IIVDKOIDA II 



internodiuni, surrounded by a pair of supracalycine sarcothecse on the distal part of the internodiuni 

 and an unpaired median proximally; between this and the base of the hydrotheca arises a sarcotheca- 

 bearing branch, which bends forward over the hydrotheca, and has on its convex (outer) side a row 

 of sarcothecae. The sarcotheca-bearing branch of the basal hydrotheca developes into a secondary 

 hydrocladium of the same appearance as the primary, but somewhat finer. Also in the exterior 

 sarcothecal branches hydrothecae may be developed. The hydrothecae are fused throughout their 

 basal half with the branch; the distal portion forms an angle with the basal, and widens some- 

 what towards the aperture. The margin is furnished with 9 or n teeth; a large median proximal 

 (abcladial), beside this as a rule a couple of smaller ones, then two well marked, and finally there are 

 distally (adcladially) a pair of large teeth of the same size as the proximal, and between them a couple 

 of quite small ones. 



The gonothecse are attached by a short, often almost rudimentary stalk to the stem; viewed 

 laterally, the gonotheca is asymmetrically egg-shaped or oval, with a distal lateral opening; seen from 

 the front, they are oval, distally often broadly rounded; the aperture is round. At times there may 

 be some approach to formation of an "upper lip" above the month. 



Material : 



"Ingolf" St. 44 6i42 ( N., g^6' W., depth 545 fathoms 4,8 

 - 98 6 5 3 8' N, 2 62 7 ' W, - 138 5,9 



The new colonies brought home by the "Ingolf show that the Halicornarla pluma Broch 

 (1903 p. 8) described as distinct species is really only a somewhat older stage of Nematocarpus ramti- 

 liffnis (All man); we have now colonies showing the next stages through which they pass over to 

 the possession of secondarily branched hydrocladia (fig. XXXVII a). Here also the species retains its 

 peculiar nude posterior side, whereas the front appears even more furry than in young colonies. There 

 are certain signs which seem to indicate that a primary hydrocladium may bear several secondary 

 ones. Halicornaria pluma was established chiefly on the strength of the fact that the basal sarcotheca- 

 bearing branch of the hydrocladium has a hydrotheca, whereas the remaining sarcothecal branches 

 lack hydrothecae. The present colonies now show that this was merely the forerunner of the second- 

 ary hydrocladium, which gradually developes new hydrothecse with sarcotheca-bearing branches out- 

 side the first 1 . At the same time, however, we find a hydrotheca with its corresponding sarcothecal 

 branch developed at the second, often also at the third hydrotheca, and it is therefore highly possible 

 that in still larger colonies we may also here find developed secondary hydrocladia, showing that a 

 primary hydrocladium can bear several secondary ones. 



The gonothecs: are incompletely described both by Allman (1874 p. 477) and Broch (1903 

 p. 8) probably from imperfectly developed specimens. They are of very peculiar form (fig. XXXVII b\ 

 They are attached by a stalk which is not infrequently very short, almost rudimentary. The one 

 (adcauline) side is somewhat flattened and short, the other however, highly curved and a good deal 

 longer, so that the plane of the aperture is almost or entirely parallel with the longitudinal axis of 



1 In fig. 'XXXVII a, the secondary hydrocladium shows only one complete sarcothecal branch (the basal); this is 

 due to the fact that the two next are broken off. Ordinarily, they appear in fully normal development at every single 



hvdrotheca. 



10* 



