REPORT ON THE RADIOLARIA. loSS 



or meridioual rows ami couceiitiic horizontal verticils. The branches are irregularly curved, twice to 

 four times as long as the distal end of the tube, armed with two opposite rows of lateral denticles, 

 and at the distal end witli a spathilla of six radial teeth. 



Dimensions. — Length of the tubes 1-5 to I'S, breadth 0-02 to 0-04; branches 0-1 to 015 long. 



Habitat. — North Pacific, Stations 25.3 and 254, depth 3025 to 3125 fathoms. 



26. Aulogvaphis candelabrum, n. sp. (PI. 103, fig. 1). 



Radial tubes club-shaped, straight, thickened towards the distal end and constricted beyond the 

 ovate, inflated, terminal knob. This knob is similar to a candelabrum and bears a corona of six to 

 nine strongly curved terminal branches, which are eight to ten times as long as the tube is broad, 

 armed with scattered lateral denticles, and with a spathilla of five to seven radial teeth. 



Dimensions. — Length of the tubes 1'6 to 2'4, breadth 0"03 to 0'05 ; branches 0'2 to 0'3 long. 



Habitat. — South-east Pacific (off Juan Fernandez), Station 300, depth 1375 fathoms. 



Genus 668. Anloceros} n. gen. 



Definition. — A ulacantliida with a veil of tangential needles, and with radial 

 tubes, which bear no lateral branches, luit at the distal end a verticil of ramified or 

 forked terminal branches. 



The genus Auloceros differs fi'om the preceding closely allied Aulographis, its 

 ancestral form, in the ramification of the verticillate terminal branches. They are 

 either simply forked or again ramified, and their distal ends are either simply pointed 

 or armed with a terminal spathilla, or a Kttle crown of recurved teeth. Some forms of 

 this genus belong to the most elegant and graceful Ph^eodaria, as the Auloceros elegans 

 figured, which I observed living in the Indian Ocean. 



Subgenus 1. Aulocercea, Haeckel. 



Definition. — Distal ends of the terminal branches pointed, smooth, without spathiUa 

 (or corona of radiate denticles). 



1. Auloceros furcosus, n. sp. (PI. 102, figs. 2—6). 



Radial tubes slender, spindle-shaped or nearly cylindrical, more or less tapering towards the 

 two ends. Terminal branches slender, curved, twice to four times as long as the tube is broad, 

 very variable in number (usually two or three, rarely four, five, or six ; compare figs. 2-6), once 

 or twice forked ; the secondary branches are short, irregular, and pointed. No terminal spathillas. 



• Atdoceros = Tubular horn ; avhic, xif^as. 



