84 NOTES TO THE 



(104) This manner of feciuid.iting the eggs, 

 though it seems extravagant, is n<it beyontl nature, 

 since we know, from the beautiful experiments of 

 S^allanzani, that frogs are thus fecundated, etc. 



(105) Linnaeus, System, iiatur. edit, xii, p. 

 33?.4, spec, 4; Pallas^ ElenchiLS Zooiihytor.^ p. 

 450 ; Dissertafio de infest'is viventihusy etc. j?. 85, 

 no. 4 ; Lioch, Traite de la generation, etc., xvi. 

 species de Vordr. 1, p. 38 ; Goeze, Versucheiner 

 JK^atiirgeschichte, etc. no. 3, p. £9S. Plater, Prax- 

 is tnedica, cap. 14, names it Taenia prima. 



Jlvdrij, de la generation des vers, T. 1, chap, 

 iii. art. 2, called it Taenia with thorns, (Taenia, 

 a epines,J 



Bonnet in the Memoires de Mathematiques et. 

 de Physique presentes a Vaccademie royale des sci' 

 ences, etc., T. 1, p. 418, gave it the name of Tae- 

 Tiia with short articu/ations, 



Dionis, Dissert, de Taenia, called it, Taenia 

 articidos demittens, 



Leske, Elementi di Storia naturale, etc. vol. ii, 

 p. S33, Werner, Vermium intestinaliiim, etc. p. 49, 

 have described it under the name of Taenia vulgaris. 



Bonnet, in another memoir inserted in the Jour*. 

 Tial de Physique, anno 1777? p. 26S, again gave it 

 the name of common taenia, 



(106) Memoires Mathematiques, etc., torn. i. 

 p. 478. 



(107) See pi. I, fig. v, vii, ix, xii, xiii, xiv, xv. 



(108) " Taenia lata, Candida, articulis brevissi- 

 mis, medio-nodosis, uniosculatis. Corpus longie- 



