SYNDICTYON. 



177 



Fig. 239. 



observed on the Ilydrariiim in Maroli ; no yonng; INIodusa^ have been 

 obfserved ; the adidts attain an enonnons size, nieas- 

 nrino; more than an inch in polar diameter, as in Fig. 

 289, which is drawn tlie natural size. 



The spherosome bulges very lajiidly from the abacti- 

 nal pole (Fig. 289) till it reaches the point of junction 

 of tlie chymiferous tubes ; from there it tapers very 

 gradually towards the peripheric tube ; the chymiferous 

 tuljcs are exceedingly slender, the digestive cavity very 

 long, projecting one half its length beyond the circular 

 tube, swelling near the lower extremity, and then sud- 

 denly contracting, tapers gradually, in the form of a 

 conical projection, beyond the ovaries ; the sensitive 

 bulbs are large, the eye-specks small. The proboscis 

 and the tentacles are of a dirty-yellow color, the color 

 of the swelhng of the proboscis and of the sensitive 

 bulbs being somewhat darker. It resembles Sarsin 

 txhiilosa of the English coast moi-e than Sarsia mira- 

 hUis of New England. Found in the Straits of Rosario 

 in May, and as late as the beginning of July in the 

 Gulf of Georgia, W. T., and also in the harbor of San Francisco during 

 November. 



San Francisco, Cal. (A. Agassiz) ; Gulf of Georgia, W. T. (A. Agassiz). 



Cat. No. 48, Gulf of Georgia, W. T., May, 1859, A. Agassiz. Medusa. 



Cat. No. 49, San Francisco, Cal., March, 1860, A. Agassiz. Hydrome- 

 dusarium. 



SYNDICTYON A. Ag.^ss. 



Syndictyon A. Agass. ; in Agassiz's Cont. Nat. Hist. U. S., IV. p 340. 186-2. 



Syndictyon reticulatum A. Agass. 



Synilictyon reticulatum A. Agass. ; in Agassi2's Cont. Nat. Hist. U. S., IV. p. .^40. 1862. 



The Hydrarium (Fig. 290) resembles that of Coryne mirahiUs ; it is 

 much smaller, not being more than one tenth of an inch in height ; it 

 does not bi'anch, or only occasionally once, near the base, in very old 

 specimens. The stem is slender, the head large, club-shaped, the tenta- 

 cles short, eight or ten in number. The MedusjB develop among the 

 tentacles in the lower part of the head ; this development is similar to 

 that of Sarsia ; when the Medusa is separated it is nearly as large as 

 the whole Hydrarium, measuring about one sixteenth of an inch in 



Fig. 289. Conno rosaria, natural pize. 

 NO. II. 2.3 



