MARINE ALG/E. I ''< 



cither sessile or very shortly pedicellate, ovoid and bluntly rostrate. The pericarp is 

 composed of six or more rows of cells in vertical series. 



Its nearest ally is P. interrupta, which it somewhat resembles in external form ; 

 but it differs from that species in having simpler and more longly dichotomous 

 branching (being very rarely or never palmate), and the apices of the branches ligulate 

 and not reniform or rotundate. The thallus is not moniliform or torulose, but merely 

 opposito-sinuate. P. interrupta is more shortly dichotomous, and often has a triangular 

 expansion below its dichotomy, and palmate branching. The constrictions, too, are 

 often reduced to almost stalk-like thinness, which is not the case in P. nntnrcli<-. 

 P. interrupta is an Arctic species, and P. antarctica appears to be its Antarctic 

 couo-ener. Possibly they are antipodal polar descendants from a common ancestor. 



P. Brodicei J. Ag. differs in its long stipes cuneately expanded into a more or less 

 palmate frond, and is apparently the Arctic congener of the Antarctic P. cuneifolia, 

 which has shorter stipes, broader less-lobed frond, and broader shorter lobes with 

 shallower sinus. 



13. SPONGOCLONIUM ORTHOCLADUM. 

 (Plate IV., figs. 23-25.) 



Frons 8 cm. alta dense fruticulosa axi central! crecto tereti rhizoidibus hand 

 corticato ramulis ascendentibus velato, quoquoversum ramoso, ramis cauli similibus 

 ramulis ultimis longis erecto-patentibus simplicibus strictis subulatis, articulis diametro 

 sesquilongioribus, articulo basal! mine nudo mine procarpium intra ramcllorum 

 minutorum fasciculum emittcnte. Tetrasporangia ignota. 



Cape Adare, January 9, 1902. 



This is a densely bushy plant (fig. 23) of moderate size, about 8 cm. high without the 

 basal attachment and without tetraspores, but bearing young procarpia with tricho- 

 gyues (figs- 25a, 25b), and so thickly infested with diatoms that it is difficult to obtain 

 a clear view of its ramification. S. orthocladum is remarkable for its long straight 

 subulate ultimate branchlets (fig. 24), and differs in this respect from all the fruticulose 

 Callithamnioid species which we have seen. Its nearest ally is found in certain 

 states of S. hirtum \_C(dlithamnii>n hirtum Hook. f. and Harv. in Flora Antarctica, II. 

 (1847), pi. Ixxviii., figs. 3 and 4], a plant recorded from the Auckland Islands and Ki-\v 

 Zealand. The typical plant, it is true, differs inter all it in having ultimate pinnse 

 consisting of a flexuose rachis bearing sub-distichous incurved obtuse ramelli. There is, 

 however, in the British Museum a specimen from Cook's Straits, New Zealand, collected 

 by David Lyall and named by Harvey, which, though normal in most respects, yet has 

 a few branches which break up into long, straight, subulate ramelli like those of 

 our plant. 



