Prof. J. C. Schiddte on Buprestide and Elateride. 173 
Animal white; tentacula fifty to fifty-four. Calyx festooned. 
Statoblasts elliptical, yellow, with a narrow blackish ring 
dividing the cell from the narrow purple rim or annulus which 
surrounds it. The cell is beautifully reticulated externally. 
Two out of the three statoblasts observed had a slight constric- 
tion on one side, which gave them a slightly reniform outline. 
Habitat. On an old valve of Anodon cygneus, in the canal, 
Exeter, June 23, 1866. 
This appears to be a very distinct species, and is allied or, 
rather, belongs to that section of the genus to which P. emar- 
ginata belongs, viz. with a line or ridge along the upper part of 
the diaphanous tube. But the line of demarcation between the 
diaphanous portion of the tube in this species and the thick opake 
walls of the inferior half gives it, even at first sight, a very dis- 
tinct and marked appearance. Another striking peculiarity is 
that the tubes grow mostly in pairs, and are very closely adhe- 
rent to the matrix, except the polype-cell, which stands up con- 
spicuously near the end of the tube. 
Length of the coencecium 10 lines. 
EXPLANATION OF PLATE XII. 
Fig. 1. Plumatella lineata: coencecium, nat. size, or 2 inches in its longest 
diameter. 
Fig. 2. A portion of the same, enlarged, showing the animais protruded, 
and one partly withdrawn within its cell. 
Fig. 3. Statoblast. 
Fig. 4. Plumatella Limnas: ccencecium, enlarged. 
Fig. 5. Polype-cell, showing its position at the end of the tube. 
Fig. 6. Showing the true polype-cell within the ectocyst. 
Fig. 7. The polype expanded. 
Fig. 8. Statoblast. 
XXIX.— On the Classification of Buprestide and Elateride, with 
special regard to the Danish Fauna. By Prof. J.C. Scui6pre*. 
I. 
By the well-known and valuable researches of Eschscholtz (pub- 
lished in Thon’s ‘ Entomologisches Archiv,’ 11., and in Silber- 
mann’s ‘Revue Entomologique,’ vol. iv.) attention was drawn toa 
great number of hitherto unobserved points in the external 
structure of Elateride, on which he founded an artificial classifi- 
cation of that family; and since then, the remainder of Latreille’s 
Sternozi have been subjected by other entomologists to an ana- 
logous examination, resulting in the establishment of more than 
* Translated from ‘ Naturhistorisk Tidsskrift,’ ser. 3. vol. 11, Copen- 
hagen, 1865. Accompanied in the original with a plate representing the 
organs of the mouth, 
