To the naked eye it appears as a white moveable point; but when examined by the microscope, a tail projecting from the lower part is discovered, and a double rotatory instrument is seen, which it can conceal or expose at pleasure. It has been seen and described by most microscopical writers; but as Baker’s seems to be the most perfect description, I shall principally follow his account of it.
He discovered three species of them, two of which are included under the vorticella urceolaris. Fig. 33, 34, 35, are of the first species; Fig. 36, 37, 38, are of the second kind. The first sort, when extended, is about twice as long as it is broad. It is contained in a shell; the fore part of this is armed with four sharp teeth or points; the opposite side has no teeth, but is waved or bent in two places, like the form of a Turkish bow. At the bottom there is a hole, through which it pushes the tail. It fastens itself by this tail to any convenient substance when it intends to use its rotatory organs; but when it is floating in the water, and at all other times when not adhering to any body, it wags the tail backwards and forwards something like a dog.
We may consider it as divided into a head, thorax, and abdomen; each of which may be extended and contracted considerably: it can, by dilating all three, protrude the head beyond the shell, or by contracting them, draw the whole body within the same.
The head, when extended, divides itself into two branches, between which, another part, a kind of proboscis, is pushed out; at the end of this are two fibrils, that appear when they are at rest like a broad point, but which can be moved to and from each other very briskly with a vibratory motion, see Fig. 33.
The form and situation of the two branches are sometimes changed, the ends thereof becoming more round, and the vibratory motion is altered to a rotatory one: this alteration is represented at Fig. 34: the head also appears in this figure. The thorax is annexed to the lower part of the head; it is muscular: within it there is a moving intestine, which has been supposed to be either the lungs or the heart of the little creature, see b, Fig. 33 and 34.
A communication is formed between the thorax and the abdomen by means of a short vessel c, whose alternate contractions and dilatations occasion the abdomen to rise and fall alternately, having at the same time a sort of peristaltic motion. The food is conveyed through this vessel into the abdomen, where it is digested; it is then discharged by the anus, which is placed near the tail.
The tail has three joints, and is cleft or divided at the extremity, by which means it can better fasten itself to suitable objects. It is in general projected from the lower end of the shell, moving nimbly to and fro, serving the animal as a rudder when it is swimming, to direct its course.
When the water in which the little animal is placed is nearly dried away, or when it has a mind to compose itself to rest, it contracts the head and fore-part of the body, brings them down into the shell, and pulls the tail upwards, so that the whole of this minute creature is contained within the shell, see Fig. 35. The shell is so transparent that the terminations cannot be easily distinguished when the animal is extended; but whatever is transacted within the shell, is as plain as if there was no substance between the eye and the interior parts.
Fig. 36, 37, 38, exhibit the appearance of another species of these animals, which differs from the foregoing kind. This has also a head, a thorax, and abdomen, but then they are not separated by a gut or intermediate vessel, as in the former, but are joined immediately together, and at the place where in the first kind a moveable intestine was seen; in this a muscle, most probably the heart, may be discovered; it has a regular systole and diastole: this part is intended to be shewn at a, Fig. 36, 37, 38. Like the other, it draws the head and tail within the shell, which then appears to have six teeth or spikes on one side, and two on the other. It very seldom protrudes its head so far out as the other; sometimes the fibrillæ may be seen within the margin of the shell.
Both species carry their young in an oval integument or bag, fastened externally to the lower part of the shell, somewhere about the tail; these bags are sometimes opake at one end, and seemingly empty at the other, see d, Fig. 34: sometimes the middle is opake, with a transparent margin, see b, Fig. 36.