DISTRIBUTION OF H0L0THURIAN8. 



135 



Fig. 91. — Hooks and plates of 

 Synapta Giroj'dii.— After VerriU. 



body ends in a long, tail-like prolongation ; G. arenata 

 Stimpson has fifteen four-pronged tentacles ; it is com- 

 monly thrown up on the beaches 

 of Massachusetts Bay. A deep- 

 water form, a member of the 

 abyssal fauna, is Molpadia tur- 

 gida Yerrill, which we have 

 dredged in over one hundred 

 fathoms in the Gulf of Maine, 

 and which ranges southward to 

 Florida. It has a head-end like 

 the neck of a bottle, and the end of the body suddenly con- 

 tracts into a tail, with a Yery small anus. There are fifteen 

 tentacles. 



Order 3. Pedata, or Holothurians with feet. The mem- 

 bers of the first family {DendrochirotcB) have tree-like, 

 branching tentacles, retractor muscles, without CuTieriaii 

 organs. It is represented by Thyone and Pentacta, while 

 here belong also Lophothuria Fabricii Diiben and Keren, 

 Psolus phantapus and P. squainatus, in which the body is 

 armed with heavy calcareous plates, and the feet are confined 

 to a ventral creeping disk. 



In the highest family, AspidocJiirotce, there are tentacular 

 ampullse ; the left respiratory tree is bound to the body- 

 walls, and there is a single ovary, while Cuvierian organs- 

 are present. ^oZo^Awria is the type of the group. H. eduU& 

 Lesson, of the Moluccas and Australia, and H. tremula 

 forms, when dried, the trepang sold in Chinese markets. 

 Our H. floridana has been dried and exported to China as 

 an article of food. 



In their geographical distribution the Apoda are mostly 

 boreal and arctic. Of the Pedata, the DendrochirotcB are 

 mostly northern or arctic, while the highest group, Aspi- 

 dochirotce, are mainly tropical. Certain genera [Solothwiat 

 Thyone, Psolus,Pentacta, Chirodota, and Synapta) are almost 

 cosmopolitan. 



A few forms attain a great depth, and certain abyssal 

 forms are often highly colored. One species, Synapta. 



