Fig. 28 represents the hydræ stentoreæ, or funnel-polypes, fixed to the under side of a piece of some vegetable substance; they are in this figure of their natural size.

Fig. 27, the same polypes magnified; the different forms they assume are also seen here, sometimes short and thick, as at m m; long, as at n; nearly globular, as at o; extended to the full size, as at k; seen as contracted at i. The fibrillæ or little hairs may be seen in most of the attitudes except those of l.

OF THE HYDRA SOCIALIS.

[Plate XXI.] Fig. 11.

Hydra socialis mutica torosa rugosa.[117]

[117] Linn. Syst. Nat. p. 1321. No. 7.

Social hydra, bearded thick and wrinkled.

This species of hydra has been described by many writers. It is the vorticella socialis of Müller, who defines it as vort cella caudata, aggregata, clavata; disco obliquo. Müller Animalcula Infusoria, p. 304. Pallas makes it a brachionus, Pall. Zooph. 53.

In Fig. 11, these animals are represented as considerably magnified; they appear like a circle, surrounded with crowns, or ciliated heads, tied by small thin tails to a common center, from whence they advance towards the circumference, where they turn like a wheel, with a great deal of vivacity and swiftness, till they occasion a kind of whirlpool, which brings into its sphere the proper food for the polype. When one of them has been in motion for a time, it stops, and another begins; sometimes two or three may be perceived in motion together. They are often to be found separate, with the tail sticking in the mud. The body contracts and dilates very much, so as sometimes to have the appearance of a cudgel; at others, to assume almost a globular form. The young polypes of this species have been sometimes taken for the hydra stentorea.

OF THE VORTICELLÆ.