REPORT ON THE RADIOLARTA. 1571 



to be open at both ends, siuce they are easily and constantly filled by air when dried. 

 Their length is usually between 0"2 and 0'3 mm., rarely less than 015 or more than 

 0"5 ; their diameter is always less than O'OOl, usually less than 0"0005. 



The large radial tubes of the Aulacanthida constitute the most characteristic struc- ■ 

 tures of this family, and are always so placed that their inner or proximal ends are in 

 loose contact with the outer surface of their central capsule (upon which they rest), whilst 

 their outer or distal ends are more or less prominent over the spherical surface of the 

 calymma. Their position, therefore, is rather loose and movable, since they are fixed 

 only by the consistence of the jelly of the surrounding calymma, and on the surface of 

 the latter by the covering veil or the mantle of tangential needles (compare PI. 102, 

 fig. 1; PL 103, fig. 1; PL 104, fig. 1). Their number seems never to be fixed, and is 

 probably very variable in difierent species. I found, in 1859, in the common Aula- 

 cantlia scohjmantha, the number varying from thirty to one hundred and fifty [loc. cit., 

 p. 264). So also in Aulographis pandora, Aulospathis variabilis, and some other common 

 species, numerous specimens of w^hich I could compare, I found their number very variable, 

 being in one and the same species sometimes only from ten to twenty, at other times from 

 fifty to eighty, and sometimes even from one hundred to one huncbed and fifty or more. 

 Perhaps the number increases with the age and the increasing size of the calymma. 



The radial tubes are always cylindrical (circular in transverse section), never angular 

 or prismatic. Usually they are straight, more rarely slightly curved (PL 105, 

 figs. 1, 2 ; PL 101, fig. 6). The cylinders are usually more or less tapering towards 

 both ends, sometimes even spindle-shaped ; the inner or proximal end is always simple 

 and rounded, often slightly swollen or inflated, and ovate ; the outer or distal end is often 

 thickened, club-shaped, and exhibits the greatest variety in form and ramification. The 

 length of the radial tubes is usually from 1 to 3 mm., rarely less than 0"8, or more 

 than 3"2 ; their diameter is usually between 0"02 and 0"03, rarely less than O'Ol or more 

 than 0"05. The smallest i-adial tubes are found in Aulactinium, the largest in 

 A ulospathis. 



The siliceous waU of the cylindrical radial tubes is usually very thin, fragile, and per- 

 fectly structureless. Only in a few species, mainly oi Aulographis, does the wall become 

 very thick and composed of concentric cylindrical layers (PL 105, figs. 6—11). Their 

 cavity is wide and simple, and filled up by jelly (not by sarcode, as I supposed in my 

 first description). The simple cavity of the tubes, though not smaller than in the radial 

 tubes of the Aulosphserida, Cii'coporida and Tuscarorida, never contains the characteristic 

 axial filament with its branches, which is constantly foimd in the latter families. 

 According to the description of R. Hertwig, the tubes are perfectly closed and have no 

 opening. I suppose, however, that a small opening always exists in the centre of the 

 rounded base, and perhaps a second on the distal apex. Otherwise the circum- 

 stance that the entu-e and well-preserved tubes become easily and constantly filled 



