DEVELOPMENT OF HYDROIDS. 



59 



Fig. SO. — Polypite of 

 'Coryne ndrabUU, with a bud 

 "below a, and medusa-bud 

 -(gouopliorej at a. Much eu- 

 iargecl. — After Agaysiz. 



living Millepora, unless handled with great care, severely 

 stings the hand of the collector. 



AVe n(jw come to Ilydroids which throw oU a free naked- 

 eyed medusa from the hydrarium (Kg. 

 39). From the centre of these free 

 bell-shaped, minute jelly-fishes depends 

 a hollow, open sac called the manu- 

 brium, the cavity of which (stomach) 

 opens into usually four canals, which 

 radiate from the hollow or stomach in 

 the centre of the disk and communi- 

 cate with a canal following the margin 

 of the disk. This is 

 the water-vascular sys- 

 tem, communicating 

 directly with the gas- 

 tro-vascular cavity, or 

 stomach. Four tenta- 

 cles hang from the 

 disk, and simple eye- 

 spots and otolithic sacs (simple ears) are usu- 

 ally present and situated at regular inter- 

 vals around the edge of the disk. Such is 

 the typical form of all the fi-ee-swimming 

 HydroJds. They are said, in a few cases, 

 to possess a well-developed continuous ner- 

 Tous system, consisting of a nervous ring 

 a-round the disk (Romanes). They are bi- 

 sexual, the ovaries or spermaries being de- 

 Teloped on the radiating canals, the embryo 

 ■escaping into the surrounding water by rup- 

 turing the walls of the ovary. 



The young is at first oval, ciliated all 

 over the surface of the body, and is called a 

 planiila. The planula, as in Melicertuin, a Pig. 4o.- 

 genus allied to Campanularia, and a type 

 ■of most marine- Hydroids, at first spherical, becomes pear- 

 shaped, and after swimming about for a time attaches itsell 

 io some object. It then elongates, a horny sheath {'peri- 



-Free Medtt 

 ' Ba of Coryne. 



