cespitosum, 401 ; clavus, 403; cuspi- datum, 402 ; fasciculatum, 399 ; hys- trix, 401 ; musicale, 399 Anthophyllutn anthophyllites, 383; calycu- lare, 406 ; cespitosum, 380 ; cyathus, 371 ; Esperi, 401 ; fasciculare, 402; saxeum, 383 ; spherula, 403 Anthozoa, 15 ANTIPATHACEA, 574 AXTIP'ATHES, 575 ; alopecuroides, 584 ; anguina, 576 ; arborea, 584 ; Boscii, 584 ; corticata, 583 ; cupressus, 581 ; ericoides, 580 ; eupteridea, 577 ; fla- bellum, 579 ; foeniculum, 582 ; lace- rata, 583; larix, 577; mimosella, 580; myriophylla, 578 ; pectinata, 578 ; pen- nacea, 582 ; pinnatifida, 581 ; pyra- midata, 583 ; reticulata, 579 ; scopa- ria,582; spiralis,576; subpinnata,579 Antip'athesclathrata,580; compressa, 585; dichotorna, 585 ; glaberrima, 585 ; li- gulata, 580 ; radians, 580 ; ulex, 581 ANTIPATH'IDvE, 574 APSENDESIA, 573 ARACHNOPIIYLLUM, 360 ASTR.EA, 206 (ORBICKLLJB) annularis, 214 ; argus, 207; crispata, 216; coronata, 211; curta, 209 ; excelsa, 212 ; glaucopis, 208 ; hyades, 212 ; microphthalma, 217; ocellina,218; orion,720; patula, 209; pleiades, 213 ; radiata, 206 ; ro- tulosa, 210; stelligera, 216; stellulata, 215 — (SIDERINA) galaxea, 218 (FISSICELL.E) abdita, 247 ; ananas, 222 ; cerium, 245 ; deformis, 235 ; denticulata, 234 ; dipsacea, 225 ; echi- nata, 229 ; eximia, 242 ; favistella, 241 ; favulus, 245 ; filicosa, 232 ; flexuosa, 227 ; fragilis, 230 ; fusco- viridis, 228 ; intersepta, 246 ; mag- nifica, 231 ; melicerum, 244; pallida, 224; pandanus, 222; parvistella, 244; pectinata, 235 ; pentagona, 241 ; pe- trosa, 238 ; porcata, 226 ; pulchra, 240; purpurea, 239; puteolina, 223 ; reticularis, 237; rigida, 237; robusta, 248 ; sinuosa, 243 ; spcciosa, 220 ; • tenella, 231 ; tcsserifera, 248 ; uva, 221; varia, 236 ; versipora, 233 ; vi- rens, 228 (APPENDIX) cornplanata, 249 ; cy- clastra, 251; favosa, 252; halicora, 250 ; heliopora, 250 ; Hemprichii, 250 Astrsea ananas, 221, 222 ; astroites, 220; calycularis, 406, 569 ; detrita, 239 ; diffluens, 332 ; halicora, 232 ; mean- drina, 347; myriophthalma, 415; puli- fera, 409; planulata, 570; pulvinaria, 415; punctifera, 416; siderea, 332; viridis, 406 ASTR/EACEA, 121 ASTRjE'ID^E, 154 ASTR.EOP'ORA, 414; fungifbrmis, 416; pul- vinaria, 415 ; punctifera, 416 ; stellu- lata, 416 Astranopora myriophthalma, 415 ASTHOITIS, 405, 722 ; calicularis, 406 ; viridis, 406 AULOPOR*, 630; tennis, 631 RKBKYCE, 677 ; mollis, 677 Illumenbachium, 702 Bonnet de Neptune, 312 INDEX. 733 Branching, by furcation, 71 , by lateral shoots, 71 BRIA'REUM, 642 ; arboreum, 644 ; gorgo- nideum, 645 ; suberosum, 645 Bryozoa, 15, 108 Budding, 14,24,57,709 , in Astrfca, 75 , in Aulopora, 66 •, in Caryophyllia, 69 , in Cyathophyllidas, 80 , in Dcndrophyllia, 69 , in Echinopora, 75 , in Fungido?, 77 , in Gemmipora, 67 , in Madrepora, 69 , in Meandrina, 77 , in Oculina, 67 , in Zoantha, 66 , connexion with modes of growth, 66 Calamites, 637 Calamophyllia, 368 Calamop'ora, 536 CALOPHYLLUM, 356 CAMPANULARIA, 689 CAMl'ANULAR'IDyE, 688 CANI.MA, 358 CAP'NEA, 124 CARYOPHYLLACEA, 350 CAHYOPHYL'LIA, 378 ; anthophyllum, 383 ; arbuscula, 381 ; cespitosa, 379; con- ferta, 380 ; cornigera, 382 ; flexuosa, 381 — , dilatata, 384; solitaria, 383 ; pocil- lum, 384 Caryophyllia angulosa, 164, 168, 177; as- treata,400; aurantiaca, 388 ; calycu- laris, 406 ; carduus, 176 ; cespitosa, 380; compressa, 161, 162; corym- bosa, 178; cristata, 180; cyathus, 371,372; dianthus, 375 ; fasciculata, 400; fastigiiita, 164, 165, 175,720; glabrescens, 163; lacera, 176; musi- cal is, 399 ; ramca, 386 ; sinuosa, 180 ; Smithii, 372 CARYOPHYL'LlDyE, 364 CATEMI-'ORA, 538 184 CAULASTR^EA, 197 ; distorta, 199; furcata, 198; undulata, 199 Caunop'ora, 702 Cavolinia mammillosa, 425 ; rosea, 424 CERIOP'ORA, 571 Ceriop'ora, 536 CHACNOP'ORA, 702 Chffitetes, 536 Chrysa'ora, 571 Cirrhip'ates Sieboldi, 577 ; spiralis, 576 Clado'cora anthophyllum, 383 ; calicularis, 406 ; candelabrum, 382 ; cespitosa, 380 ; flexuosa, 381 ; levigata, 380 Classification of Zoophytes, 105 Clavularia, 629 ; violacea, 603, 629 ; viri- dis, 603, 629 CLISIOPHYLLUM, 361 Coalescence of branches, 65 COLUMNARIA, 362 CONSTELLARIA, 537 CORALLIUM, 640 ; nobile, 640 ; secundum, 641 Corallium rubrum, 640 Corallum, secretion of, 15, 50 , definition of, 15 , constitution of, 56, 712 , specific gravity of, 713 , structure of, 50, 710 Cordyloph'ora, 691 CORNULARIA, 627 ; rugosa, 628 Cornularia cornucopia?, 628 ; floridea, 606 ; subviridis, 606 ; thalassianthoidea, 601 CORNULAR'ID^:, 627 Corticif'era aggregata, 427 ; flava, 426 ; glareola, 426 CoRYDENDRIUM, 691 COR'YNA, 691 ; capillifera, 692 COSCINOP'ORA, 700 Cribrina, 126 CTENOPHYLLIA, 169; pachyphylla, 172; pectinata, 170 ; profunda, 172 ; quad- rata, 171 CCLICIA, 376 ; stellata, 377 ; tenella, 377; truncata, 378 Curalium, 15 CYATHI'NA, 369; cyathus, 370; flexuosa, 371 ; pezita, 371 ; Smithii, 371 ; tur- binata, 372 734 INDEX. Cyathoph'ora, 357 CYATHOPHYL'LID^E, 352 CYATHOPHYLLUM, 355 CYCLOH'TES, 305 Cyclolithas, 306 Cydo'nium Mulleri, 614 , 360 Death of Zoophytes, 63 Dendrogyra caudex, 266 ; cylindrus, 265 DEXDROFHYLLIA, 384 ; aurantiaca, 388 ; coccinea, 388; diaphana, 389; mi- crantha, 386 ; nigrescens, 387 ; ra- mea, 386 ; rubeola, 389 ; scabrosa, 390 Dendrophyllia cornigera, 383 Dentip'oraanastomozans, 395 ; virginea,395 DESMOPHYLLUM, 375 ; dianthus, 375 ; stel- laria, 376 Dimorphsea, 15 Diploctenium, 158 Dipsastreea deformis, 236 ; denticulata, 235; dipsacea, 225 ; versipora, 234 Discoso'ma, 126 DISTICHOP'ORA, 703; gracilis, 704; vio- lacea, 703 Dysmorphosa, 691 Echinastrsca gemmacea, 282 ; ringens, 280 ; rosularia, 279 ECHINOP'ORA, 277 ; aspera, 281 ; horrida, 282 ; reflexa, 280 ; ringens, 279 ; ro- sularia, 279 ; undulata, 278 ECMESUS, 369 Ectacmcca, 126 EDWARDSIA, 124 EntacmcGa, 126 Epicla'dia, 125 EPICYS'TIS, 124 ERRI'NA, 570 ; aspera, 571 EUDENDRIUM, 691 Eunice'a antipathes, 661 ; apiculata, 661 ; arbuscula, 659 ; Bertolonii, 663 ; cla- varia, 671 ; furcata, 669 ; granulata, 660; limiformis, 672 ; mammosa,G72; microthela, 671 ; mollis, 672 ; muri- cata, 674 ; nivea, 661 ; papillosa, 670 ; pseudo-antipathes, 671 ; quincuncialis, 669 ; ramulosa, 665 ; reticulum, 660 ; suberosa, 671 ; succinea, 671 ; tama- rix, 659; tubcrculata, 664; turgida, 670 ; umbratica, 660 ; verrucosa, 661 Euno'mia, 538 EUPHYLLIA, 157 ; anthophyllum, 160 ; aperta, 165 ; aspera, 164, 720 ; cos- tata, 720 ; cultrifera, 169; glabre- scens, 163; gracilis, 163; Hempricbii, 169 ; meandrina, 167 ; pavonina, 159; rubra, 161 ; rugosa, 166 ; sinuosa, 168 ; spheniscus, 160 ; spinulosa, 162 ; turgida, 166 Europ'ala, 125 Evag'ora rosea, 601. E.xplanaria annulata, 2T4; aspera, 282; cinerascens, 412; crater, 410; cris- tata, 500 ; gemmacea, 282 ; Hempri- chii, 282; infundibulum, 411 ; radiata, 207 ; ringens, 280 Favia ananas, 222 ; complanata, 249 ; denticulata, 235; microphthalma, 218; porcata, 222; rotulosa, 211; uva, 221 ; versipora, 234 FAVISTEL'LA, 538 FAVOSI'TES, 535 FAVOSIT'ID,E, 51)9 Flabellum, 158 ; pavoninum, 160 Flustroid polyps, 15 FUNOIA, 287; actiniformis, 299; agarici- formis, 292 ; asperata, 303 ; conferti- folia, 297 ; crassa, 304 ; crassitentac- ulata, 299 ; cyclolites, 289 ; dentata, 293 ; dentigera, 301 ; discus, 291 ; distorta, 721 ; cchinata, 294 ; Ehren- bergii, 303 ; glans, 290 ; horrida, 298 ; integra, 296 ; paumotensis, 300 ; pectinata, 302 ; rcpanda, 295 ; Riip- pellii, 304 ; scutaria, 301 ; tenuis, 902 Fungia cchinata, 30 1; limacina, 307; li- max,307; patellaris, 293; pileus, 312 FUN'GULE, 283 Funiculi'na, 593 ; sfellifera, 590 ; tetragona, 598 Galaxca anthophyllites, 383; cespitosa, 380; cuspidata, 402; cyathus, 371 ; fascicularis, 400 ; musicalis, 399 I X D E X. 735 Gcmmip'ora, growth of, 67 GEMMIP'ORA, 408; brassica, 413; cineras- cens, 411 ; crater, 411 ; frondens, 412; palifera, 409; patula, 410 ; peltata, 410 Gemmip'ora mesenterina, 412 GEMMIPOR'IDjE, 407 GOXIOP'ORA, 563 ; columna, 569 ; peclun- culata, 569 ; Savignii, 570 Gorgonia, axis of, 55, 712 GORGO'NIA, 644; alba, 673; anguiculus, 668 ; antipathcs, 666; apiculata, 661 ; Bertolonii, 663 ; cancellata, 658 ; cla- tlirus, 656 ; clavaria, 671 ; coccinea, 673; crassa, 670; dichotoma, 669; elongata, 664 ; exsorta, 666 ; flabellum, 655 ; flammea, 662 ; flavida, 664 ; flexuosa, 660 ; furcata, 664 ; grami- nea, 663; granulata, 660; homomalla, 667; humilis, 663; juncca, 664 ; lima, 672 ; madrepora, 671 ; rnammosa, 672 ; miniacea, 662; moniliformis, 673; nivoa, 661 ; olivacea, 668; papillosa, 670 ; pcnna, 673 ; plantaginea, 672 : pseudo-antipathcs,671 ; purpurea, 672; quincuncialis, 668 ; ramulosa, 665 ; retellum, 659 ; reticulum, 656; rhizo- morpha, 673 ; Richardii, 673 ; san- guinea, 663 ; sasappo, 663 ; spicifera, 665 ; stricta, 659 ; suffruticosa, 665 ; tamam, 659 ; trichostemma, 665 ; tubcrculata, 659 ; umbella, 656 ; um- braculum, 657 ; ventilabrum, 657 ; venusta, 658 ; venniculata, 669 ; ver- riculata, 657 ; vcrrucosa, 661 ; virgu- lata, 662 < iurgonia abietina, 650; acerosa, 649, 651 ; anirricana, 650 ; anceps, 648 ; bria- reus, 643; calyculata, 671; cerato- pliyta, 652, 653, 662; ccrea, 675; citrina, 648; coralloides, 610; dila- tata, 647; florida, 611 ; friabilis, 669 ; furfuracca, 659 ; heteropora, 670 ; hu- inosa, 661 ; laxa, 651 ; laxispica, 674 ; Icpadifcra, 676; leucostoma, 653; mol- lis, 672 ; multieauda, 670 ; muricata, 672, 674 ; myura, 676 ; nobilis, 640 ; nodulifcra, 666; ochrostoma, 652; pal- ma, 661 ; patula, 650 ; peclinata, 652 ; petechizans, 650 ; pinnata, 649, 651 ; placomus, 675 ; porosa, 669 ; pseudo- antipathes, 658; pustulosa, 654; quer- cus-foliurn, 647 ; reseda, 677 ; reticu- lata, 657 ; rosea, 651 ; sanguinolcnta, 651,653; sarmentosa, 653; setacea, 653 ; setosa, 651 ; stricta, 663 ; sub- erosa, 643, 652, 671 ; succinea, 671, 672 ; sulcifera, 652 ; umbratica, 660 ; ventalina, 657 ; vcrticillaris, 675 ; vi- minalis, 661, 662; violacca, 651 ; vir- gata, 674 GORGON'ID,E, 637 Haliglossa echinata, 304 ; foliosa, 309 ; in- terrupta, 308 ; limacina, 308 ; stella- ris, 309 HALOMITRA, 311 ; pileus, 311 Halysi'tes, 538 Harmodites, 637 HELIOH'TES, 541 Heliophyllum, 356 HELIOP'ORA, 539; cffirulea, 540 Heliopora angulosa, 723 ;• furcata, 555 Hermia, 691 HERPETOL'ITIIUS, 306 ; crassus, 310 ; folio- sus, 308 ; interruptus, 308 ; limacinus, 307 ; stellaris, 309 ; strictus, 309 Herpetolithus echinata, 304; Ehrenbergti, 303 ; Riippellii, 304 Helerodac'tyla, 125 HETEROP'ORA, 539; 572,723 Heteropora abrotanoides, 478 ; appressa, 458 ; ccrvicornis, 476 ; corymbosa, 446; decurrens, 459, 488 ; echidnn a, 458; nabellum, 439; Forskalii, 489 ; Hemprichii, 473 ; imbricata, 722 ; laxa, 488; microclados, 444; palmata, 437 ; prolifera, 480 ; regalis, 468 ; scriata, 488 ; squarrosa, 488 ; tubu- losa, 488 ; tylostoma, 489 HVAI.ONK'MA, 641 ; Sieboldi, 642 I lydnoph'ora Pallasii, 268 ; Esperi, 268 HYDRA, 12, 24, 685 Hydra sociata, 421 HVDRACTINIA, 691 736 INDEX. HY'DRIDyE, 685 Hydroidea, structure of, 14 , reproduction in, 22, 709 HYDROID'EA, 685 Hughea Hemprichii, 418; Savignyi, 419 ILYANTHUS, 124 Isacmrca, 126 ISAI.'RA, 418; aster, 419; Hemprichii, 418; Savignii, 419; s[>eciosa, 419 -Isis, 680 ; elongata, 681 ; hippuris, 680 Isis aurantia, 683 ; coralloides, 680 ; dicho- toma, 679; encrinula, 679; encrinus, 598 ; erythracea, 680 ; gracilis, 679 ; nobilis, 640 ; ochracea, 682 LAOMEDE'A, 689; gracilis, 689; simplex, 690 LICIIEXOP'ORA, 574 Lichenopora glomerata, 537 LIMA'RIA, 702 Lithodcndrum angulosum, 177 ; cristatum, 180; proliferum, 393; rameum, 386; virgincum, 395 Lobophyllia angulosa, 166, 167, 177; au- rantiaca, 388; carduus, 176; corym- bosa, 178 ; fastigiata, 175 ; glabre- scens, 163; sinuosa, 180 Lobularia arborea, 644 ; asbestina, 643 ; aurantiaca, 618; brachyclados, 618; coriacea, 625 ; conoidea, 614 ; digitata, 614; grandifiora, 614 ; palmata, 615 ; pauciflora, 617; polydactyla, 617; spherophora, 616 ; rubiforrnis, 625 LUCERNARIA, 125 MADREP'ORA, 431 ; abrotanoides, 477 ; acervata, 460 ; aculeus, 450 ; alces, 437 ; appressa, 457 ; arbuscula, 474 ; aspera, 468; austera, 478; brachiata, 474 ; carduus, 464 ; cerealis, 460 ; cervicornis, 479 ; conigera, 440 ; con- vexa, 449 ; corymbosa, 456 ; oribri- pora, 470 ; cuneata, 487 ; cuspidata, 485; cyclopea, 439; cytherea, 441; decurrens, 488 ; deformis, 484 ; digi- tifera, 454 ; divaricata, 477 ; cchid- nsea, 459; echinata, 464; efflorescens, 441; effusa, 455; exigua, 469; fla- bellum, 438 ; florida, 466 ; Formosa, 473 ; Forskalii, 489 ; globiceps, 454 ; gracilis, 482 ; gravida, 470 ; hebes, 468; horrida, 472; humilis, 4S3; hy- acinthus, 444 ; hystrix, 476 ; impli- cata, 466; labrosa, 486; laxa, 487;. millepora, 446 ; nasuta, 453 ; nobilis, 481 ; palmata, 436; paxilligera, 452; plantaginea, 459; pocillifera, 484; prolifera, 480 ; ramiculosa, 463 ; re- galis, 488 ; retusa, 462 ; prostrata, 447 ; robusta, 475 ; rosaria, 465 ; se- cunda, 481 ; securis, 486 ; scriata, 488 ; spicifera, 442 ; squarrosa, 488 ; subulata, 448 ; surculosa, 445 ; tenuis, 451 ; tortuosa, 467 ; tubicinaria, 451 ; tubulosa, 488; tylostoma, 489; valida, 461 ; virgata, 471 Madrepora abdita, 247; acropora, 211; agaricites, 343 ; ampliata, 272; ana- nas, 222 ; angulosa, 177, 180; annu- larlfc, 214; anthophyllum, 371; an- thophyllites, 383; arborea, 3S6 ; arco- lata, 192; aspera, 281 ; astroites, 219; axillaris, 394 ; boletifbrmis, 328 ; cae- rulea, 541 ; calycularis, 406 ; capi- tata, 165, 175; carduus, 176; caryo- phyllites, 400 ; cavernosa, 203, 234 ; ccllulosa, 242 ; cespitosa, 401 ; chal- cidicum, 403; cinerascens, 412; con- tigua, 560; corymbosa, 178; crater, 411; cristata, 180, 328; cucullata, 340 ; cyathus, 371 ; damicornis, 525, 527,528; dedalea, 255, 513; denti- culata, 234 ; denudata, 424 ; dctrita, 239; digitata, 516; divergcns, 403; echinata, 295 ; elephantotus, 324 ; cxesa, 268; fascicularis, .380, 400; fastigiata, 164, 165, 168, 175; fa- vosa, 225, 247, 252; favtis, 235; filograna, 260, 263 ; flexuosa, 380, 381 ; foliosa, 498, 505 ; fungites, 292 ; galaxea, 219 ; gemrriascpns, 696 ; hirtclla, 392 ; intcrsepta, 247 ; labyrintbica, 257, 264; laccra, 176; lactuca, 196; lamcllosa, 281; lima, INDEX. 737 307; meandrites, 171; 193, 257; musicalis, 390; natans, 194; norva- gica, 097 ; oculata, 395; patella, 293; patiniformis, 497 ; peltata, 410; pen- tagona, 241 ; phrygia, 260, 261 ; pileus, 307, 322 ; pistillata, 517 ; pleiades, 214; porcata, 226; porites, 554, 558, 559; prolifera, 393; punc- tata, 568; radiate, 207, 221 ; ramea, 386 ; retepora, 512 ; rosacea, 498 ; rosea, 458, 695; rotulosa, 211; se- riata, 520 ; siderea, 332 ; solida, 562 ; stellulata, 215; trilinguis, 309; undata, 336 ; tiva, 221 ; virginea, 397, 697 MADREPORACEA, 428 MADREPOR'ID^, 431 Mirandra, see Meandrina Mammillifera auricula, 424 ; denudata, 424; fuliginosa, 425; mammillosa, 425 ; nymphaea, 424 ; occllata, 426 MANICI'NA, 188 ; amarantum, 189; areo- lata, 191: dilatata, 194; fissa, 190; hispida, 193; meandrites, 193; pra> rupta, 193 Manicina intcrniptn, 194; lactuca, 196; manica, 192 ; pachyphylla, 172 ; pec- tlnata, 171 MANOP'ORA, 489 ; caliculata, 492; capita- ta, 504 ; circumvallata, 496 ; com- pressa, 494; crista-galli, 494 ; digitata, 508 ; effusa, 500 ; erosa, 504 ; ex- pansa, 498 ; foliosa, 497 ; foveolata, 507; gemmulata, 491; grandifolia, 499 ; hispida, 496 ; incrassata, 503 ; lichen, 492 ; lima, 505 ; nodosa, 501 ; nudiceps, 505; palmata, 493; papil- losa, 506 ; planiuscula, 507 ; scabri- cula, 502 ; spumosa, 495 ; stilosa, 500; tortuosa, 509 ; tuberculosa, 506 ; ve- nosa, 501 ; verrucosa, 506 MARGINOP'ORA, 705 ; vertebralis, 706 Massa'rium massa, 615 MF.ANDHI'NA. 252 : raudox, 266 ; cerebri- fomiis, 263 ; cylindrtis-, 265 ; dedalca, 254 ; filograna, 262 ; gracilis, 261 ; interrupta, 258 ; labyrinthica, 256 ; mammosa, 265 ; phrygia, 260 ; rus- 185 tica, 258 ; spongiosa, 255 ; strigosa, 257; tennis, 262; truncata, 264; va- lida, 259 Meandrina areolata, 192 ; crispa, 184; gy- rosa, 185, 186 ; lamellina, 266 ; pecti- nata, 171 ; sinuosa, 188 ; spatiosa, 266 Megalactis, 125 MELIT^A, 681 ; coccinea, 688; ochracea, 682 ; retifera, 682 ; tenella, 683 Melitaca Rissoi, 683; textiformis, 683 MERULI'XA, 271; ampliala, 272; crispa, 274; folium, 274; laxa, 276 ; regalis, 273 ; rigida, 276 ; scabricula, 275 ; speciosa, 273 Mesacmcea, 126 METHID'IUM, 125, 150 ; concinnatum, 152 ;" muscosum, 153 ; prcetextum, 150 MlCHELINIA, 362 Microsolena, 637 MILLEP'OHA, 542 ; alcicornis, 543 ; com- planata,547; incrassata, 547 ; plicata, 546 ; platyphylla, 548 ; pumila, 545 ; ramosa, 544 ; squarrosa, 547 ; tortuo- sa, 545 Millepora aspera, 494, 571; csrulea, 541 ; clavaria, 544 ; compressa, 494 : line- ata, 520 ; miniacea, 707 ; porulosa, 549 ; rubra, 707 ; truncata, 698 Minyas, 124 Mitra polonica, 312 Monomyces, 349 ; anthophyllum, 160, 350 ; eburneus, 350, 373; patella, 293, 350 MONTICULABIA, 266 ; lobata, 268 ; micro- cona, 267 ; polygonata, 269 Monticularia exesa, 268 ; folium, 275 Montip'ora, 490 ; lima, 505; papillosa, 506; verrucosa, 503, 506 Montlivaltia, 306 MOPSEA, 678 ; dichotoma, 678 ; cncrinula, 679 ; erythrtea, 679 ; gracilis, 679 Mopsea mediterranea, 681 ; vcrticillata, 679 Moschata, 124 MUIUCE'A, 673 ; cerea, 675 ; elongata, 674; myura,675; placomus, 674; spicifera, 673 ; verticil laris, 675 Murirca calyptrata, 675 ; furfuracea, 659 ; muricata, 674 ; sulphurea, 674 733 INDEX. Mrs? .Y, 173; angulosa, 176 ; cactus, 178; carduus, 175; cerebriformis, 182; co- rymbosa, 177 ; costata, 179 ; crispa, 183; cytherea,180; dipsacea, 184; fas- tigiata, 175,720; fragilis, 185; gyrosa, 186; multilobata, 181; nobilis, 187; recta, 186; regalis, 182; sinuosa, 179 Mussa dianthus, 375 Myce'dium ampliatum, 273 ; clephantotus, 324 ; cucullatum, 340 Myriap'ora truncata, 698 ; gracilis, 698 MYRIOZO'UM, 698; truncatum, 60S; gra- cile, 699 Neptaea florida, 611, 626 ; innominata, 611 NEPHTHYA, 610 ; Savignii, 610 Nephthya florida, 611 ; Rathkiana, 611 Oculi'na, budding of, 67. OCULI'NA, 390; axillaris, 394; diffusa, 397 ; hirtella, 392 ; horrescens, 392 ; oculata, 395 ; pallens, 395 ; prolifera, 393 ; varicosa, 394, virginea, 396 Oculina coccinea, 389 ; echidnoea, 458 ; fla- belliformis, 695; gemmascens, 696 ; in- fundibulifera, 696 ; micranthus, 387 ; ramea, 386 ; rosea, 695 ; virginea, 395, 397 ORBULI'TES, 704 Organic developement, 85 Palmip'ora alcicornis, 544 ; complanata, 547 ; squarrosa, 547 PALYTHOA, 422 ; argus, 427 ; auricula, 424 ; Cicsia, 427 ; denudata, 423 ; flavo-viridis, 426 ; fuliginosa, 425 ; glareola, 426 ; nymphaia, 424 ; mam- rnillosa, 425 ; ocellata, 426 Palythoa Bertholetii, 422 ; Peril, 425 ; Sa- vignii, 419 ; stellata, 425 PASYTH'EA, 686 ; gracilis, 688 PAVONARIA, 597 ; quadrangularis, 597 Pavonaria antenninu, 598 PAVO'NIA, 319; boletiformis, 327 ; cactus, 324 ; clavus, 332 ; crassa, 331 ; cris- pa, 322 ; decussata, 329 ; divaricata, 327 ; elephantotus, 323 ; explanulata, 322 ; formosa, 325 ; frondifora, 328, 721 ; lata, 330 ; latistella, 332 ; pa- pyracea, 323 ; prastorta, 325 ; siderea, 331 ; venusta, 326 Pavonia agaricites, 343; cristata,343; lactu- ca,196; obtusangula, 346 ; plicata,560 Pectinia lactuca, 196 PELAOIA, 573 PENNARIA, 691 PENNAT'ULA, 594 ; argentea, 596 ; grisea, 595 ; phosphorea, 594 ; rubra, 595 Pennatula mitennina, 598 ; cynomorium, 590; elongata, 596; encrinus, 598; grandis, 59(i ; granulosa, 595 ; juncea, 592; mirabilis, 592 ; phalloides, 590; quadrangularis, 598; reniforniis, 589; rubra, 595 ; setacea, 595 ; spinosa, 596 ; stcllifera, 591) PENNATU'LID^E, 587 PHYLLASTRJRA, 269 ; tubifex, 270 Phyllop'ora leptostoma, 723 ; spherostoma,. 723 Phyllodes, 374, 722 Planules, 709 Plexaura antipathes, 667 ; crassa, 670 ; flexuosa, 668; friabilis, 669, 670; ho- momalla, 668; miniacea, 662; oliva- cea, 668 ; reticulata, 657 ; suberosa, 643 ; viminalis, 662 PLUMULARIA, 686 POCILLOP'ORA, 523 ; acuta, 524 ; brevicor- nis, 526; bulbosa,527; cespitosa, 525; clavaria, 530 ; damicornis, 527 ; elo- gans, 532 ; elongata, 531 ; favosa, 528 ; grandis, 533 ; informis, 535 ; ligulata, 531 ; rneandrina, 533 ; plica- ta,534; squarrosa, 530 ; verrucosa,529 Pocillopora Andreossoyi, 516 ; apiculata, 528 ; ccerulea, 541 ; fenestrata, 514 ; Hemprichii, 529 ; verrucosa, •">•'!:) Polypary, 15, 52 POI.YPHYLLIA, 312; fungia, 316; galeri- formis, 317; leptophylla, 314 ; pelvis, 315 ; pih'iformis, 317 ; sigmoides, 314 ; talpa, 313 Polypidom, 15, 52 Polypifer, 15 INDEX. 739 POLYTRE'MA, 706 ; brunncscens, 707 ; me- senterina, 708 ; miniacca, 707 Polytrema corallina, 707 PORI'TES, 550 ; arenacea, 567 ; astraeoides, 561 ; clavaria, 554; compressa, 553; conglomerate, 561 ; contigua, 560 ; cribripora, 564 ; cylindrica, 559 ; di- varicata, 556 ; erosa, 565; favosa, 564 ; flexuosa, 554 ; fragosa, 563 ; furcata, 555 ; informis, 565 ; levis, 559 ; lichen, 566 ; limosa, 563 ; Io- bata, 562 ; monticulosa, 566 ; mor- dax, 552 ; nigrescens, 557 ; palmata, 558 ; recta, 556 ; reticulosa, 567 Poriles angulata, 723 ; .armata, 568 ; cer- vine, 723 ; circumvallata, 496 ; com- planata, 503 ; conglomerata, 562 ; crista-galli, 494; dedalea, 513; digi- tata, 516; elongata, 517; flabelli- formis, 555 ; foliosa, 497 ; Peronii, 512; pistillata, 517; punctata, 568; reticulata, 512 ; rosacea, 498 ; scabra, 516 ; spongiosa, 496 ; spumosa, 496, 497; stilosa, 501; stromatopora, 568; subdigitata, 517 ; tuberculosa, 507 ; verrucosa, 506 PORIT ID.E, 549 PRIMXOA, 676; lepadirera, 676 Primnoa flabellum, 675; verticillaris, 675 PSAMMO'CORA, 344 ; columna, 347 ; exesa, 348 ; fbssata, 347 ; obtusangula, 345 ; plicata, 346 PTEROGOR'GIA, 647 ; acerosa, 649 ; anceps, 648; citrina, 648; fasciolaris, 648; fusco-purpurea, 652 ; laxa, 651; leu- costoma, 653 ; ochrostoma, 652 ; pa- tula, 050 ; pectinata, 652 ; petechi- zans, 650 ; pinnata, 649 ; pustulosa, 654 ; quercifolia, 647 ; rosca, 651 ; sarmentosa, 653 ; setacca, 653 ; se- tosa, 650 ; sulcifera, 652 ; thoniasien- sis, 649 ; turgida, 651 ; violacea, 651 Pterogorgia sancti-thoma3, 649; stricta, 650 Podasteria, 186 PI'STULOP'ORA, 699 RKCEI-TACULITES, 700 REMLLA, 588 ; americana, 588 ; violacea, 589 RHIZOXE'NIA, 600 ; primula, 601 ; rosea, 601 ; thalassantha, 600 SARCIN'ULA, 363 Sarcin'ula, 404; astreata, 400 ; musicalis, 399 ; |*rforata, 405 Sarcorhinanthus, 125 Scirpea'ria, 593 ; mirabilis, 592 SERIATOP'ORA, 518; caliendrum, 522; hystrix, 521 ; lineata, 520 ; octoptera, 521 ; subulata, 519 Seriatopora cervina, 723 ; ocellata, 520 ; valida, 523 SERTULAHIA, 686 ; mimosa, 687 Sertularia dumosa, 628 SERTULAR'IDjE, 686 Siderastraea galaxea, 219; siderata, 332 SIDEKOP'ORA, 515; digitata, 515; elon- gata, 516 ; mordax, 518 ; palmata, 517 ; subdigitata, 517 Siderop'ora pistillata, 517 SPINOP'ORA, 572 SPOCGO'DIA, 625 ; celosia, 626 STEJJOP'ORA, 536 Stephano'cora Hemprichii, 282 STEPHANOPHYLLIA, 373 Stipula, 691 STROMATOP'ORA, 702 Strombo'des, 359, 362; Hemprichii, 169 STVLI'NA, 403 ; echinulata, 404 Styloph'ora, 517 SYMPO'DIUM, 608; cseruleum, 609 ; fuligi- nosum, 609 ; roseum, 609 Sympodium coralloides, 610 ; massa, 610 ; ochraceum, 610; rubrum, 610, 614 SYNCORYNA, 691 Synhydra, 691 Synoicum pelagicum, 632 SYRINGOP'ORA, 637 TELESTO, 631 ; aurantiaca, 632; fruticu- losa, 632 ; lutea, 632 ; pelagica, 632 TERKKKLLARIA, 572 Tefhya mammlllosa, 425 TETHADH-.M, 701 740 INDEX. Thalnssianthus, 125 Thamnasteria, 321, 345 TlIEONEA, 701 THOA, 686 TIIUIA'RIA, 686 TILKSIA, 572 TRIDACOPHYLLIA, 194; lactuca, 195; manicina, 196; paxmia, 196 Trldacophyllia aspera, 282 Trochopsis, 721 Truncularia, 698 Tubastrsca annularis, 214; cavernosa, 208; pleiades, 214 ; radiata, 207 TUBIP'ORA, 633 ; Charnissonis, 635 ; fim- briata, 634 ; Hemprichii, 636; musica, 633 ; purpurea, 634 ; rubeola, 636 ; syringa, 635 Tubip'ora, structure of, 42 TUBlPOR'IDjE, 629 Tubiporites, 637 TDBULARIA, 691 ; ornata, 691 Tubularia cornucopise, 628 ; tubifera, 628 TUBULAR'IDjE, 690 Tubularidae, reproduction in, 709 TURBINALIA, 374, .721 TCRBINALOPSIS, 349, 721 Turbinaria cinerascens, 412 ; cupula, 410 ; microstoma, 412 ; peltata, 411 Turbinolia,374; amicorum, 163; compressa, 161 ; cuneata, 161 ; rubra,161, 162 UMBELLITLARIA, 598 ; greenlandica, 598 Umbellularia encrinus, 598 ; stellifcra, 590 Undaria undata, 336 VERETIL'LUM, 589 ; clavatum, 591 ; cyno- morium, 590 ; luteum, 590 ; pbal- loides, 590 Veretillum stellifera, 590 VIRGULARIA, 591 ; juncea, 592 ; mirabilis, 591 Virgularia australis, 593 ; juncea, 593 ; laxipinna, 592 XENIA, 604 ; ca?rulea, 605; elongata, 606 ; florida, 606 ; fuscescens, 605 ; um- bellata, 604 Xenia Desjardiana, 603 ; purpurea, 607, 626 ZOANTIIA, 420; Berlholetii, 422; dubia, 422 ; Ellisii, 420 ; sociata, 421 ; So- landri, 421 Zoantha thalassanthos, 601 Zoantliidae, structure of, 40 ZOANTH'IO/E, 417 Zoophytes, classification of, 16, 45, 105 , definition of, 1 1 , forms of, 59 -, geographical distribution of, 101 ZOOF'ILCS, 318; echinatus, 319 THE END. UJ — I RETURN TO the circulation desk of any University of California Library or to the NORTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY Bldg. 400, Richmond Field Station University of California Richmond, CA 94804-4698 ALL BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAYS 2-month loans may be renewed by calling (510) 642-6753 1-year loans may be recharged by bringing books to NRLF Renewals and recharges may be made 4 days prior to due date DUE AS STAMPED BELOW date. JUL •O- OCT 2 1 1996 inCULATION DEPT. SENT ON ILL DEC 0 4 1997 U. C. BERKELEY 0,000 (4/94) UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY FORM NO. DD6 BERKELEY, CA 94720 ^ •••r T" ..,. General Library University of Californi U C lit MM LEY I 1BHAKIE S CDS71S15SD I "**' i (