NOTES. 



391 



127 Strictly speaking, no individual is independent. Such is the division 

 of labor in a hive, that a single Bee, removed from the community, will soon 

 die, for its life is hound up with the whole. An individual repeats the type of 

 its kingdom, subkingdom, class, order, family, genus, and species, through its 

 whole line of descent. 



128 These definitions of the various groups are mainly taken from Agassiz. 

 They are not practically very useful, as they are not used by working natu- 

 rsdists. The kind and degree of difference entitling a group to a particular 

 rank varies greatly with the naturalist, and the part of the Animal Kingdom 

 where the group is found. Some families of Insects are separated by g;ips 

 less than those which divide genera of Mammals. 



129 The Millepore coral, so abundant in the West Indian Sea, is the work 

 of Hydroids. The surface is nearly smooth, with minute punctures. Ge- 

 genhauer, Haeckel, and others hold that the Acalephs have no body-cavity 

 at all, the internal system of canals being homologous with the intestinal 

 cavity of other animals. 



130 This digestive cavity is really homologous to the proboscis of the Jelly- 

 fish, turned in. It is lined with ectoderm. The "body-cavity" is not really 

 such, but homologous to the digestive sac of the Hydra. 



131 Among the exceptions are Tubipora, which have eight tentacles and no 

 septa, and the extinct Cyathophylla, whose septa are eight or more. 



la2 The longer septa (called primary) are the older; the shorter, secondary 

 ones, are developed afterwards. As a rule, sclerodermic corals are calcare- 

 ous, and a section is star-like ; the sclerobasic are horny and solid. The 

 latter are higher in rank. 



133 Some Star-fishes (Solaster) have twelve rays. In all Echinoderms, 

 probably, sea-water is freely admitted into the body-cavity around the viscera. 

 34 The shell is not strictly external, like the crust of a Lobster, but is 

 coated with the soft substance of the animal. 



135 Six hundred pieces have been counted in the shell alone, and twelve 

 hundred spines. The feet number about eighteen hundred. They can be 

 protruded beyond the longest spines. 



* 36 The classification of this edition maybe compared with that of the for- 

 mer by the following table, in which the order of the groups is altered to show 

 the relation more easilv. 



III. 

 MOLLUSCA. 



Former Edition. 



Class. 



4. Lnmellibranchiata. 



5. Gasteropoda. 



0. Cephalopoda. 

 3. Tunicata 



2. Brachiopoda. 



1. Polzoa. 



Class. 

 Do. 

 Do. 

 Do. 



Present Edition. 



Subkingilom. 



1. 1 V.' 



2. )> MOLLUSCA. 



3. J VII. 



TUNICATA. 



Do. 4. "I 



Do. 5. | 



1. Platyhelminthes. ! IV. 



2. Nematelminthes. [ VERMES. 



3. Rotifera. 

 6. Annelides. 



Do. 1. 



Do. 2. I VI. 



Do. 3. [ ARTHUUPODA, 



Do. 4. 



