THE POLYZOA. 395 



parent buds are reallj one of two kinds of embryos devel- 

 oped from the impregnated ova. The other kind of embryo 

 becomes a gastrula, with a large post-oral ciliated disk, like 

 a mesotrochal annelid larva, and its ultimate fate has not yet 

 been traced. 



The Ectoprocta are divided into the Gymnolcemata^ which 

 have a circular lophophore, and no epistoma ; and the Phylac- 

 tolcematQj^ which possess an epistoma, and usually have the 

 lophophore prolonged into two lobes, so as to be horseshoe- 

 shaped ; whence the term hippocrepian applied to such Po- 

 lyzoa. 



Among the Gymiiolcemata are distinguished : the Cyclo- 

 stomata, in which the opening of the cell is round and has no 

 opercular structures ; the Ctenostomata (supra)^ and the 

 Cheilostomata (supra). 



All the Phylactol(Binata are inhabitants of fresh water ; 

 while all the Gyynnolcernata, except Paludlcella^ are marine. 



The polyzoarium of Cristatella is free and creeps about as 

 a whole ; and that of Lunulites is free, at any rate in the 

 adult condition. 



In the fresh-water Polyzoa^ the impregnated ovum gives 

 rise to a saccular planuliform embryo, which is covered external- 

 ly with cilia. From one end of this cystid^ one or more poly- 

 pides are developed from thickenings of the wall of the sac. 



In the Gymnolfematous genera Pugula, Scrupocellaria, and 

 Picellaria, the embryo is ciliated, and provided with a mouth 

 and with eye-spots. After swimming about for some time, it 

 loses its cilia, fixes itself, acquires a chitinous outer coat, and 

 becomes a mere sac or cystid, in which a polypide is developed 

 by gemmation, and gives rise to the first cell of the polyzoa- 

 rium. 



Schneider^ has shown that the anomalous Cyphonaufes, 

 which he considers to resemble Actinotrocha, and which is 

 inclosed in a bivalve shell, is the larva of Membranipora pi' 

 losa. It is provided with an intestine, and with largely de- 

 veloped ciliated motor bands. But when it attaches itself, all 

 these organs disappear, and the larva passes into the condi- 

 tion of a cystid, from which a polypide is developed, as in the 

 foregoing cases. 



* See Bumortier and Van Beneden, " Histoire Naturelle d. Pol}7)es compo- 

 s6es d'eau douce " (" M^ra. de I'Aad. Jioyale de Bruxelles," 1850)'; the mono- 

 graph of Allman cited above ; and Nitsche's " Beitrage." 



2 " Zur Entwickelungsgeschichte und svstematischen Stellung der Bryozoen 

 Und Gephvreen." (" Archiv fur mikr. Anat.," 1869.) 



