REPORT ON THE ACTINIARIA. 81 



which is soft-membraned and smooth walled, is pretty sharply defined from 

 the bark-like section of the wall, and, like the oral disk, is inverted during con- 

 traction. Gosse formed the genus Phellia for these Actiniae, which are easily recognised 

 even by a superficial observer (Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., ser. iii. vol. ii. p. 192) ; 

 Verrill went a step further, and erected them into a special sub-family, though in so doing 

 he attached undue value to the character. 



Jourdan was the first to explain the essential nature of this formation by pointing out 

 that the bark-like layer is merely a deposit on the ectodermal epithelium, and that the 

 latter has undergone retrograde formation under this deposit so as to become an imper- 

 ceptible layer (Annales des Sciences Nat. Zool., ser. vi. t. x. p. 98). 



Verrill has made some statements about the internal structure of the PhellicB (Transact. 

 Connect. Acad., vol. i. p. 490), which refer to Phellia panamensis; the ovaries are 

 irregularly distributed on the septa, are wanting on the smaller, and present only on the 

 twelve largest. This so flatly contradicts all observations on the distribution of the repro- 

 ductive elements in the Actiniae, that Verrill must somehow have been mistaken. His 

 observations are of no use for another reason, namely, that he says nothing about the 

 relation of the septa to the oesophagus. 



Phellia pectinata, n. sp. (PI. I. fig. 7 ; PI. VI. fig. 5 ; PI. VIII. figs. 1, 2, and 10). 



The bark-like part of the wall is covered with transverse and longitudinal furrows ; 

 terminating above in twelve knobs, which are prolonged on to the inverted soft- 

 membraned section as twelve longitudinal combs ; each comb ends in a very prominent, 

 bifurcated, nose-like projection ; tentacles small, pointed, arranged in four cycles. 



Habitat.— Station 307. January 4, 1876. Lat. 49° 24' S., long. 74° 23' W. Depth, 

 147 fathoms. One specimen. 



Dimensions. — Height of the wall (taken as far as the inverted soft-membraned part), 

 2 cm. ; breadth, 1*5 cm. 



This animal, which I have incorporated as a new species in the genus Phellia, would 

 hardly be taken for an Actinia by any one who glanced at it in a contracted condition ; its 

 small body, about 2 cm. high and 1 "5 cm. broad, rather resembles the body of a Cynthia, 

 perhaps Cynthia canopus ; it has the same rough, somewhat shaggy surface, the same 

 leather-like consistency, the same oval form having an opening at the one end, whilst a 

 second opening similar to the egestive opening is naturally wanting. This constitution 

 of body is explained by the peculiar fashion in which the animal contracts itself; during 

 this process not only the oral disk and corona of tentacles, but the upper part of the wall 

 is so deeply invaginated that not the smallest part of the tentacles nor of the oral disk 

 remains externally visible. 



As in every Phellia we can distinguish two sections in the wall, a lower sec- 

 tion which does not, and an upper part which does, become invaginated. The two 



(zool. CHALL. EXP. — PART XV. — 1882.) P 11 



