436 EEPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [730] 



expanded border, having a circle of dots near the edge ; the older or 

 secondary cells, arising from these, are rather elongated, narrow, cylin 

 drical, with slightly expanded rim, more or less bent and crooked or 

 geniculate at base, and usually with one or two irregular constrictions. 

 Many of the older cells are much elongated, and have two or three old 

 rims below, separated by distances equal to two or three times the 

 diameter. The hydroids are long, slender, with numerous long tentacles, 

 much exsert from the cells. The branchlets and gonothecse (reproduct 

 ive capsules) arise in the axils of the hydroid cells, and, like the latter, 

 the gonothecse are often secund on the branchlets. The male and female 

 capsules are different in form. The male gouothecse are oblong, sub- 

 fusiform, about three times as long as broad, obtusely rounded at the 

 end, more gradually tapered to the base ; the female gouothecpe are 

 broader, somewhat flattened, usually a little shorter, gradually expand 

 ing from the narrow base to near the distal end, which is emargiuate ; 

 the outer angle broadly rounded and slightly produced ; the inner angle 

 prolonged into a short cylindrical hydroid cell, with the edge slightly 

 everted, from which two hydroids usually protrude. Height, 75 mm to 

 150 mm ; diameter of stems, seldom more than l mm ; length of female 

 gonotheca3, about l mm ; breadth, 0.40 mm to 0.45 mm ; length of male gono- 

 thecse, l mm to 1.10 mm ; breadth, 0.30 mm to 0.40 mm ; diameter of hydro- 

 thecse, about 0.12 mm . 



Great Egg Harbor, New Jersey, on oysters, just below low-water 

 mark ; Long Island Sound, near New Haven, in 2 to 6 fathoms, abundant, 

 and also in brackish water on floating timber ; Thimble Islands, 2 to 6 

 fathoms; Buzzard s Bay and Vineyard Sound. 



This species is more nearly allied to H. lialecinum of Europe and 

 Northern New England than to any other described species. It is a 

 much more slender and delicate species, with longer joints, and narrower 

 and more elongated hydrothecaB and polyps. The female gonothecre, 

 although similar, differ in having the distal ends decidedly emarginate? 

 with the outer angle somewhat produced, though much less so than in 

 those of H. Beanii. 



ANTENNULAHIA ANTENNINA Fleming, (p. 497.) 



Brit. Anim., p. 546 ; Johnston, Brit. Zooph., ed. ii, p. 86, Plate 19, figs. 1-3 ; 

 Hincks, Brit. Hydr. Zooph., p. 280, Plate 61. Serlularia aniennina Linne&quot;, Syst. 

 Nat., ed. x, 1758; ed. xii, p. 1310. Antennularia indivisa Lamarck, Anim. sans 

 Vert., ed. ii, vol. ii, p. 156. 



Martha s Vineyard to Bay of Fundy ; northern coasts of Europe to 

 Great Britain and France. Off Gay Head, 8 fathoms ; Casco Bay, 6 to 

 30 fathoms ; Bay of Fundy, 10 to 60 fathoms, not uncommon. 



AGLAOPHENIA ARBOREA Verrill. 



Plumularia arlorea Desor, Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. iii, p. 65, 1848 ; A. 

 Agassiz, Catalogue, p. 140. 



The original specimen of this species is still preserved in the collection 



