[Plate XXII.] Fig. 25, 26.
Vorticella composita, floribus muticis obovatis; tentaculis bigeminis, stirpe ramosa. Compound, with beardless oval florets, two double arms, the stem branched.
It is somewhat of a pear shape, the base is pellucid, the top truncated, the lateral arms, which are a pair on each side, cannot be distinguished without some attention; they are sometimes to be seen disengaged from the pedicle, and rolling swiftly in a kind of circle.
VORTICELLA CRATÆGARIA.
[Plate XXII.] Fig. 40.
Vorticella composita, floribus muticis globosis; tentaculis binis, stirpe ramosa. Compound, with globous naked florets, two tentacules, and a branched stem.
These vorticellæ are to be found in the month of April, both in the mud, and upon the tail of the monoculus quadricornis; they are generally heaped together in the manner in which they are represented in the figure; they are of a spherical form, and united to one common stalk. They are also often to be found without any pedicle. The body is rather contracted; the aperture is circular, and surrounded with a marked margin; it has two small arms. With a deep magnifier, a vehement rotatory motion may be seen. They sometimes separate from the community, and go forwards in a kind of spiral line, and then in a little time come back again to the rest.
The figure represents a parcel of these vorticellæ united together.
Among the other authorities for this animal, Linnæus refers to Baker’s description of the mulberry insect, “Employment for the Microscope,” p. 348, which, as it differs a little from the preceding account, we shall insert here. That from which his drawing was made, and which he has described, was found in a ditch near Norwich; he called it the mulberry insect, from the resemblance it bore to that fruit; though the protuberances that stand out round it are more globular than those of a mulberry. It is to be seen rolling about from one place to another, and is probably a congeries of animalcula; they are to be met with in different numbers of knobs or protuberances, some having fifty or sixty, others more or less, down to four or five. The manner of moving is the same in all. They are generally of a pale yellow.