ACTINOZOA. 



91 



CLASS II. THE ACTINOZOA. 



Ccelenterates vrith a digestive sac partially free from the body -cavity open- 

 ing into it below and held in place by six or eight mesenteries 'radiating from 

 the digestive cavity and dividing the peri-visceral space into chambers. Mouth 

 surrounded icith a circle of tentacles, which are hollmo, communicating di~ 

 redly with the ptrivisceral chambers. A sliahtly marked bilateral symmetry. 

 To the edges of the mesenteries (usually the free vnes)are attached the repro- 

 ductive glands, both 'male and female, or of one sex alone ; also the craspeda, 

 .or mesentertal filaments, which contain a large number of lasso-ceUs. Body 

 eitJier entirely Jlt'thy, or secreting a calcareous or horny coral-stock, and 

 when the species is social connected by a ccenenchyme. In some forms (sea- 

 pens) the entire colony capable of limited locomotion. No well-marked 

 nervous system, but a plexus of fusiform ganglionic cells connected by nerve- 

 fibres in the base of Actinia/is. Reproduction by self division, gemmation, 

 or by ova, the sexes being separate or united in the same individual; the 

 young undergoing a morula and gastrula condition, and tJien becoming 

 'fixed. 



Order 1. Zoantharia. Mesenteries and tentacles usually six or iu mul- 

 tiples of six, cnrallum with calcareous septa. Mesenterial fila- 

 ments abundantly developed (Astraea, Madrepora, Actinia). 



Order 2. Alcyonaria. Mesenteries and tentacles always eight in num- 

 ber. Coral-stock without true septa. Mesenterial fila- 

 ments not usually numerous Corallum usually horny, and 

 the whole colony in the Pennatulacea capable of locomo- 

 tion (Alcj'onium, Gorgonia, Pennatula, Reuilla). 



VIEW OP THE CLASSIFICATION OP THE ACTINOZOA. 



Alcyonaria. 

 (Alcyonium.) 



Zoantharia. 

 (Actinia.) 



ACTINOZOA. 



Laboratory Work. Verrill has preserved Actiniae completely ex- 

 panded by slowly adding a saturated solution of picric acid to a small 

 quantity of sea-water in which they had expanded. When dead they 

 should be transferred to a pure saturated solution of the acid, and 

 allowed to remain for from one to three hours, according to size, etc. 

 They should then be placed in alcohol, which should after a day or two 

 be renewed. Thus hardened they can be cut into sections. Corals 

 can be studied by grinding or sawing sections, and, if desirable, treated 

 as in the case of the coralluiu of the Millepores. 



