IA HYDROIDA 



If we, therefore, like Kiihti (1913) and Stechow (1913), separate Syncorync as a genus of its 

 own, there will be insurmountable difficulties about drawing the limits. If, as is done by Stechow, 

 the limit is drawn by the production of free-swimming medusae, Coryne Loveni must normally be 

 omitted from the genus Syncorync, and a species such as Coryne Sarsi will probably have to be reck- 

 oned sometimes among the Syncorync, at other times, on the contrary, among the Coryne. If, on 

 the other hand, we follow Kiilin and draw the limits of genera between species with eumedusoid 

 gonophores and species having gonophores more strongly reduced, it may be greatly questionable 

 where, for instance, Coryne Hincksi and Coryne brevicornis ought in fact to be placed. In this case 

 as in others, the more species we learn to know more exactly, the more impossible it proves to draw 

 the limits of genera on the ground of gonophoral conditions. To this must be added that in all the 

 species of Coryne or Syncorync the colonies and the polypes are so uniform as to their appearance, 

 that they cannot with certainty be identified to species or included under one or the other of the two 

 "genera", if the gonophores are wanting or only little developed. It is, therefore, absurd to insist on 

 drawing an artificial and arbitrary line of distinction, founding on merely biological phenomena of 

 adaption. 



Coryne Sarsii (Loven) Johnston. 



1835 Syncoryna Sarsii, Loven, Bidrag til Kannedomeu af Slagterna Campanularia och Syncoryna 



p. 275, pi. 8, fig. 1—6. 

 1847 Coryne Sarsii, Johnston. A History of the British Zoophytes, p. 43. 

 Piejii Syncorync Sarsii, Saeniundsson, Bidrag til Kundskaben 0111 de islandske Hydroider II, p. 72. 



"The delicately constructed colonies attain to a height of up to 30 mm. The hydrocaulus is 

 wholly irregularly ramified with no distinct main stem; the branches form acute angles with the stem 

 or the main branch whence they proceed; both the stems and the branches are almost entirely 

 smooth with no rings nor wrinkles. The strongly contractile polype, when extended, attains to a 

 length of up to 1.5 mm., and is then almost wholly filiform ; when contracted, it is oviform or nearly 

 globular. The numerous capitate tentacles are irregularly distributed over the polype. 



The gonophores develop into medusae, which are likely to break away during the greater 

 part of the generative period of the polype; the medusa bud developes four tentacles. One or two, 

 more rarely three, gonophores occur simultaneously on the polype". 



Material : 



Iceland, Reykjavik. Shallow water (associated with small Mytilus). 



In all probability, Ssemundsson (1902, 1911) is right in including these very delicately con- 

 structed colonies under Coryne Sarsii. The occurrence of the species is boreal. But the possibility that 

 the species is frequently confused with forms nearly related, as yet precludes certain decision as to its 

 distribution. Coryne Sarsii is recorded from the coasts of Norway, Bohuslan, Denmark, Helgoland, 

 Great Britain, Iceland, and Northern France. Hartlaub (1905 a) and Jad erholm (1903), though with 

 some doubt, refer some colonies from Tierra del Fuego and from Patagonia to the same species. 



