EEPORT ON THE ALCYONARIA. 193 



According to the arrangement of the polyps on the stem we can distinguish three 

 groups, which, it must be confessed, are not sharply marked off from one another, and 

 are even connected with one another by intermediate forms. They are : — 



A. Spicatw. — The terminal twigs of the colony are thick, spike-shaped lobes, upon 

 which the little polyp heads are directly and thickly placed. The general form reminds 

 one more of Alcyonium. 



B. Glomerate. — The little polyp heads are for the most part united in little bundles 

 which are placed on peduncles on the terminal twigs {Spoggodes, Gray). 



C. Divaricatie. — The little polyp heads arise singly, generally on long peduncles 

 {Spoggodia, Gray). 



These three divisions correspond essentially with those established by Klunzinger in 

 his work Die Korallenthiere des rothen Meeres (p. 36), and are to be regarded only 

 as provisional. 



A. Spicatie. 



Spongodes digitata, n. sp. (PI. XXXVI. figs. 2a, 26). 



Colony upright, consisting of a number of stems arising from a common base. The 

 stems ramify irregularly, and finally terminate in numerous finger-shaped, cylindrical 

 lobes, rounded at the end. Height of the colony, 75 mm. Thickness of one of the stems 

 at the base, 12 to 16 mm. Length of a terminal lobe, 6 to 9 mm. Thickness of the 

 same, 4 to 5 mm. The little polyp heads are overtopped by bundles of needle-like 

 spicules ; on the stem they occur isolated and scattered, on the branches they begin to 

 group themselves more closely together, and finally they completely cover the finger- 

 shaped lobes, on which they are densely crowded. The projecting portion of the polyp, 

 which corresponds to the tentacular portion and the section containing the cesophageal 

 tube, is narrower at the base, and terminates with the head-like, protruding, tentacular 

 portion. The former is surrounded by large, needle-like spicules, of which a bundle of 

 three or four is so strongly developed on one side that it projects beyond the head. 

 ■ Spicules are strongly developed in the head and tentacles. 



The ccenenchyma of the stem and branches is thickly beset with large spicules of a 

 yellow colour. These spicules are horizontally arranged, and so closely packed together 

 that no interspaces of soft tissue remain. They are stout spindles, straight or .bent, often 

 even bent into somewhat the shape of the letter /; they measure 0'9 to 1 mm. in length 

 and 0-07 to 0'08 mm. in thickness. Their surface is thickly covered with small spines. 



The bundles of spicules which project beyond the head consist of white-coloured, 

 spiny, slightly curved spindles, which often appear to be somewhat enlarged at one end ; 

 their length reaches 0'86 to 1-4 mm.; their diameter 0"12 to 0'07 mm. The pol}^ heads, 



(zooL. CHALL. ESP. — PART Lxrv.— 1888.) Sss 25 



