REPORT ON THE RADIOLARIA. 1527 



Ph.^odaria from all the other Kadiolaria, and from the other Rhizopoda in general. 

 It is always placed on the oral pole of the main axis, forming here a peculiar cap- 

 shaped or flatl)^ conical elevation, the centre of which is prolonged into a short, 

 cylindrical tulude ; we call the latter shortly a proboscis, and the former an operculum. 

 To understand better the different forms which these important parts assume in 

 the difierent families, compare PI. 101, figs. 1-6 ; PL 102, fig. 1 ; PL 103, fig. 1 ; 

 PL 104, figs. 1-3; PL 111, fig. 2; PL 123, figs. 1-9; PL 127, figs. 4-6; 

 PL 128, fig. 2, &e. Compare also the first very accurate figures which R. Hertwig 

 has given in 1879 (loc. cit.) in his Taf. x. 



The operculum of the astropyle, the most important part of this main opening 

 (" der Oefluungshof der Hauptofl:nung," in the description of Hertwig), is a circular 

 convex plate, always more strongly vaulted than the surrounding part of the capsule 

 membrane, and is sharply separated from it by a circular, often thickened and double- 

 contoured margin. The operculum covers the main-opening like the lid of a tea- 

 kettle, and the proboscis arising from its centre is comparable to the handle of that 

 lid. The diameter of the circular operculum is usually about half as long (rarely as 

 long) as the radius of the central capsule, therefore in the majority of Ph.eodaria 

 0"03 to 0*06, sometimes 0"1 and more. Its form is sometimes more conical, sometimes 

 more like a mamma. Its height is usually about equal to half its diameter. It always 

 exhibits a very distinct radial striation, produced by numerous prominent radial ribs, 

 which arise in the centre and end at the circular sharply truncated margin. The usual 

 number of these radial ribs may be, in the operculum of smaller capsules, from thirty to 

 fifty, in those of medium size from sixty to ninety, and in the largest two hundred to three 

 hundred or more. Usually the ribs are simple (PL 101, figs. 1, 2, 6, 10 ; PL 127, 

 figs. 4—6 ; also in all figures given by Hertwig) ; but sometimes, mainly in the biggest 

 Aulaeanthida, they are distinctly branched in a centrifugal direction (PL 114, fig. 13 ; 

 PL 115, fig. 3). Hertwig is of the opinion that the radial ribs are thickened 

 ridges of the endocapsa ("leistenartige Verdickungen der inneren Membran"), 

 and that the ectocapsa covering it is structureless (compare his figs. 1 and la, in 

 Taf. X.). But I am convinced now, by numerous experiments and observations, that 

 the radiate operculum is a part of the outer, not of the inner membrane. That part 

 of the latter which lies immediately beyond the former, and which may be called the 

 " inner operculum," also exhibits usually a fine radial striation ; but this is probably 

 only the cast of the stronger and much more prominent radial ribbing of the " outer 

 operculum " belongmg to the ectocapsa. The latter exhibits a large circular opening 

 with thickened margin, when the radiate operculum is taken from it. The operculum 

 becomes stained intensely red by carmine, yellow by nitric acid, corresponding to the 

 ectocapsa, the main-opening of which is closed by it. 



Tlie proboscis, or the cylindrical tubule, which arises in the centre of the 



