CTENOPHORA. 



under the name of Tfalfiella^) frhfoma. and of which the full description is included in this report, with 

 the permission of Mr. Ad. S. Jensen and of the Editor of the "Ingolf Expedition. By this discoverv 

 the view of the Ctenophores is upon the whole considerably widened; the Ctenophoran type, hitherto 

 regarded as rather uniform, is now shown to have a verx- considerable adaptive power. It would be 

 very singular if Tjalfiella should be the only Ctenophore which has adopted a sessile habit, and there 

 may certainly be reason to expect the discovery of new sessile forms. The difficulty of the preser- 

 vation has presumably been a main cause, why such forms have not hitherto been made known - 

 had the Tjalfiella been simply preserved in alcohol, it would also have been impossible to recognise 

 its characters. In any case it .should be recommended to look out very carefully for such forms on 



future occasions. 



The present report is divided into two mains parts, the first containing the full description of 



Tjalfiella, the second dealing with the pelagic Ctenophores of the North Atlantic. 



I) Tjalfiella from the "Tjalfe", the name of Mr. A.S.Jensen's vessel on his Greenland Expedihon. Tjalfe is a 

 renowned figure in Northern Mythology- (the companion of the good Thor on his journey to Utgard). 



* The Ctenophora collected by the "Challenger" have not been made the object of a special report. In tlie "Summary 

 of Results" are given some notes on the Ctenophores observed during the Expedition; most of them are in the form: "recorded 

 in the note-books . . . Ctenophora", sometimes the names Cydippc or Plrurobrachia, Eucharis and Beroe being named, but always 

 wiUiout indication of the species. Such notes are rather useless. Some value might be ascribed to the statement of the 

 occurrence of a species of Encharis on St. 217 (0° 39 S. 138° 55' E. ^^n 1,875; near New-Guinea), as it may be suggested to 

 have hQ:ei\ \h^ Eucharis grandiformis described by A. Agassiz and A. G. Mayer (Acalephte from the Fiji Islands. Bull. Mus. 

 Comp. Zool. 32. 1899), the only species of this genus hitherto known from the Pacific — if the identification of the genus 

 has been correct, of which there is, however, no guarantee. Also the observation, at Stat. 165 A (36°4i'S. I58°29'E. ; between 

 .AustraUa and New Zealand) of "a very long, ribbon-like, animal of a golden green colour, supposed to be a Cestum" (Sum- 

 mary of Results. I. p. 587) is worth recalling, even if it is scarcely at the present moment possible to state which species of 

 Cesius has been observed here. 



Considerably more interest, however, may l>e attached to another observation recorded in the "Summary of Results". 

 On p. 850 is mentioned from St. 217 "Dendroc;elous Planarians, with digitiform processes", and in the most interesting record 

 by Moseley on a large line of driftwood observed near New Guinea (Stat. 217) is mentioned among a number of other 

 animals here observed "a small Dendrocielous Planarian with central mouth, diffuse ovaries, a superior penis, and single 

 generative aperture (which) was in swarms upon everything, not only upon the dead matter, but all over the hving crabs''. 

 There is in this description especially one thing, which indicates that this has not been a Planarian, viz. the "superior" penis, 

 supposing "superior" to mean dorsal. I cannot but suggest that this supposed Planarian has really been Cnrloplattn : the 

 "superior penis" would then evidently have been one of the tentacles. 



On my asking Sir John Murray, whether it might be possible to get some specimens of these Planarians for 

 examination, he kindly apphed to the British Museum about the matter, and I had the pleasure to receive some specimens 

 found among Crustaceans from that station. The examination of these specimens certainly left no doubt that they were really 

 Planarians. The matter is, however, not definitely settled thereby. The specimens examined had no tentacles or processes, 

 so that they could not have been described as having "digitiform processes" or a "superior penis". It seems then not un- 

 reasonable to suppose that there have really been some Cocloplana among the Planarians, Avhich have, however, become lost 

 on account of the difficulty of preservation. 



It is, of course, impossible now to state anything definitely about this matter, but it will probably lie conceded 

 that there are here some points which seem to indicate that Moseley was really the first to observe Cocloplana, though 

 without observing its Ctenophoran nature. 



