3° 



TUBULARIA. 



I am indebted to Dr. John Fothergill for this fpeci- 

 men : he received it from the Eaft Indies. 



Fig. d. is the natural fize, and D. andDi. the magni- 

 fied figure of a piece of it. 



'Three-celled Cell. Coralline. 



This Coralline is branched, 

 dichotomous, jointed, and 

 creeping ; the joints are near- 

 ly top-fhaped, with angles at 

 their fides ; they have three 

 cells in the front of each. 



This little Coralline, which is of a ftony femi-tranfpa- 

 rent nature, was fent from Aberdeen by the ingenious 

 Dr. David Skene. 



1 8. Cellaria ternata. 



Cellaria ramofa dicho- 

 toma articulata repens, 

 articulis angulath fub- 

 turbinattS) cellulis teniis 

 wiilateralibas. 



V. TUBULARIA. 



Animal tubulofum^ cor- 

 neuniy fimplicijfwiu?/^ vel 

 ramofum, gelatina viva 

 prceditum^ habitu pla?it<z 

 ere fc ens, bafi affix um ; a- 

 pice capitulum> tentaculo- 

 rum duabus feriebus crna- 

 tum, fujlinens ; una me- 

 dium cingens, altera ex 

 ore fefe exjerensi 



PIPE CORALLINE. 



This Pipe Coralline is an 

 animal with a horny tube, or 

 one branched into many, full 

 of a living gelatinous fub- 

 ftance, fixt by its bafe, and 

 growing in the fhape ol a 

 plant. On the top of thefe 

 tubes are little heads furnimed 

 with two rows of claws : one 

 row furrounds the middle of 

 the heads, and the other is 

 placed round the mouth. 



Ovaria 



