560 THE PORTUGUESE MAN-OF-WAR. 



curious inhabitants of the ocean, and devours the whole body with the exception of the firm 

 cartilaginous plates. 



A conspicuous member of this class of animals is the celebrated Portuguese Man-of- 

 Wak {Phi/sal is pelagicus). 



This beautiful but most formidable acaleph is found in all the tropical seas, and never 

 fails to attract the attention of those who see it for the first time. The general shape of this 

 remarkable being is a bubble-like envelope filled with air, upon which is a membranous crest, 

 and which has a number of long tentacles hanging from one end. 



These tentacles can be protruded or withdrawn at will, and sometimes reach a consider- 

 able length. They are of different shapes, some being short, and only measuring a few inches 

 in length, while the seven or eight central tentacles will extend to a distance of several feet. 



These long tentacles are most formidably armed with stinging tentacles, too minute to be 

 seen with the naked eye, but possessing venomous powers even more noxious than those of 

 the common nettle. " It is in these appendages alone," writes Mr. I>. Bennett, " that the 

 stinging property of the Physalis resides. Every other part of the mollusk may be touched 

 with impunity, but the slkj'htest contact of the hand with the cables produces a sensation 

 as painful and protracted as the stinging of nettles; while, like the effect of that vegetable 

 poison, the skin of the injured part often presents :) white elevation or wheal. 



"Nor is the inconvenience confined to the hand ; a dull aching pain usually proceeds up 

 the arm and shoulder, and even extends to the muscles of the chest, producing an unpleasant 

 feeling of anxiety and difficulty in respiration. Washing the injured part with water rather 

 aggravates than relieves the pain, which is best remedied by friction with olive oil. The 

 cables retain their urent property long after they have been detached from the animal, and 

 their viscid secretion when received on a cloth retains the same virulent principle for many 

 days, and communicates it to other objects.'" 



It is most probable that these terrible appendages are employed for the purpose of 

 procuring food, and that they serve to entangle and kill the creatines on which the Physalis 

 lives. Several of these acalephs have been observed with the bodies of half decomposed fishes 

 entangled among the short tentacles. 



The colors of the Physalis are always beautiful, and slightly variable, both in tint and 

 intensity. The delicate pink crest can be elevated or depressed at will, and is beautifully 

 transparent, grooved vertically throughout its length. The general hue of its body is blue, 

 daking a very deep tint at the pointed end, and fading into softer hues towards the tentacles. 

 A genera] iridescence, however, plays over the body, which seems in certain lights to be 

 formed of topaz, sapphire, or aquamarine. The short fringes are beautifully colored, the 

 inner row being deep purple, and the outer row glowing crimson, as if formed of living 

 carbuncle. The larger tentacles are nearly colorless, but are banded at very small intervals 

 throughout their length, giving them the appearance of being jointed. 



It is a common trick with sailors to induce a "green hand" to pick up a floating 

 Physalis, and to make him buy a, rather dear experience at the cost of several hours' smart. 



The vesicular body seems to be permanently filled with air, the animal having no power of 

 inflating or collapsing at will. Many of these beings maybe found on the sea-shore, where 

 they have been flung by a tempest, the tentacles all decayed, but the body still inflated 

 with air. 



This is one of the most familiar objects seen in tropical waters, and it is one of the most 

 beautiful. A thin, bubble-like, pear-shaped float rests upon the water, colored a brilliant 

 indigo shading to pink. Along its upper crest is a narrow ruffle of silvery-white. Delicate 

 in the extreme is this gorgeous bubble. But on the under side, hanging in the water, is 

 a jelly-like mass of flesh, from which depend in coils, of several feet in length, the tentacular 

 organs. So low is this creature in the scale of life, it has no propelling power. The little 

 sail-like ruffle along the crest of the bladder catches the breeze, and the tiny ship seems to sail 

 before it. The adult length is about nine inches. Often these creatures are seen in great 

 numbers, bedecking the ocean far and wide with their richly-colored floats. 



