34 REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [328] 



adapted for browsing ou hydroids, but yet this may not be its principal 

 food, for our observations were very few on this fish, owing to its rarity. 

 One f the most interesting of the hydroids, found in the rocky pools 

 at low-,:iter, or in other shaded places, is the Hybocodon prolifer, (Plate 

 XXXVIII, fig. 282.) This is one of the largest and most beautiful of 

 the tubularians, and is very conspicuous on account of its deep orange- 

 red color. It is by no means common, and grows only in those pools 

 where the water is pure and cool, or under the shade of overhanging 

 rocks. It usually grows singly or in groups of two or three clustered 

 together. The delicate hydrariuni of Bougainvillia superciliaris (Plate 

 XXXVII, fig. 276) is also occasionally met with in the larger tide-pools 

 near low water mark, and the small, free medusae, which are produced 

 by budding from the hydrariuni, are frequently found swimming in the 

 waters in spring. The Clava leptostyla is a beautiful and apparently 

 soft and tender species, but it grows in clusters on the fronds of Fucus 

 at low-water mark, on the most exposed shores, and withstands the 

 most powerful surf, unharmed. The colonies are bright light red in 

 color and consist of numerous hydroids arising from creeping stolon- 

 like tubes, which interlace to form the base of the colony. Each of 

 the hydroids consists of a cylindrical stem, slender at base and about 

 a quarter of an inch high, at the end of which there is a thicker, club- 

 shaped or fusiform &quot; head,&quot; covered with about fifteen to thirty, long, 

 slender tentacles, but the form both of the heads and tentacles is con 

 stantly changing, owing to their contractions. The small medusa-buds 

 are grouped in clusters below the tentacles and do not become free. 

 This species is also to be found in the pools and on the under sides of 

 large stones close to low-water mark. 



The Hydractinia polyclina is often met with covering the dead shells 

 inhabited by the hermit-crabs, whether in the pools or in deeper water 

 off shore, with a soft, velvet-like, reddish coating, which is made up of 

 hundreds of hydroids united together by their bases into a rather firm, 

 continuous layer, covered with conical points. This basal layer some 

 times not only entirely covers the shell, but extends out considerably 

 beyond the borders of the aperture, so as to increase the capacity of 

 the interior. This is no doubt a great gain to the crab, because he will not 

 be so soon compelled to exchange his shell for a larger one. Each col 

 ony of these hydroids is either male or female ; the sexes differ in depth 

 of color, the male colonies being palest. But in each colony there are 

 also many sterile individuals, who have to do the eating and digesting for 

 the whole community, while the sexual individuals attend to the repro 

 duction of the race. Farther north, as at ^ahant, Massachusetts, this 

 species often incrusts broad surfaces of the rocks in the pools, but I 

 have not observed it growing in this way south of Cape Cod ; yet in one 

 instance we dredged it growing on a rock. 



The Halecium gracile V. is frequently found growing in profusion on 

 the under side of stones, in tide-pools, and attached to oysters, dead 



