1260 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. 



Subgenus 3. Polypleuris, Haeckel. 



Definition. — Pyramidal shell with numerous (twelve or more) radial main beams 

 (commonly twelve to eighteen, sometimes twenty to thirty or more). 



11. Plectopyr amis poly pleura, n. sp. (PL 56. fig. 8). 



Shell smooth, slenderly conical, with straight outlines. Cephalis small, subspherical, with very 

 small dot-like pores, and an oblique conical horn twice the length. Thorax with numerous 

 (twenty to thirty) divergent longitudinal ribs ; usually twelve of these radial beams appear as 

 stronger, primary main ribs, and twelve to eighteen other as secondary, feebler, interpolated ribs. 

 They are crossed by numerous (twenty to forty or more) horizontal rings. The large meshes so 

 produced are quadrangular, and partly filled up by a very delicate secondary network, with small 

 square pores. 



Dinnensions. — Cephalis 0"03 diameter ; thorax 0'36 long, 0"24 long. 



Habitat. — Central Pacific, Station 267, depth 2700 fathoms. 



12. Plectopyramis lagena, n. sp. 



Shell smooth, wine-bottle shaped, or slenderly conical-campanulate, with bent outlines, which are 

 concave in the upper, convex in the lower half. Cephahs very small, spherical, hyahne, without 

 pores. Thorax with twenty-four radial ribs, twelve stronger primary, alternathig with twelve feebler 

 secondary. They are crossed by interrupted transverse bars. The irregular quadrangular meshes 

 so produced are filled up by a delicate, irregular, secondary network. 



Dimensimis. — Cephalis 0'02 diameter; thorax 0-5 long, 0'3 broad. 



HaUtat. — South Atlantic, Station 335, depth 1425 fathoms. 



Genus 562. Spongopyramis^ n. sp. 



Definition. — S e t h o p h o r m i d a (vel Dicyrtida multiradiata aperta) with numerous 

 straight or slightly curved radial ribs in the wall of the pyramidal thorax. Network 

 spongy. Cephalis commonly without horn. 



The genus SjMngopyramis has arisen from Sethopyramis by development of an 

 irregular spongy framework around the lattice-shell, and is one of the small number of 

 C y r t o i d e a in which the shell- wall exhibits a spongy structure. In both observed 

 species the cephalis is small, but evident. 



