CAMPANULARIA. 165 
object, and we see the Creator’s wisdom and kindness in its 
structure. ‘This elegant microscopic species is furnished 
with a delicate joint or hinge, situated at the base of each 
little cup. This beautiful contrivance is designed, I ima- 
gine, to enable this frail zoophyte the better to elude the 
rude contact of the element by which it is surrounded, by 
permitting it to bend to a force which it cannot resist.” 
(Hassall.) 
2. CampanuLaria INTEGRA, V7. W. Saunders. (Plate XI. 
fig. 38.) 
Hab. Donmouth, parasitical on Tubularia indivisa, J. 
Macgillivray ; Hastings, W. W. Saunders; on stones and 
shells from deep water, Polperro, Mr. Couch. 
«This species, which I believe to be new, differs from the 
preceding in having cells with the rim entire, and not ser- 
rulated as in C. volubilis. With C. syringa, the only other 
British species of the genus which has a single tube for 
a stem, it can never be confounded; the denser corneous 
texture, cylindrical tubular cells, and short pedicles of C. 
syringa, are perfectly distinctive.” (J. Macgillivray.) 
I observed what I regarded as this species, on algee kindly 
sent to me by Miss 8. Beever of Coniston, which had been 
transmitted from the Isle of Man; but as the specimens had 
