190 



ECTOPLEURA. 



The Medusa is exceedingly active, moving very rapidly and inces- 

 santly. Found at Naliant in the latter part of August. 



Euphysa is not, as Professor Agassiz has stated, the generation of 

 Medusre which become separated from the base of the reproducing 

 tentacle in Hybocodon. That generation of Medus£B are identical with 

 the parent Medusa, as well as the second generation which bud froi^;! 

 the large tentacle of this first set of Medusae. 



Massachusetts Bay, Nahant (A. Agassiz). 



Cat. No. 452, Nahant, A. Agassiz. 



ECTOPLEUKA Agass. 



Ectopleura Agass. Cont. Nat. Hist. U. S., IV. p. 342. 1862. 



In this genus I would include those species of the genus Sarsia (like 

 Oceania telostyla Geg., Sarsia turricula McCrady, and Sarsia gemmi- 

 fera Forbes) which have a short digestive trunk, and in which the 

 pigment-cells are not concentrated in one mass in the sensitive bulb, 

 but are scattered irregularly through the whole swelling at the base of 

 the tentacles. 



Fig. 316. Eupliysa virgulata, seen in profile ; magnified. 



Fig. 317. Proboscis of Euphysa. a, actinostome ; o, ovaries ; ff, fatty globules ; magnified. 



Fig. 318. Actinal view of Euphysa, to show the character of the veil, i, the odd long tenta- 

 cle ; (', one of the pair of tentacles ; (", the odd small tentacle. 



Fig. 319. One of the tentacles seen in profile, to show the character of the band of pigment 

 cells, py extending along the base of the chymiferous tube from the origin of the tentacle, t'. 



