THE SEA-SQUIRTS, 



Tunicates or Ascidians. 



\ TTACHED to rocks, sea weeds or piles of wharves, one some- 

 times finds a globular or dome-like mass of tough, gelatinous 

 consistencj', usually dull in color, and often covered with sand or 

 detritus. If the creature he touched it contracts, and a fine stream 

 of water is forced out of two openings that will be observed quite 

 close together near the highest point of the dome-like body This 

 habit has led to their being commonly designated as "sea-scpiirts." 

 Tlie older naturalists were inclined to believe that they were re- 

 lated to mollusks, but a study of their development showed con- 

 clusively that they are lowly orgauized and degenerate vertebrate- 

 like animals in which a flexible rod serves as a back-bone, although 

 it must be remembered that this rod is tough and gelatinous in con- 

 sistency — not bony. It is interesting to observe, however, that the 

 central part of the backbone of all vertebrates, from the lowest 

 fishes up to man, is at one time a flexible rod exactly similar in 

 origin and constitution to that of the tunicates. In higher forms, 

 however, this primitive rod becomes surrounded, and often 

 all but obliterated by a casing of cartilage or bone, thus greatly 

 increasing its efficiency as a supjoort for the skeleton and muscles. 

 But to return to the tunicates; no one would have supposed 

 that these xmattractive, almost shapeless creatures were primitive 

 vertebrates until their develojjment was studied, and it was discov- 

 ered that the larva is free-swimming and resembles a tadpole in hav- 

 a large head and long, lash-like tail. Moreover, we find that 

 extending a short distance down the middle of the back immedi- 

 atel)' under the skin there is a nervous tube in every way compar- 

 able with the spinal cord of vertebrates, while parallel with, and 

 lying under this tube we find a flexible, rod-like structure that is 

 evidently similar to the central core of the back bone of all 

 vertebrates. 



The head of the tunicate embryo is also interesting, for we 

 find on the dorsal side a single eye, and in front of this a primitive 



