ECHINOIDEA. I. 



53 



that it is a normal form of pedicellariae characteristic of this group of species. Of tridentate pedicel- 

 larue two kinds are found. The larger form has not been seen by Wyv. Thomson, but I have 

 found it on a fragment kept in British Museum under the name of Calveria Phormosoma, but being 

 undoubtedly an original specimen of Wyv. Thomson's Calveria fcnestrata. The edges of the blade 

 are much involuted, only the point is widened and deeply indented in the edge (PI. XIV. Fig. 32). The 

 valves are highly curved outward, so that they are wide apart when the pedicellaria is shut The 

 length of the head up to 2 mm . The other form is very varying according to its size (PI. XIV. Figs. 8, 

 17, 18, 24). Larger specimens recall to some degree the large form, but the widened part of the blade is 

 comparatively larger, the involuted part smaller; the edge of the widened part is coarsely sinuate. When 

 the pedicellaria is shut the valves are only a little apart (the figure by Wyv. Thomson. PL LXVII, 7). 

 In the very smallest ones only a quite small space below is involuted, and the edge of the upper 

 part is quite straight. All transitions between these forms are found, so that they can only be inter- 

 preted as modifications of one kind. Their neck is short, the stalk of the common structure. The 

 triphyllous pedicellarise have the cover-plate much developed, and are lengthened and narrow; the 

 edge finely serrate (PL XII. Fig. 33). - The primary spines on the actinal side are curved and end in 

 a little hoof. The tube feet as in C. hystrix arranged in three separated series; the spicules large, 

 irregular fenestrated plates, in the lower part of the tube foot arranged in four separated series; the 

 sucking disk well developed. As characteristic of this species Wyv. Thomson lays stress on the 

 large membranous interpaces between the plates; as Bell (72) has shown that this feature is very 

 varying this character is not reliable. For the present there is no other sure character than the pedi- 

 cellarise, and even if the tetradactylous ones be wanting, which seems most frequently to be the case, 

 be it now that they have fallen off, or perhaps may be quite wanting in some individuals, the tri- 

 dentate pedicellariae are sufficiently characteristic, so that no confounding can take place between this 

 species and Calveria hystrix. A separate genus must be formed for this species; I propose the name 

 of Araeosoma 1 ). -- No doubt it is this species that Agassi z (6) described as Asthenosoma Reynoldsii, 

 but later (9) retired as a synonym of A. hystrix. 



To this genus will further have to be referred A. coriacetim Ag. Of this species I have 

 examined a specimen from Chall. 51.169. This station is not enumerated by Agassiz as a locality of 

 the species, but according to the statement of Prof. Bell the determination of the animal has been 

 made by Agassiz, so that it may be taken to be due to an omission that this station has not come 

 in. - The tetradyctylous pedicellarise agree exactly with those of A. fenestratum^ so that no specific 

 difference seems to be found in this structure. They were only found on the upper side, and only a 

 few ones, as it was almost rubbed off. Of the tridentate pedicellariae I have not found the largest 

 form. The smaller form (PL XIV. Fig. 5) is especially highly developed, the head up to 2 ram long. The 

 blade is filled by a very complicated net of meshes, more developed than in A. fenestratum. As in 

 this latter, forms are also here found with almost straight edge, as well as such as are rather similar 

 to the large involuted form, and all transitions between them. Triphyllous pedicellaria; chiefly of the 

 same form as in A. fan-stratum (PL XII. Fig. 27). (The form figured of A. fenestratum with the cover- 

 plate open in the median line, is not constant; they are as commonly found with the projections 



') dpauig thin. 



