NANOMIA CARA. 211 



ing together a community, and not a single animal, as maintained by 

 the former. The solution of this question has been considered in 

 various ways by Agassiz, Kolliker, Vogt, Leuckart, Gegenljaur, and 

 Huxley. Professor Agassiz, who was the first to show the homology 

 existing between one of these iloating eonununities and a fixed eom- 

 munity of Hjdroids such as Hydraetinia, has, it seems to me, given 

 the correct account of these animals. According to him, and the prin- 

 cipal points of this view have afterwards been proved independently 

 by Vogt, and also developed further, from Professor Agassiz's lectures, 

 by McCrady, a Siphonophore is neither a single animal, and its different 

 appendages simply organs, nor, according to the opposite and more 

 extreme view of Leuckart, does he push the polymorphism to such an 

 extent as to consider all the appendages, such as the tentacles and 

 scales, as independent individuals ; he compares one of these commu- 

 nities to the different kinds of individuals found in a Iljdractinia com- 

 mmiity, and thus shows beyond doubt that the Siphonophores are not 

 a natural order of the Acalephs, but simply different suborders of the 

 order of Ii3''droids ; the fact that they move about as free communities 

 does not separate them from the fixed Ilydroids ; it would be as un- 

 natural to remove into different orders the free swimming Halcyonoids, 

 such as Renilla, Veretillum, and the fixed Gorgonia or Ilalcyonium. 

 It has already been fully shown by Vogt that the swimming-bells of 

 Agalma and the like are only Medusa3 differing from the Ilydroid 

 Medusae in the absence of a free proboscis and of an opening commu- 

 nicating directly with the surrounding medium. The swimming-bells 

 of Nanomia are nothing but MedusaB having complicated chymiferous 

 tubes, remaining almost always attached to the community, and per- 

 forming their part of the work. They are the locomotive individuals 

 of the community ; to them is intrusted the carrying about the whole 

 of this fraternity, while different functions belong to the other indi- 

 viduals, some of them feeding the connnunity, others serving to repro- 

 duce it by budding, while others again reproduce it by laying eggs. 



The nature of the different kinas of polyps found along the axis 

 does not seem to have been correctly understood ; we can compare 

 them, in a general way, to the different kinds of individuals found in 

 a Hydraetinia community ; it seems to me that the only parts which 

 can be homologized to one of these fixed Hydroids are the float, the 

 original polyp, and the buds (top of Fig. 338) which drop off. These 

 are in reality the floating Ilydroid, and the other individuals, developed 

 as the axis or original Hydroid becomes larger, are not Polyps like the 

 original one, but Medusa? in various stages of development, having a 

 different appearance from those we are accustomed to consider as such. 

 We have, in the suborders of Siphonophoroe, communities of different 

 kinds of Medusce, instead of having communities of different kinds of 



