392 THE ANATOMY OF IXVERTERBATED ANIMALS. 



The single nervous ganglion is situated, as has been 

 stated, between the oral and the anal apertures. In Seria- 

 laria, Scrupocellaria, and some other genera, nervous cords 

 and plexuses connecting the ganglia of the several polypides, 

 and constituting what F. Mtiller 1 terms a "colonial nervous 

 system," have been described. But it is not yet certain that 

 these cords and plexuses are really nerves. It is doubtful if 

 there are any special organs of sense, unless a lobed process 

 — the epistoma — which overhangs the mouth in many fresh- 

 water Polyzoa, be of this nature. The ectoderm of that region 

 of the body which lies immediately beneath the tentacula is 

 always soft and flexible ; and when the lophophore is re- 

 tracted, becomes invaginated, so as to form a sheath, by which 

 the tentacles are protected. Sometimes, as in the Ctenosto- 

 mata,* this sheath is surrounded by a circle of chitinous fila- 

 ments, which, when the tentacles are retracted, furnish a pro- 

 tective outer covering to them. And, sometimes, as in the 

 Cheilostornata* part of the ectocyst of the polype cell is dis- 

 posed in such a manner as to constitute a movable lid, which 



Fig. 114. — ScrupoceUaria f&rox.—k small portion of a polyzoariuui, showing the 

 vibracula (a). (After Busk.) 4 



1 " Archiv iur Anatomie," 1860. 



2 Farre, " Observations on the Minute Structure of some of the Higher Forms 

 of Polypi" (" Phil. Trans.," 1837>. Reichert, "Ueber Zoobotryon pellucidus" 

 (" Abh. d. konisrl. Akad. der Wissenschaften," Berlin, 1869). 



3 Busk, " Catalogue of the Marine Polyzoa in the British Museuin : Cheilo- 

 stomata," 1 852-' 54. See for this group Nitsche's recent important "Beitrage zur 

 Kenntniss der Bryozoen" (ZeitseJirift fur wiss. Zoologie, 1869-'71). 



4 "Catalogue of Marine Polyzoa," 1852. 



