20 



Stat. (.4. Kambaragi Bay, Tanah Djampeah. Up to 32 m. Coral, coralsand. 

 Stat. 66. Bank between islands of Bahuluwang and Tambolungan, south of Saleyer. 8 to iom. 

 I u ad coral, I talimeda, Lithothamnion. 



Stat. 78. Lumu-Lumu-shoal, Bi 10 bank. 34 m. Coral and coralsand. 



Stat. ui. Muaras-reef, inner side: East coast of Borneo. 



Stat. 93. Pulu Sanguisiapo, Tawi-Tawi Islands, Sulu Archipelago. 1 2 m. Lithothamnion-bottom. 



Sand and coral. 



Stat. io6. Off Kapul Island, Sulu Archipelago. 13 m. Coral-bottom. 



Stat. 109. Off Pulu Tongkil, Sulu Archipelago. 13 m. Lithothamnion-bottom. 



Siat. [23. North Bay. Biaru Island. 36 — 27 m. Stone and Lithothamnion-bottom. 



Stat. 125. Off Sawan, Siau Island. 27 m. Stone and some Lithothamnion. 



Stat. 133. Lirung. Salibabu Island. Reef. 



Stat. 136. Ternate-anchorage. 23 m. Mud and stone. 



Stat. 155. Piapis Bay (Telok Sapira) Northwest coast of Waigeu Island. Reef. 



Stat. 240. Banda-anchorage. From 9 — 45 m. Lithothamnion bank in 18 — 36 m. 



Stat. 250. Kilsuin, West-coast of Kur Island. 20 — 45 m. Coral and Lithothamnion. 



Stat. 258. Tual-anchorage, Kei Islands. 22 m. Lithothamnion, sand and coral. 



Stat. 277. Kulewatti (Sollot) Bay, Dammer Island. Reef. 



St.it. 282. Between Nusa Besi and the N.E.-point of Timor. 27 — 54 m. Sand, coral and 

 Lithothamnion. 



Stat. 2yo,. Buka or Cyrus Bay, South-coast of Rotti Island. 34 m. Mud, coral and Litho- 

 thamnion. 



Stat. 322. 1 ' '., mile south of Tandjong Lajar, South-coast of Bawean Island. 32 m. Coral. 



In Fl. Koh Chang 1. c. I referred some small and not well developed specimens from 

 the Gulf of Siam to the above species, the only specimens of this species then known from the 

 Pacific. They resemble delicate specimens of a form from the Mediterranean and the Adriatic 

 which I proposed to name f. clavulata. 



I have afterwards referred a few other and similar specimens from the Maldives to the 

 same form of the species '). As I then remarked, the latter also agree in habit ancl structure 

 witli somewhat stunted growths from the Mediterranean and the Adriatic. The only difterence 

 appears to be that the conceptacles of cystocarps are more conical or more acute than generally 

 seen in specimens from the last named regions. As remarked, there seems to be no reason to 

 consider this aio-a as a form so differing- from the Mediterranean and Adriatic f. clavulata as 

 to be specially denominatecl. Besides, in delicate branching specimens from the said regions the 

 cystocarpic conceptacles sometimes may be even as conical as in those from the Maldives, 

 especially when they are developed in the tip of the branches, and then somewhat differing 

 from those in a coarse f. crassiuscula. 



The mentioned collection from the Maldives also contained some other and coarser 

 specimens which partly coincide with L. fruticulosum f. crassiuscula. (1. c. pi. XXIV, fig. 2), 

 partly appear to be somewhat differing (1. c. pi. XXIV, fig. 3). I have however been unable 

 to distinguish even the latter specimen from the form crassiuscula, ancl therefore I consider it 

 only to represent an extreme variation of the said form. Cp. 1. c. p. 465. 



1) M. Fosme. The Lithothamnia of the Maldives and Laccadives. — The Fauna and Geography of the Maldive and Laccadive 

 1 1 [902 Pag. 464, PI. XXIV — XXV. 



