41 
on long slender foot-stalks ringed in two places, at their 
°^SiH8 and near the cells; bntthe animal possesses the power 
j 1 . corrugating the whole, and making it look annular, as in 
j. le figure of Ellis and Solander tab. 4, E. F. These, ringed 
r>Q t-st :i lks arise in an alternate manner from a hollow 
Cree ping horny tube; variously twisting over the substance 
'fhich it grows. The vesicles are ovoid, but very much 
| : ° rr 'igated transversely, and arise from the creeping trunk 
j. n a short foot-stalk. ” Polypes with twenty tentaeula of a 
'sbt colour. • 
Keeping BELL CORALLINE. C. Syringa. “ Stem 
creeping, capillary ; cells on short twisted toot-stalks, 
^ ee ply tubular, with plain even apertures, 
Creeping bell Coralline, Ellis’ Coral., p. 25, pi. 14, fig. b B. 
® r *" syringa, Turton’s Lin., vol. 4, p. 680. Stewart’s Klein., 
2. p. 444. Sort, repens, Ellis and Solander’s Zooph., 
<*,' °2. Clytia syringa, Lamouroux’s Cor. Flex., p. 203. 
atn panularia syringa, Fleming’s Brit. An,, p. 548. John- 
°Q s Brit. Zoopb., p. 155, fig. 18. 
t On the antenna? of the spider crabs, and on the 
c e!l 'ains of old corallines in company with the small climbing 
(^alline. Polperro, Goran, Fowey, Whitsaud and St. Austle 
8 conseqnence of the minute size of this and the last 
to a ' es ’ ' s necessar .V to examine them with a microscope 
0 discover their specific differences. They most commonly 
together, but this is distinguished by the shortness of 
J e tinged foot-stalk to the cells; the depth, tubuliform 
pj^acter, and stoutness of the cells. The apertures are not 
. Qlous a nd are plain and even, while those of the last 
e serrated. 
-^MPANULARIA INTERTEXTA. R. Q. c. Texture 
spongy, composed of single tubular fibres very much inter- 
*°ven with each other, not ringed; cells campanulate; 
a Pertur es 
eveD. PI. xi. 
f fQ J llis which is I believe quite new, differs so remarkably 
‘t'ist* any °* tlie kintlretl sp ecies » tllat i 1 cannot easily be 
8p * ta W it so closely resembled a very loose textured 
tjjj t-liat several specimens were laid aside for a time, 
8p ,‘ at class came under consideration. I have found many 
C*nens encrusting the Sertutaria polyzonias, Campanularia 
lea*® and other corallines from deep water about seven 
e l1c ^ u<is from the DeadmaD, in a line S.E. to S.S.W . It 
Up ^' ,s fs or surrounds the stein and branches tor about half 
b 0 jj ric h in length ; it is ovoid and formed of minute brown 
°' v tubes variously intervoven. The cells, which are 
