1562 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. 



to be the most common of the living forms and widely distributed over all warmer seas. I observed 

 in Ceylon, taken on the surface, the living specimen figured in PL 101^ fig. 10 ; the numerous 

 spicula were irregularly scattered over the spherical surface of the alveolate calymma. Other 

 specimens occur in various preparations of the Challenger collection, from the Atlantic and the 

 Pacific. The majority of the siliceous little hats exhibited the stirrup-form shown in fig. 11, and 

 many were united in pairs, forming a twin-piece (fig. 12). Intermingled with these are found some 

 irregular forms, representing the specific form of some allied species, viz., Dictyocha speculum, 

 Dictyocha staurodon, Bictyoclut epiodon and Dictyocha messanensis. 



Dimensions. — Diameter of the basal ring 0"015 to 0"03, of the meshes 0'005 to 0'012. 



Habitat. — CosmopoHtan ; Atlantic, Pacific, Indian Ocean, in the Tropical and wanner regions ; 

 Stations 159, 244, 266-272, 318, 352, &c. 



12. Dictyocha rhombus, n. sp. 



Each pileated piece of the skeleton stirrup-shaped, similar to Dictyocha stapcdia, with four 

 paired meshes. It differs from the latter in the rhomboid form of the basal ring and the larger 

 size of the two opposite meshes, which are two to three times as large as the two others. There- 

 fore the four centripetal teeth of the basal ring do not stand in the four single meshes, but in pairs 

 only in the two larger meshes. 



Dimensions. — Diameter of the basal ring 0'02, of the meshes O'OOS to O'Ol. 



HaMtat. — North Atlantic; Faroe Channel, Gulf Stream, depth 50 to 600 fathoms, John Murray. 



Genus 663. Distephanus,^ Stohr, 1880, Palseontogr., vol. xxvi. 



Taf. ii. p. 121. 



Definition. — C a nn o r r h a p li i cl a with a skeleton composed of j)ileated pieces, each of 

 which is a small truncated pyramid with one girdle of meshes (the apical ring being simple). 



The genus Distephanus was founded in 1880 by Stohr {loc. cit.) for a single twin- 

 piece of the skeleton of Dictyocha speculum. Among the common fossil forms of 

 this species he once found in the Tertiary rocks of Caltanisetta, Sicily, a single j^iece 

 {loc. cit., Taf. vi. fig. 9), which seemed to be composed of two equal pieces so united that 

 they formed a little sphere with fourteen meshes ; on each jjole of the sphere Ues a 

 central hexagonal mesh surrounded by six pentagonal meshes, and from the six 

 corners of the equatorial ring arise six centrifugal spines. No doubt this was a 

 mistake, and the apparent little sphere was one of the above mentioned twin-forms, 

 composed of two separate hexagonal truncated pyramids, which were loosely connected 

 by their basal rings. I have often seen such twin-pieces of Dictyocha speculum and of 

 other species (PL 101, fig. 12 ; PI. 1 14, fig. 8), and was always able to separate the two 

 loosely connected halves of the bivalve shell by slight compression. 



' Disiep/iamts = Double corona; li(^ri(pauos. 



