104 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGEE. 



space below covered with thin scales sparsely set with small grains, which stand also on 

 the margin. Two large genital openings, extending from the outer corners of mouth 

 shield to margin of disk. On first joint, outside disk, four sharp slender arm spines, 

 placed high on side arm plate, the uj^permost one as long as an arm joint, the others 

 progressively shorter ; on joints beyond there are only two short spines. One large 

 rounded tentacle scale on the inner edge of each tentacle pore ; the second pair of mouth 

 tentacles have a wide flap-like scale hinged on the side mouth shield, and enclosed by the 

 wide outer mouth papilla3. Colour in alcohol, very light grey. 



This is one of the very few deep-sea species that have a loose granulation on the disk. 



Other specimens had the disk scales more regularly disposed than in fig. 13, and the 

 radial shields pear-seed shape with an angle inward. 



Station 218.— March 1, 1875; lat. 2° 33' S., long. 144° 4' E. ; 1070 fathoms; 

 globigerina ooze. 



Ophiopyren. 

 OpMopijren, Lym., Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. v., part 7, 1878. 



Disk granulated. Teeth ; no tooth papillse ; numerous mouth papillte arranged in a 

 close line. Mouth frames long and conspicuous. Side mouth shields smalP and widely 

 separated by the mouth shield. Under arm plates divided in two parts by a crease or 

 joint. Arm spines standing on outer edge of side arm plates. Two genital openings in 

 each interbrachial space. 



Ophioinjreyi stands, perhaps, near Pectimira, from which it is distinguished by the 

 divided under arm plates and the tendency to minute grain-like papillse along the genital 

 opening. The peculiar division of the under arm plates by a crease or soldered joint rises 

 in this way ; near the tip of the arm the inner piece of the plate occupies most of the 

 space, under the form of a long narrow plate having a sharp angle without, where are 

 the tentacle pores bordered l)y a narrow rim, and this rim, growing gradually wider 

 and thicker, forms the outer piece as it appears near the base of the ai'm. 



Besides delicate imbricated scales, the disk is covered by flat, nearly semicircular, 

 closely joined radial shields, to which are joined slender, rounded, slightly clubbed, genital 

 plates, with a thin, blade-like genital scale. The arm bones, beyond the disk have an 

 outer apophysis like that of Ophiopilax. But the most striking feature is the double 

 peristomial plate, one half stretching on either side, as a long narrow strip, from the outer 

 corner of the mouth frame, to the centre of the mouth angle. 



See Plate XXXIX. figs. 4-6. 



^ Their strict homology with the wide arm phites is very phiin in this genus, especially in Ophiopyren longispinus. 



