PROTOZOA. 



243 



FIG. 1ST. A Compound Monad 

 (UoeUa), X 1000. 



CLASS IY. Infusoria. 



This unassorted group of living particles derived its 

 name from the fact that they were first discovered in veg- 

 etable infusions. Every drop of 

 a stagnant pool is crowded with 

 them. They are all single and 

 microscopic, yet of various sizes, 

 the difference between the small- 

 est and largest being greater than 

 the difference between a Mouse 

 and an Elephant. Some are fixed 

 (as Vorticelld), but the majority are free, and constantly 

 in motion, propelled by countless cilia, as a galley by its 

 oars. The delicate body consists of two 

 layers of sarcode (there are no cellular 

 tissues, but the whole body represents a 

 single cell), covered by a ihembrane, or 

 skin, having one or two contractile cavi- 

 ties, and a nucleus. Food-granules can 

 often be seen. On one side is a slight 

 depression, or " mouth," leading to a 

 short, funnel-shaped throat. A mouth 

 and a rudimentary digestive cavity are 

 among the distinctive features of these 



FIG. 188. Infusorium 



(Parameciumaurelia}, ProtOZOanS. Some have a pigmeilt-Speck 

 X 300: m, mouth; v, . . . . 



con tractile vesicles ; n, the simplest sense organ and m the 



stem of Yorticella the first rudiments of 



muscle may be found. They multiply so rapidly (chiefly 



by self-division), that a Paramecium, the most common 



form, may become the parent of 1,364,000 in forty-two days. 



There are two main groups: Flagellata, or Monads, 



provided with one or two flagella, or long, bristle -like 



cilia; and Ciliata, which are furnished with numerous 



vibratile cilia. 



