44 HISTORY OF BRITISH ZOOPHYTES. 



use of the vesicles which arc seen abundantly in many of 

 the zoophytes. Some who had observed them thought that 

 they were merely air-vessels to aid in floating the corallines, 

 like the air-vessels which answer that purpose so well in 

 many marine plants. So long as corallines were thought 

 to belong to the vegetable kingdom, these vesicles had 

 been regarded as the seed-vessels, and Ellis himself had 

 at first been disposed to regard them as such. lie now 

 discovered, however, that these vesicles were the habitations 

 of the young polypes, — that they might be regarded as cor- 

 responding to the buds proceeding from the bodies of fresh- 

 water polypes, only that, like the parent, they were defended 

 by a calcareous covering, and that when they approached 

 maturity they drop])ed off, to become independent animals, 

 of the same kind as those from which they sprang. 



Not only did Ellis fully satisfy himself that what had 

 formerly been considered vegetable productions were the 

 habitations of little animals, by which they were formed, 

 but he succeeded in rendering these little creatures per- 

 manently visible, so that they could at any time be shown 

 to those who were still sceptical as to their existence. Hi- 

 therto he had been able to exhibit, when he returned to 

 town, only the dried specimens, and as the polypes, on 



