THE MORPHOLOGICAL COMPOSITION OF ANIM,:VLS. 



95 



generally they are numerous.* A considerable 



liiatus occurs between this phase of integration and the next 

 higher phase which we meet with; but it is not greater 

 than the hiatus between the types of the Annuloida and the 

 Annelida, which present the two phases. Though it is 

 doubtful whether separation of single segments occm-s among 

 the Annelida, yet very often we find strings of segments, 

 arising by repeated longitudinal budding, which after reach- 

 ing certain lengths undergo spontaneous fission : in some 

 cases doing this so as to form two or more similar strings 

 of segments constituting independent individuals ; and in 

 other cases doing it so that the segments spontaneously 

 gi^parated are but a small part of the string. Thus a Si/lli.s, 

 Fig. 168, after reaching a certain length, begins to trans- 







form itself into two individuals . one of the posterior seg- 

 ments develops into a head, and simultaneously narrows its 

 connexion with the preceding segments, from which it 



* I find that the reasons for regarding the segment of a Tania as answering 

 to an individual of the second order of aggregation, are much stronger than I sup- 

 posed when writing the above. Van Eeneden says : — " Le Proglottis (segment) 

 ayant acquis tout son developpement, se detache ordinairement de la colonic el 

 continue encore h. croitre dans I'intestin du merae animal ; il change meme sou- 

 vent de forme et semble done d'une nouveUe vie ; ses angles s'effacent, tout le corps 

 s'arrondit, et il nage comme une Planaire au milieu des iiuscosites intestiualeo ' 

 80" 



