TUNIC AT A. 



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respectively, at the same time the arteries are changed into veins and 

 the veins mto arteries, and this in consequence of the current which 

 traverses these canals changing its direction after certain contractions 

 of the heart. 



Simple as is their organisation, the Tunicata have a nervous system. 

 It is a single ganglion, connected with divers small threads. The 

 organs of sensation present tlierasehe.s in a very rudimentary fashion, 



for after very minute search, eyes have been found. Tlie Tunicates 

 are propagated by budding, and also from eggs. The young are 

 subject to some very curious metamorphoses, some particulars of 

 which will be given farther on. 



Some species of the Tunicates are free, some are united to others 

 in a manner more or less intimate. Hence their division into the 

 three groups of simple, social, and compound Tunicates. 



The genus Ascidia is one of the best known among the simple 

 Tunicates. The term is derived from the Greek word ao-«iSio^, 

 leather bottle, and it has, as indicated by the name, the shape of a 

 bottle or purse. The analogy becomes more evident v/hcn it is con- 

 sidered that these creatures are habitually filled with water, which 

 can be expelled by very slight pressure. 



Simple Tunicates attach themselves, each individual singly, to 



