4cS ANTHOZOA HYDROIDA. 



6. TuBULARiA,* Linnseus. 



Character. — Poh/pidom liorny^ fixed hy a creeping fibre^ 

 erect, fistular and unhranched, the tube filled with a semifluid 

 medulla: Polypes placed at the extremities of the tubes, non- 

 retractile, fleshy, furnished with two circles of flUform smooth 

 tentacula ; " one row surrounds the middle of the heads, and 

 the other is placed round the mouth T bulbules clustered, shortly 

 pedicled, placed within and at the base of the lower tentacula : 

 embryo sometimes in the form of a Beroe, sometimes of a 

 Hydra. 



1. T. iNDivisA, tubes clustered, arundinaceous, narrowed and 

 interwoven at the base, smooth throughout. E. Lliwyd.-j* 



Plate III. Fig. 1, 2. 



Remarkable Pea-plant, Lhwyd in Phil. Trans, abridg. vi. 73, pi. 3, fig. 1. — Adianti 

 aurei minimi facie planta marina, Raii Syn. 31, no. 4. Jussieu in Mem. Acad. 

 Roy. des Sc. 1742, p. 296, tab. 10, fig. 2. — Tubidar Coralline like oaten pipes, 

 Ellis in Phil. Trans, xlviii. tab. 17, fig. D. Phil. Trans, abridg. x. 453, pi. 10, 

 fig. D. Ellis Corall. 31, no. 2, tab. 16, fig. C, copied in Espcr Tubul. tab. 27, 

 fig. 1. — Tubularia indivisa, Lin. Syst. x. 803. Lin. Syst. 1301. EUis and 

 Soland. Zooph. 31. Berk. Sjti. i. 214. Blumeiih. Man. 272. Turt. Brit. Faun. 



* Formed from tuhuhis, a little hollow pipe. — As restricted by the above definition, 

 the genus appears to be synonymous with the Calamblla of Oken. See Schweigger, 

 Hand. p. 424. 



t Edward Lhwyd, or Lloyd, was bom in 1670, and died in July 1709. He was 

 son of Edw. Lloyd of Kid well, in Caermarthenshire ; became, when 17 years of 

 age, a student of Jesus CoU. Oxford, and, upon the resignation of Dr. Plot, was 

 appointed keeper of the Ashmolean Museum. He was distinguished amongst his 

 contemporaries for knowledge in antiquities and natural history. " He is, indeed," 

 writes Archdeacon Nicolson, afterwards Bishop of Carlisle, and very competent to give 

 an opinion, "if I may judge of him, the greatest man (at antiquities and natural 

 philosophy together) that I have had the happiness to converse with." — L^efters to 

 R. Thoreshy, F.R.S., vol. i. p. 206. Ray gratefully records his assistance in the 

 Synopsis and Hist. Plantarum ; and Petiver frequently mentions him as his 

 "worthy,'' "curious," and "generous friend." — Of his life and writings the reader 

 will find an account in Pulteney's Sketches of Botany in England, vol. ii. p. 110-116 ; 

 and some additional particulai-s in the " Analecta Scotica,^'' especially in the Second 

 Series, published at Edinburgh in 1838. See also Wood's Atken. Oxan. v. ii. 

 p. 1094 ; and Ricliardson''s Correspondence, edited by D. Turner, p. 12. The genus 

 Luidia of Edw. Forbes is dedicated to his memory. See the Hist, of Brit. Star- 

 fishes, p. 136. 



