CELLULAKTNE AND OTHER POLTZOA 303. 
shown by Ellis in his figs. B and D. Hassall later (184y, A. M. N. H. xi.. 
p. 112) altered the name of his species to F. spatliulosa. 
In regarding Cellularia Jistulosa as the genotype of the genus I um obliged 
to accept the following synonymy : — 
1 . Cellaria pisttilosa (L.). 
Larger Bugle Coralline, Ellis, 1755, p. 46, pi. 23. figs, a, A-D. 
Eschara Jistulosa, L. 1758, p. 804. 
Cellularia salicornia (pars), Pallas, 1766, p. 61. 
Tubularia fistulosa, L. 1767, p. 1302. 
Cellularia farciminoides, Ellis and Solander, 1786, p. 26. 
Tubularia salicornis (Jistulosa] (Cellaria salicornea, Pall.), Esper, between 
1805 and 1810, Pflanzenth. iii. p. 103, Tubularia, pi. 2. figs. 1-4 (figures 
poor, but Ellis cited in synonymy). 
Salicornaria diclwtoma, Schweigger, 1819, Tab. 8 ; 1820, p. 428. 
Fareimia sinuosa, Hassall, 1840, A. M. N. H. vi. p. 172, pi. 6. figs. 1, 2. 
Farcimia spatliulosa, Hassall, 1843, A. M. N. H. si. p. 112. 
Cellaria sinuosa, Hincks, 1880, p. 109. 
(nee Cellaria Jistulosa, Hinoks, 1880, p. 106 ; and of other authors.) 
2. Cellaria salicornia (Pallas). 
Cellularia salicornia (pars), Pallas, 1766, p. 61. 
? Cellaria salicornioides, Lamouroux, 1816, p. 127. 
Salicornaria farciminoides, Johnston, 1847, p. 365. 
Cellaria Jistulosa, Hincks, 1880, p. 106 ; et auctt. 
Pallas divided C salicornia into two Sections: — (a) the larger Bugle 
Coralline, as shown by his citation of Ellis, PI. xxiii.; (/3) a more slender 
form, characterized in his synonymy as "subtilior" and "tenuior," in contrast 
with "crassior" of his first Section. He gives Eschara Jistulosa, L., as a 
synonym of /j, but this was not admissible, in view of Linnaeus' citations of 
Ellis' figure of the larger Bugle Coralline and of the " Corallina fistulosa 
fragilis crassior " of Bauhin and Cherler, emphasizing the fact that he had 
the coarser form in mind. This conclusion is not modified by reference to 
Linnaeus' "Fauna Svecica," 1761, no. 2232, which Pallas wrongly cites as 
2234. Pallas includes Ellis "Angi. Bugle Coralline" at the end of his 
Sect. /3, and this may be taken as the determining factor. As his trivial name 
is not applicable to the larger Bugle Coralline, it may be used for the smaller 
form. The adoption o£ G. salicornioides for this species would be open to some 
uncertainty, as though Lamouroux also had a slender species in view, the 
locality, presumably of specimens in his own collection, is given as Mediter- 
ranean. This suggests the possibility that his specimen, if it exists, may 
prove to belong to G. (Nellia) johnsoni. Busk (1858, Q. J. M. S. vi. p, 125), the 
typical locality of which is Madeira, and not to G. Jistulosa, auctt. 
Gellarina, Van Beneden, 1848, Bull. Acad. Roy. Belg. xv. 1, p. 70. — Genosyntypes,. 
G. gracilis and G. scabra, Van Ben., n. spp., and Grisia delilii, Audouin, 1826, 
p. 242. Norman (1903, A. M.N.H. (7) xi. p. 579), who had examined a 
fragment of Van Beneden's type-specimen of the first species, described it as ■ 
