174 BULLETIN 104, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



ornamental character of this species nor does his description give 

 an adequate opportunity to make the identity of the two certain. 



Siphoffenerina adveiia — material examined. 



SIPHOGENERINA RAPHANUS (Parker and Jones). 



Plate 42, fig. 14, 



Uvigerina (Sagrina) raphanus Parker and Jones, Philos. Trans., vol. 155, 



1865, p. 364, pi. 18, figs. 16, 17. 

 Sagrina raphanus H. B. Brady, Rep. Voy. Challenger, Zoology, vol. 9, 

 1884, p. 585, pi. 75, figs. 21-24.— Chapman, Journ. Linn. Soc, vol. 28, 

 1900, p. 187; The Foraminifera, 1902, p. 403.— Millett, Journ. Roy. 

 Micr. Soc, 1903, p. 272. — Dakin, Rep. Ceylon Pearl Oyster Fish., vol. 

 5, 1906, p. 236, pi., fig. 11.— Chapman, Journ. Linn. Soc. Zoology, vol. 

 30, 1910, p. 415. — Heron-Allen and Earland, Trans. Zool. Soc. Lon- 

 don, vol. 20, 1915, p. 677. — Sidebottom, Jour. Roy. Micr. Soc, 1918, p. 

 148. 

 Siphogenerina (Sagrina) raphanus Egger, Abh. kou. bay. Akad. Wiss. 



Miinchen, CI. II, vol. 18, 1893, p. 317, pi. 9, fig. 86. 

 Siphogenerina raphanus Cushman, Bull. 71, U.S. Nat. Mus., pt. 3, 1913, 

 p. 108, pi. 46, figs. 1-5; Bull. 100, U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 4, 1921, p. 

 280, pi. 56, fig. 7; Publ. 311, Carnegie Inst. Washington, 1922, p. 35, 

 pi. 5, fig. 5. 

 Siphogenerina costata Schlumberger, Feuille des Jeunes Naturalists, 

 ann. 13, 1883, p. 118, fig. 13. 

 Description. — Test elongate, cylindrical, or tapering ; chambers of 

 the uniserial portion broader than long; surface marked by several 

 rather widely separated, well-developed costae, each extending 

 nearly the length of the test and not affected by the sutures; aper- 

 ture typically with a short tubular neck and well-developed flaring 

 lip. 



Length up to 1 mm. 



Distribution. — There are published Atlantic records for this 

 species as follows : " shore sands, Bermuda, West Indies, Panama " 

 (H. B. Brady); Tortugas region (Cushman). There is a single 

 specimen in the Albatross collections from D2150, in the Carribbean 

 off C; ntral America. The species is much more common in the 

 Indo-Pacific. 



It is one of the species which occurs as far westward as the 

 Kerimba Archipelago off southeastern Africa; Ceylon, as far north 

 as Southern Japan, thence across to Hawaii and Samoa, finally ap- 

 pearing in the tropical western Atlantic. 



