Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2012
Two contrasted oceanographical regions are dealt with in this paper, the fauna of the eastern Pacific being distinct from that of the Marquesas, which are the farthest outliers of the western ocean. In each of these two regions again are two divisions of markedly different ecology, physical conditions in the Galapagos being as great a contrast as could well be to those of the coast of Panama, while the Marquesas Islands differ from their neighbours farther west, which are either atolls, or high islands surrounded by broad reefs, in being without coral deposits of any considerable size, and certainly no true reefs. The corals afford a striking example of the contrast between the two main regions; in Panama the only abundant coral is Pocillopora, in the Marquesas the only “reef” is of Porites, and the other deposits depend upon this genus for their existence. Several species of Pocillopora are abundant in the Marquesas, but are all distinct from those of Panama.
page 531 note † Cf. Fox, H. M., “Cambridge Expedition to the Suez Canal,” Trans. Zool. Soc., 1926.
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page 532 note † During cold-water period only (January to April); during remainder of the year 76° to 84° F.
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page 541 note † This gorgonian is a new species, and is being described by Professor S. J. Hickson under the name Gorgonia galapagensis.
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page 543 note * But cf. the Red Sea.
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page 549 note * I owe the opportunity of examining these, and the large additions to my collections made here, to the very kind hospitality of the Rev. Père Siméon Delmas, whose large collection of Mollusca corroborates the contention that prolonged work here might modify our views on geographical distribution in oceanic islands.