SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 
845 
Distance at noon from Lord North Island, 94 miles ; from Warren Hastings Island, 
133 miles ; and from Greenwich Island, 1485 miles. Made good 75 miles. No current. 
The following species is recorded from the trawl at this Station : — 
Macrtjea (Spence Bate, Zool. pt. 52). 
Hymenodora glauca, n.sp. One specimen ; obtained also at Station 159. 
Surface Organisms. — The following species are recorded from the surface at this 
Station : — 
Eadiolaria (Haeckel, Zool. pt. 40). 
Pleuraspis liorrida, Haeckel. 
Coscinaspis ceriopora, Haeckel. 
Acontaspis liastata, Haeckel (?). 
Psilomelissa galeata, Haeckel. 
Setlioconus trochus, Haeckel. 
Dictyomitra macilenta, Haeckel. 
In addition, the following are recorded in the note-books (February 12 to 15): — 
OsciUatoriacese, Peridinium, Pyrocystis noctiluca and Pyrocystisfusiformis, Coscinodiscus 
rex and other Diatoms, Globigerina (various species) and Pullenia in great abundance, 
Orbulina, Pidvinulina, Acanthometrse in large numbers, Acineta on the tail of a Copepod, 
Physalia (apparently different from the Atlantic species), Diphyes, Velella, and other 
Siphonophorse, SempeFs golden-haired Coelenterate larva, Sagitta, Alciopa, Terehella 
larva with otoliths, Sipunculid larvae, Planarians, Copepods, Rhabdosoma, Phronima, 
Phronimella, Zoeae of Euphausia. Ampliion, Firoloida with egg-strings, Cardiopoda, 
Atlanta and larvae, various species of Pteropods, small Cephalopod, Appendicularia, 
Salpa (two species — single and in chains), young Amphioxus and other small fishes. 
Several schools of dolphins were seen, and some fishes jumping out of the water. 
Mr. Murray observed the protoplasm in Globigerina rubra moving up and down 
the spines ; this was rendered visible by the small refrigerent particles and a thickening 
of the sarcode. The large oval-shaped symbiotic yellow cells (similar to those of the 
Eadiolaria) moved about in the fluid-sarcode, and came outside the shell, forming a thick 
layer on the surface of the shell ; some of these zooxanthellse proceeded some distance up 
the spines, and sometimes they formed into clumps of six to a dozen, and had a curious 
rotating and advancing motion, apparently independent of the fluid. Delicate 
pseudopodia were also observed in Pulvinulina. 
Moseley writes : “ The tow-net yielded a very rich harvest, being fuU of oceanic 
forms and their larvae, without any shore larvae. Pteropods were abundant, also Atlanta 
with its larvae, having four long ciliated processes cf the velum, as figured in Bronn’s 
(SUMMAEY OF RESULTS CHALL. EXP. — 1893.) 107 
STATrON 21. 5. 
Organisms from 
Surface-Uets. 
