REPORT ON THE RADIOLARIA. 061 



sagittal iiair, one posterior and one anterior). All six gates of the basal plate triangular, the 

 jugular and cervical a little smaller than the cardinal gates. 



Bimcnsioihs. — Height of the sagittal ring 0"1, breadth 0'07. 



Habitat. — Tropical Atlantic, Station 348, depth 2450 fathoms. 



3. Semantidium haeckelii, Biitschli. 



Stephanolithis Haeckelii, Biitschli, 1882, Zeitschr. f. wiss. Zoo!., vol. xxxvL pp. 499, 538, Taf. 

 xxxii. figs. 6a, &!). 



Sagittal ring elliptical, with three pairs of short horizontal branched spines, one apical and two 

 equatorial pairs (one dorsal and one ventral). Basal ring roundish hexagonal, with numerous short 

 thorns on the margin. Jugular pores ovate, about half as broad as the ovate cardinal pores and 

 twice as broad as the small cer\'ical pores. 



Bimensioiis. — Height of the sagittal ring 0'08, breadth 0-06. 



Habitat. — Fossil in Barbados. 



4. Semantidium signatorium, n. sp. (PL 92, fig. 7). 



Sagittal ring semicircular, thorny ; basal ring pentagonal, with short spines on the margin and 

 five stronger thorny spines on the five corners. Jugular pores ovate, smaller than the triangular 

 cervical pores. Cardinal pores two to three times as large as each of the former, pentagonal. 



Dimensions. — Height of the sagittal ring 0-08, breadth 0"12. 



Habitat. — North Pacific, Station 241, depth 2300 fathoms. 



Genus 410. Clathrocircus,^ Haeckel, 1881, Prodromus, p. 447. 



Definition. — Semantida with a variable number of pores on the apical and the 

 basal part of the ring, symmetrically arranged, without typical basal feet. 



The genus Clathrocircus comprises those Semantida in which the sagittal ring 

 bears not only basal pores (as in the three preceding genera) but also apical pores (on 

 the opposite pole of the main axis), or a variable number of pores along the whole 

 ring. All these pores are sjrmmetrically arranged in pairs. In the simplest form there 

 are only two apical pores opposite to four basal pores, whilst in the highest state 

 of development the w^hole ring bears two complete circles of pores. At both poles of 

 the transverse axis two large lateral gates remain open. If these become closed by 

 lattice-work, Clathrocircus passes over into Dictyospyris. 



' CTaffiroa>cus = Lattice-ring; xKiiipoy, ki'^ko;. 

 (ZOOL. CHALL. EXP. — PAET XL. — 1886.) Er 121 



