FIRST LECTURE. BS 



Pallas , J^ordische Beytrage, S Band. p. 77? must 

 probably be so many of tiie future embrios of the 

 ovaries. 



(91) See-i^]. II, fig. ii, a b. 



(9.e) See pi. II, fig. iii. 



(93) Alternate papillae. See pi. I. fig. iii. 



(94) Irregular papillae. See pi. II, fig. i. 



(95) Maladies des enfans, etc. p. 500. 



(96) See note 88. 



(97) Versiicheiner J^atiirgescliichte, etc. p. S74. 

 This celebrated observer aflBrms, that he found a 

 taenia sucking, and was thus assured that the lat- 

 teral papillae of this worm serve also for nutrition. 

 Rosenstein, Traite des maladies des enfaus, p. 

 30S, had already remarked, that this taenia attach- 

 es itself firmly to the parietes of the intestines with 

 its papillae, which lie considered as absorbing ves-' 

 sels. 



(9^) See note 88. 



(9y) Except Vallisneri and Linnaeus, they 

 took the ovaries of the taeniae for so many chy- 

 lous vessels, their eggs for large and small glo- 

 bules of fat. 



(100) See § YIII. 



(101} JSTeve JVordische Beytrage, 1 Band, § I, 



p. m. 



(103) Vermium intestinalium, etc. p. dS3, tab, 

 t>, fig. 37. 



(103) See §, VIII, Bianchi, de generatione 

 vermium, p. fidS, was one of the first to assert, that 

 each articulation of the taenia was hermaphrodite. 



