1576 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. 



4. Aulacantha cannulata, n. sp. (PI. 105, fig. 16). 



Eadial tubes cylindrical in the inner proximal half, prismatic in the outer distal half, with 

 from three to sis, usually four, prominent, thick, parallel edges, which are dentate towards the thicker 

 distal end ; their teeth short, conical, directed outwards, scarcely one-fourth as long as the thickness 

 of the tube. The edges are separated in the distal third by more or less deep furrows, like a 

 channelled column. 



Dimensions. — Length of the tubes 1'2 to 2'5, breadth 0'03 to Ol)4. 



Rahitat. — South Pacific, Stations 291 to 293, surface. 



5. Aulacantha clavata, n. sp. 



Eadial tubes more or less irregularly curved, in the inner proximal half slenderly conical, and 

 gradually tapering towards the inflated base, in the outer distal half club-shaped, armed with a few 

 (five to twenty) short conical teeth. 



Dimensions. — Length of the tubes 1"0 to 1'2, breadth in the middle part O'Ol, in the distal part 

 0-04. 



Habitat. — South Atlantic, Station 318, depth 2040 fathoms. 



6. Aulacantha Icevissima, n. sp. 



Eadial tubes cylindrical, straight, of nearly equal breadth throughout their whole length ; the 

 inner proximal end rounded, the outer distal end pointed. Surface of the tubes perfectly smooth, 

 without any teeth. The thickness and length of the simple spicula, as well as the thickness of 

 their wall, are very variable in this species. 



Dimensions. — Length of the tubes 0'5 to 4'2, breadth 0'003 to 0'02. 



Habitat. — North Atlantic, Station 253, F^rcie Channel, surface, John Murray. 



Genus 667. Atdographis,^ Haeckel, 1879, Sitzungsb. mecl.-nat. Gesellscli. Jeiia, 



Dec. 12, p. 5. 



Definition. — A u 1 a c a u t h i d a with a veil of tangential needles, and with radial 

 tubes, which bear no lateral branches, but at the distal end a verticil of simple terminal 

 branches. 



The genus Aidographis, the richest in the number of species among all Aulacanthida, 

 differs from the preceding Aulacantha, its ancestral form, in the development of simple 

 terminal branches, which form either a fork or a verticil. The branches are either 

 smooth or spiny, but not ramified as in the following genus, Auloceros. Their distal 



1 Aulographis = 1 n^mXax niyle; »v'k6s, y^m^ii- 



