140 



ZOOLOGY. 



The mouth is situated on a disk (lophopJiore, Fig. 97, J3), 

 bearing the tentacles, which are hollow processes of the 

 body-walls, communicating with the body-cavity, the blood 

 flowing into them, there being aerated, while they are exter- 

 nally ciliated. They serve both to catch food and for respir- 

 ation as makeshift gills. Hyatt states that the tentacles are 

 used not only to catch the prey, but for a multitude of other 

 offices. They are each capable of in- 

 dependent motion, and may be twisted 

 or turned in any direction ; bending 

 inwards, they take up and discard 

 objectionable matter, or push down 

 into the stomach and clear the 

 oesophagus of food too small to be 

 acted upon by the parietal muscles. 

 They are also employed offensively in 

 striking an intrusive neighbor, and 

 their tactile power, sensitive to the 

 slightest unusual vibration in the 

 water, warns the polypide of the ap- 

 proach of danger. 



The digestive canal hangs free in 

 the body-cavity, only attached by the 

 mouth and anus to the walls of the 

 body. It consists of a pharynx, a 

 large stomach, and an intestine which 

 lies by the side of the pharynx, since 

 the canal has a simple deep dorsal 

 cniae v 'onophophoreToe, l oeso- flexure, the vent being situated on 



pha^us; v, stomach: r, intes- , , , , . . , .-, 



tine; a, anus; i. cell; x, pos- the dorsal or cardiac side, near tne 



terior, x 1 . anterior, cord, at , , TT n .1 i j.- j 



the insertion of which into mouth. Usually the stomach is tied 

 ] by a sort of ligament (funiculus) to 

 I a point on the body-walls, near the 



.^Si^-S^SSSr mouth - The nervous s J stem is rep- 

 resented by a double ganglion form- 

 ing a single mass situated between the mouth and vent; it 

 is highly contractile and changeable in form. There is no 

 heart and no circulatory apparatus. The sexes are united 

 in a single polypide, the glands forming masses growing on 



B, Plumatell 

 fi-uticosa. br, tentacular bran- 



