TYPES OF CCELENTERA AURELIA AURITA. 157 



emphasises the fact that the radial symmetry is first indicated by the 

 gut pockets, and the tentacles are late in development. Goette 

 describes a quite similar process of development in certain sea- 

 anemones, and claims to have found there rudiments of septal pockets 

 and ectodermal muscles, thus confirming his view of the intimate 

 relation between the Anthozoa and Scyphomedusae. 



The larva now forms a "Hydra-tuba" or " Scyphistoma " ; it is 

 about an eighth of an inch in height. By lateral budding, or by the 

 formation of creeping stolons, it may give rise to larvae like itself. 

 The gradual widening of the central cavity renders the gullet tube 

 less obvious, and results in an increasing resemblance to the medusa 

 type. 



In late autumn, however, a more fundamental change occurs in the 

 history of the Hydra-tuba, (a) Occasionally, as has been observed by 

 Haeckel, the Scyphistoma becomes detached and converted into a free- 

 swimming Ephyra, which in turn becomes a jelly-fish, (b) Sometimes, 

 in unfavourable conditions, a furrow appears round the upper region of 

 the Scyphistoma, the upper portion is converted into an Ephyra, and 

 floats away, while the lower portion re-forms its oral region by regenera- 

 tion, and produces another Ephyra. (c] In ordinary conditions the 

 Scyphistoma elongates, and displays a succession of annular constric- 

 tions. This stage, often compared to a pile of discs or saucers, is 

 called a Strobila. Each disc is separated off in its turn as a free- 

 swimming Ephyra, which becomes a jelly-fish. The still undivided 

 basal portion may rest for a time, and then undergo further con- 

 striction. This is probably an abbreviation of the primitive mode ol 

 development. 



In the conversion of the Scyphistoma into the Ephyrse, the diverticula 

 coalesce into a general cavity, the entrances to the septal invaginations 

 probably persist as the sub-genital pits, the gastric filaments sprout out 

 from the remains of the septa, and so mark the place where the ecto- 

 dermal gullet passed into the endodermal cavity. 



The first Ephyra differs from those which come after it in bearing the 

 original tentacles of the Hydra-tuba. From its margin eight bifid lobes 

 grow out, each embracing the base of a perradial or interradial tentacle. 

 The bases of these eight tentacles become the sense organs or rhopalia. 

 The other eight adradial tentacles atrophy. On the Ephyrse which 

 follow there are at first no tentacles, only the eight bifid marginal lobes 

 which bear the sense organs in their niches. 



This development illustrates alternation of generations. From the 

 fertilised ovum a fixed asexual Scyphistoma results. This grows into a 

 Strobila, from which transverse buds or Ephyrae are liberated. Each 

 of these grows into a sexual jelly-fish, producing ova or spermatozoa. 



Relatives of Aurelia. The Medusae, or true jelly-fish, include 

 forms which agree with the Anthozoa in relative complexity of 

 structure as compared with Hydrozoa, and in the possession of 

 an ectodermal gullet, but differ in possessing ectodermal septal 

 muscles and in some histological features. If Goette's discovery of 

 rudimentary ectodermal muscles in the larvae of certain sea-anemones 

 be confirmed, however, it would greatly increase the probability of 

 a close relationship between the two sets. Among the Scyphomedusae 

 II 



