IGO 



EUDENDRIUM EAMOSUM. 



Eudendrium tenue A. Agass. 



Fig. 250. 



This species (Fig. 250) can at 

 once be distinguished from the 

 E. (Usjxir Agass. (Fig. 249) by 

 its large ckisters of MedusjE, 

 while in the U. disjxir the Me- 

 dusae buds are always somewhat 

 scattered, and never clustered to- 

 gether, as in E. tenue. This is 

 quite a small species, the tallest 

 specimens hardly rising more than 

 an inch to an inch and a half, 

 while the E. disjKtr is a large 

 Hydroid, growing in tall stems, 

 branching but little; the E. tenue, 

 on the contrary, forms small colo- 

 nies of densely crowded individ- 

 uals, branching profusely. The color is light pinkish. 



Massachusetts Bay, Nahant (A. Agassiz) ; Buzzard's Bay, Naushou 

 (A. Agassiz). 



Cat. No. 39, Naushon, Sept. 1861, A. Agassiz. Hydi'arium. 



Cat. No. 40, Suisconset, July, 1849, L. Agassiz. Hydrarium. 



Cat. No. 41, Suisconset, July, 1849, L. Agassiz. Hydrarium. 



Cat. No. 402, Nahant, Jime 17, 1862, A. Agassiz. Hydromedusarium. 



Eudendrium ramosum McCk. 



Eudendrium ramosum McCr. Gymn. Charleston Harbor, p. 64. 

 f Eudendrium ramosum Johnst. Brit. Zooj)li., p. 4G. 



McCrady has identified this species with the English E. ramosum 

 Johnst. Specimens collected at Charleston by Professor Clark cer- 

 tainly show a great similarity to the English species, but it still 

 remains to be proved, as we do not know their development, that 

 these species are identical. 



Charleston, S. C. (McCrady). 



Cat. No. 42 Charleston, S. C, December, 1861, H. J. Clark. 



Fig. 250. A part of a male colony ; magnified. 



