4 THE ROTIFERA. 



Tlie lobes are five in number, and the cilia are like tliose of Floscularia, wliile the lobes 

 are like those of Stcjihanoccros, ha%dng the same incurved appearance towards the apex. 

 Its size is about ^- that of Stcphanoceros." If Mr. Whitelegge's specimen was full gi'owii, 

 the Australian Eotiferou would be less than half the size of the largest American 

 sjiecimen ; but of course it is not fair to judge from a solitary example — as this was. 



Flosculakia (?) CHIM.EBA, Hudsoii, sp. nov. (PI. XXXII, fig. 2). 



SP. CH. Corona a two lobed cup ; the dorsal lobe much the larger, like an over- 

 Jianijiiig hood ; the ventral slightly notched ; the edge of tJie cup fringed with seta. 

 Foot n-ith two toes. One dorsal eye. No tube. Free sivimming. 



This strange creature was discovered by Mr. V. Gunson Thorpe, in water round a 

 fountain in the Botanical Gardens at Brisbane. It was a solitary specimen. While its 

 general resemblance to a Floscule is obvious, yet it possesses characters unknown in the 

 rest of the genus, or indeed in the family of the Flosculariadce. For, first, the body 

 forms, with the foot, one continuous slender cone, terminated by two small toes ; 

 instead of being a pear-shaped body, ending in a long, narrow, toe-less foot. Next, there 

 is only one red eye, obviously situated on the dorsal surface of the hood ; instead of 

 there being two minute, deeply-sunk, cer^'ical eyes. Again, no Floscule has either a 

 niastax or gastric glands ; hut Mr. Thorpe's chinuera has two large gastric glands, and 

 an obvious mastax. To all these points of difference must be added the habit of swim- 

 ming freely ; and the result is as exasperating to classify, as it is delightful to contemplate. 



Length. About .\j inch. Habitat. Botanical Gardens, Brisbane (Thorpe). 



LiMNiAS coENUELLA, Boussclet (19G), (PL XXXII. fig. 4). 



RP. CH. Four horny processes on the dorsal surface heloio the corona; ventral 

 antennae very long, each equal in length to half the greatest width of the corojia ; tube 

 slightly tapering, generally curved (and sometimes tunsted), ringed, translucent at the 

 extremities. 



This very well marked species was discovered by Mr. Charles Eousselet,' in 

 November 1888, attached to the rootlets of a plant (Triana bogotensis) growing on the 

 surface of a hot-house tank in the gardens of the Royal Botanic Society, m Regent's 

 Park ; and I am indebted to Mr. Rousselet's courtesy for the living specimens fi'om which 

 my figures were dra\vn. The ventral antennae, which are usually fully extended, would 

 be long in any of the MeliccrtadcB, and therefore contrast strongly with the setigerous 

 stumps and pimples of annulatus, and ceratophylli. The chin projects in an elegant 

 trifid curve, and the corona has an unusually wide dorsal gap (fig. 4 b). The animal is 

 fond of liolding itself in its tube in an unusual position ; so that the plane of its corona 

 is at right angles to the longer axis of the tube. This latter is transparent and corru- 

 gated, like that of annulatus, only the corrugations are broader and shallower ; and the 

 tube itself is frequently obscured (especially in the middle) by fine granulations, and 

 small brown, circular discs. Mr. Rousselet [loc. cit.) has given some excellent drawings 

 of the tube (as well as of cornuclla itself), showing its curved form, and the curious twist 

 that it occasional!}' takes. 



Length. From ^j^ to -\, inch. Habitat. See above. 



LiMNiAS GRANULOSUS, WehcT (199). 



SP. CH. Corona formed of two great lobes, dorsal ^ cleft deep ; six processes on 

 the dorsal surface, underneath the corona; </iree antennae. Tube cylindrical, opaque, 



' Mr. Thomas Whitelegge of Sydney, N.S.W., in a list of Eotifera which he had found in his 

 neighbourhood in 1883-4, describes a Limnias in some respects similar to cornuclla. He says : " Its 

 tube is fusiform, opaque bromi and often curved. The most marked characteristic is the length of the 

 two aiitennif, which project beyond the disc, when the cilia are in full play ; and also out of the tube, 

 when the creature is retracted." 



- There is some confusion here in the terms. If by the " dorsal cleft " above (" echancrure dorsale 



