Pennatula. 
ZOOPHYTA. CARNOSA. 
507 
pennatuladj:. 
Gen. XXVII. PENNATULA. — Base of the body fleshy, and 
subcylindrical, supporting an oval, expanded, compressed 
head, consisting of soft processes, proceeding obliquely from 
a mid-rib, and supporting, on one side, the denticles or cells 
containing the polypi. 
68. P. phosphorea. The Sea-pen. — Stem villous, and desti- 
tute of a spine at the base of each lateral process ; colour pur- 
ple. 
Penna marina, Sib. Scot. ii. p. 28. Wab Or. p. 38 — Pennatula phos. 
Linn. Syst. 1322. Ellis., Ph. t. liii. t. xix. f. 1, 5. — P. Britannica Sol. 
Zoop. p. 61. — Penna marina, Cord. B. No. 18. Adheres to the mussel- 
baits of the fishermen, on the east coast of Scotland, not uncommon. 
The length is from 2 to 8 inches. Stem round and fleshy at the base, and 
closely set with minute spines ; compressed and grooved in the middle be- 
tween the processes, and terminating in a point. The processes commence 
about the middle of the stem, increase in length gradually, and then decrease 
in the same manner, to the point, forming, in the outline, the segment of a 
circle on each side. Along the upper side of each process, is a row of tubular 
denticles, having the margins of the mouths armed with moveable spicula. 
The polypi have cylindrical stems, with eight long tentacula, which are ca- 
pable of retiring within the denticle. 
Gen. ;^XVIII. VIRGULARIA.— Body linear, supporting, 
towards the upper extremity, sessile, lunate lobes, embrac- 
ing the stem obliquely, and bearing a row of cells on their 
margin. 
69. V. mirabilis. — Stem filiform, with alternate lobes trans- 
Pennatula mirabilis, Linn. Mus. Ad. t. xix. f. 4. (copied Phil. Trans, liii- 
t. XX. f. 17*) — Amoen. Acad. iv. p. 257- Pal. Zoop. 371. Brit. 
Misc. i. p. 51. t. xxv.—On the east and north coast of Scotland, where 
it is believed by the fishermen to have one end lodged erect in the 
mud ; in Zetland it is called the Sea-Rush. 
Length about a foot. The central bone is white, filiform, and cylindrical. 
AVhen broken across, it appears striated from the centre (like a Belemnite), 
as Lamarck found in his V. australis. On the fleshy back there is a groove 
from the ridge, on each side of which the lobes arise. These resemble a crest, 
embrace the side of the stem, and a portion of its front obliquely, and termi- 
nate in a recurrent manner, the point of one meeting with the bend of the 
higher one from the opposite side. Each lobe is subpectinated with about 
eight or ten ridges, constituting as many cells, with a simple pore on the 
margin for a polypus. 
I have ventured to unite under this species, the preceding synonimes, 
though three species are constituted by Lamarck, out of the Pennatula mira- 
bilis of Linnaeus, Pallas, and Muller. A comparison, however, of the descrip- 
