REPORT ON THE ASTEROIDEA. 385 
1. Patiria bellula, n. sp. (P]. LXIIIL. figs. 1 and 2; Pl. LXIV. figs. 5 and 6). 
Rays fivee R=49 mm.; r=18 mm. Breadth of a ray between the fifth and sixth 
infero-marginal plates, 17 mm. ; breadth near the tip, 7°5 mm. 
Rays produced and rather long, semi-cylindrical, flattened actinally, rather broad at 
the base and tapering towards the extremity, which is blunt and obtusely rounded. 
Interbrachial ares more or less rounded. Abactinal area of the disk convex. Actinal 
surface subplane or slightly convex. 
The abactinal area is covered with comparatively large and more or less convex plates, 
amongst which smaller ones are interspersed. Numerous papulz are present. The plates 
bear short, robust, subequal, papilliform spinelets which form groups. The plates on the 
outer part of the ray are larger and more distinct than elsewhere, and their shape is 
nearly circular. On the disk and the inner part of the ray they are smaller and more 
irregular, and there is a tendency for the plates, as indicated by the groups of spinelets, 
to assume here and there the crescentiform shape found in many species of Asterina. 
This character is more conspicuously shown in some examples than in others. 
The marginal plates are very small, and on the outer part of the ray the two series 
appear to alternate. The supero-marginal plates are about thirty-two or thirty-three in 
number, counting from the median interradial line to the extremity. They are covered 
with a compact group of spinelets rather smaller than those on the abactinal plates 
generally, and the form of the plates as defined by these groups is nearly square. 
The infero-marginal plates form the margin of the actinal surface, and are subequal 
in length to the plates of the superior series, but are not so high; they bear groups of 
similar spinelets. 
The armature of the adambulacral plates consists of :—(1.) A furrow series of four spine- 
lets, invested with membrane, partially united or webbed, forming a fan slightly obliquely 
placed, and high in the furrow. The spinelets are robust, cylindrical, obtusely tipped, 
and the two middle ones are usually longer than the others; sometimes only three 
spinelets are present. (2.) On the actinal surface of the plate is an obliquely placed fan of 
three or four (usually four) short, robust, papilliform spinelets, which are shorter and 
more robust than the furrow series, and radiate slightly apart. 
In the actinal interradial areas five rows of intermediate plates may be counted ; 
only two series extend to the end of the ray, the outer one becoming very small near the 
extremity; the third series extends about two-thirds of the length of the ray, and the 
remaining series are very short. All the intermediate plates bear groups of small, 
subequal, obtuse, papilliform spinelets, which are larger and more robust than those on 
the marginal plates, but rather smaller than the series of spinelets above described on 
the actinal surface of the adambulacral plates. The groups are more or less compact 
and well defined, each being distinctly spaced; about eight or nine spinelets are present 
(ZOOL. CHALL, EXP.—PART LI.—1888.) 49 
