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



stem angles of 45" to 50°, and are directed upwards, forming a thick bush. The polyps 

 are large, cylindrical, expanded at the apex, 4 to 6'5 mm. long and 2 to 3 mm. in diameter 

 at the mouth. The mouth is surrounded by eight large divergent bundles of spicules. 

 The polyps project perpendicularly from the twigs. Thej^ form short spirals on the stem, 

 which always consist of three polyps, each of which is separated by a distance of up to 

 2 mm. from the other. On the branches and twigs they are similarly arranged, only 

 towards the summit they are more closely crowded. The coenenchyma is thin, trans- 

 parent. The axis is fibrous, soft, brown, in the thinner branches and twigs yellowish. 



The spicules in the coenenchyma are bent spindles which are placed close together 

 and generally lie in the longitudinal direction of the axis. They are thickly covered 

 with sharp spines, 0*4 mm. long and 0'04 mm. in diameter. There are in addition also 

 smaller, strongly bent spicules, much thickened in the middle part, 0"2 mm. long and 

 0'18 mm. thick in the middle. In the polyps the large, spindle-shaped spicules are not 

 so regularly placed as in the other species ; it is not possible to distinguish eight rows, 

 but the calcareous spicules lie thickl)', placed over one another in various manners, and it 

 is only at the end of the calyX that they form a distinct peripheral ring. They are thickly 

 covered with fine, sharp spines, and are mostly more or less bent. They measure 1 mm. in 

 length by 0'5 to 0'04 mm. in breadth. The spicules forming the eight bundles which 

 surround the mouth reach 2 mm., and are either spindle-shaped and bent, or straight and 

 somewhat thickened at one end, 0*5 mm.; they are always strongly warty. In the 

 peripheral crown on the margin of the polyp there are triradiate spicules, 0"26 mm. in 

 length, and also knee-shaped, bent, club-like bodies which bear on the convex bend two 

 divergent processes, 0"25 to 0'05 mm. These forms call to mind those of the following 

 genera. The colour of the colony in alcohol is yellowish. 



Habitat. — Station 145, oflf Prince Edward Island; depth, 310 fathoms; bottom, 

 volcanic sand. 



Genus 2. Paramuricea, Kolliker. 



Parminiricea, Kolliker, Icon. Histiol., p. 136, 1865. 



Villuijurgia, Duch. and Mich., emend. Pddlej-, Ann. and Mag. Xat. Hist., vol. i.x. p. 187, 1882. 



Paramuricea, Verrill, emend., Bull. Mus. Comp. ZooL, vol. xi. p. 3i, 1883. 



This genus was originally established by Kolliker for some species of the old genus 

 Muricea, Lamk. Kolliker diagnosed the genus as one in which " the polyp spicules 

 formed large and well-developed opercular coverings upon the short, cylindrical calyces ; 

 the spicules sometimes conical-shaped, at other times with large prominences. The 

 coenenchyma spicules spindle-formed, with j^apilliform processes ; either shorter or longer 

 needle-like prominences projecting perpendicularly outwards or giving origin to three or 

 four stellate forms, of which one ray is tooth-shaped." 



Muricea vlacomus, Ehrbg., ViUogorgia nigrescens, Duch. and Mich., and two new 



