Page:Scientific results HMS Challenger vol 18 part 2.djvu/110

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986
THE VOYAGE OF THE H.M.S. CHALLENGER.

ring is the shorter axis of the frontal and equatorial ring, and about half as long as their longer axis. All three rings smooth, without spines.

Dimensions.—Height of the frontal ring 0.08, breadth 0.12.

Habitat.—Central Pacific, Station 268, depth 2900 fathoms.


3. Trissocircus octostoma (Pl. 93, fig. 11).

Sagittal ring circular, smaller than the other two rings, which are both equal, elliptical, distinctly constricted at the poles of the principal and transverse axes. The axis of the circular sagittal ring is the shorter axis of the frontal and equatorial ring, about one-third shorter than their longer axis. All three rings armed with short, irregularly branched spines.

Dimensions.—Height of the frontal ring 0.1, breadth 0.12.

Habitat.—Indian Ocean, Ceylon (Belligemma), Haeckel, surface.


Subgenus 2. Tricirconium, Haeckel.

Definition.—All three rings equal, circular.


4. Trissocircus octahedrus, n. sp.

All three rings equal, circular, smooth, their rods cylindrical (in the transverse section circular). From each pole of the three equal axes arises a short conical spine; these six spines correspond to the six corners of a regular octahedron.

Dimensions.—Diameter of all three rings 0.08, thickness 0.006.

Habitat.—Central Pacific, Station 271, depth 2425 fathoms.


5. Trissocircus globus, n. sp. (Pl. 82, fig. 13).

All three rings equal, circular, thorny; their rods prismatic (in the transverse section triangular), with three sharp dentated edges and scattered branched thorns. From each pole of the three equal axes (which correspond to the three axes of a regular octahedron) arises a bunch of larger spines.

Dimensions.—Diameter of all three rings 0.12, thickness 0.01.

Habitat.—Central Pacific, Station 268, depth 2900 fathoms.


Genus 424. Trissocyclus,[1] Haeckel, 1881, Prodromus, p. 446.

Definition.Coronida with eight large, partly fenestrated gates of equal size. Skeleton composed of three complete latticed rings, perpendicular to one another.

The genus Trissocyclus differs from its nearly allied ancestral form Trissocircus only in the development of small anastomosing branches along the edges of the rings. The incomplete lattice-work, produced by these anastomoses, partly protects the eight large gates. The three rings are either of equal or of different sizes.


  1. Trissocyclus = Composed of three crossed rings; τρισσός, κύκλος.