542 HISTORY OF BRITISH ZOOPHYTES. 
borough, very rare, Mr. Bean; Tynemouth, Miss E. Forster ; 
Copinstra, Lieut. Thomas, R.N. 
Several inches in height; cells oblong; aperture large 
and oval; capsules pearly and formed like a young Nervéa, 
whence the specific name. 
8. CeLLULaRia pLUMOSA, Doody. 
Hab. Not uncommon beyond low-water mark, Fleming ; 
Salcombe, Rev. T. Hincks; Hastings, M. Tumanowicz ; 
Firth of Forth, D. L., jun.; Lochryan, oyster-shells, D. L. 
Two inches high, in habit a little like Sertudaria argentea, 
but more tufted, and it is often of a pmk colour, with 
pearly operculums. 
9. CELLULARIA Pracnt, Bush. 
Hab. Boddom, Buchanness ; Peterhead, Tynemouth, Co- 
pinstra, Lieut. Thomas, R.N. 
The account of this new species I take by kind permis- 
sion from Mr. Busk’s account of it in the ‘ Annals of Na- 
tural History.’ Mr. Peach, by whom it was first observed 
to be distinct from C. eritina, remarks that the species is 
bushy, erect, attached to stones, old shells, and to other 
zoophytes, from deep water, brought up by fishermen’s lines 
off Peterhead.—“It is white, and of a delicate shining 
aspect when dry ; the branches long, slender, and straggling. 
