General History of the Marine Polijzoa. 177 



I now believe that in the specimen (or specimens) on which 

 Monoporella albicans was founded the sinus was not absent, 

 but was entirely concealed by the suboral umbo, as it is, I 

 find on reexamination, in many of the cells of the other form. 

 Mnnoporella albicans therefore must merge in Schizoporella 

 aperta. 



' Annals,' August 1882 (p. 96 sep.). 



Euthyris obtecta^ sp. n. 



The larger cells with modified orifice are now known to 

 occur on many species and are no doubt subservient to repro- 

 duction, MacGillivray rightly refers Carbasea [Flustra) 

 episcopalis to this genus ; but he does not mention whether 

 it possesses the two classes of cell. 



' Annals,' March 1883 (p. 104 sep.). 



Stirpaeia, Goldstein. 



It may be a question, I think, whether tliis genus can be 

 maintained. Tlie erect segmented stem seems to be the one 

 peculiarity which separates it from Bicellaria *, with which 

 it entirely agrees so far as the zocecial characters are con- 

 cerned ; and the morphology of this structural element has 

 hardly been determined as yet with certainty. There is a 

 close resemblance between the stem of Stirparia and that of 

 the genus Kinetoskias of Koren and Danielssen, also a 

 Bicellarian form. 



Ibid. (p. 108 Sep.). 



Family Cellariidae. 



Farcimia, Pourtales. 



Farcimia appendiculata, sp. n. 



In a paper on " Tertiary Chilostomatous Bryozoa from New 

 Zealand " f Mr. Waters has identified his Membranipora 

 articulata % with the present species, and expresses an opinion 

 that if I had " decalcified " my specimens I should have taken 

 the same view. Circumstances have prevented me from 



• Busk refers Stirparia glabra (mihi) to the genus Bicellaria (' Chal- 

 lenger ' Report, part i. p. 35, pi. vi. fig. 1). 



t Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. for February 1887. 



X "fossil Chilostomatous Bryozoa from South Australia," Quart, 

 .lourii. (-Jeol. Soc, August 1882. 



