128 VORTICELLA AND ZOOTHAMNIUM 



external stimulus (see p. 10). The slightest jar of the 

 microscope, the contact of some other organism, or even a 

 current of water produced by some free-swimming form like 

 Paramoecium, is felt directly by the bell-animalcule and 

 followed by an instantaneous change in the relative position 

 of its parts. The stalk becomes coiled into a close spiral 

 (o 1 , D 2 ) so as to have a mere fraction of its original length, 

 and the body from being bell-shaped becomes globular, the 

 disc being withdrawn and the peristome closed over it 



(D 1 , D 2 ). 



The coiling of the stalk leads us to the consideration of 

 the particular form of contractility called muscular, which 

 we have already met with in Stylonychia (p. 116). It was 

 mentioned above that while the stalk in its fully expanded 

 condition is straight, the axial fibre is not straight, but forms 

 a very open spiral, i.e., it does not lie in the centre of 

 the stalk but at any transverse section is nearer the surface 

 at one spot than elsewhere, and this point as we ascend the 

 stalk is directed successively to all points of the compass. 



Now suppose that the axial fibre undergoes a sudden con- 

 traction, that is to say, a decrease in length accompanied by 

 an increase in diameter, since as we have already seen 

 (p. 10) there is no decrease in volume in protoplasmic con- 

 traction. There will naturally follow a corresponding 

 shortening of the elastic cuticular substance which forms the 

 outer layer of the stalk. If the axial fibre were entirely 

 towards one side of the stalk, the result of the contraction 

 would be a flexure of the stalk towards that side, but as its 

 direction is spiral, the stalk is bent successively in every 

 direction, that is, is thrown into a close spiral coil. 



The axial fibre is therefore a portion of the protoplasm 

 possessing the property of contractility in a special degree : 

 in which moreover contraction takes place in a definite 



