The plumed polype is of a very voracious disposition, devouring a great number of small animals. If the arms, when extended, be observed attentively with the microscope, they will be found to have a constant vibratory motion; alternately bending withinside of the plume, and then rising up again. When one arm ceases its motion, the same is performed by another; thus by the perpetual agitation of the several arms, such a strong current is produced in the water, as brings the animalcula, and other minute bodies, that are floating near the polype, into its mouth, which is situated between the arms. The food, if agreeable to the creature, is swallowed; if otherwise, it is rejected by a contrary motion.
The animal may be seen very plain when it has retired within the tube. The body is about one-eighth of an inch long, without reckoning the plume, which is about the same length. It is cylindrical, and the skin is very transparent. The plume is only a continuation of this transparent skin, it is very broad in proportion to the body, and of a remarkable figure; the base is of the shape of a horseshoe; from this base the arms project, they bend rather outwards. The plume which they form, gives them a resemblance to some flowers. The arms may be compared, from their fineness and transparency, to very fine threads of glass. The base of the plume is grooved, and is fixed to the animal by the middle of the horseshoe which it forms, and it is here that there is an opening which serves as a mouth to the animal. The intestines are easily distinguished through its transparent skin; when it has just been eating, they are of a deep brown colour. Three principal parts are very visible, the oesophagus, the stomach, and the rectum.
In the inside of these animals a small oblong whitish body is formed, which is carried to the outside, and remains fixed in a perpendicular direction to the body; many of these are formed daily, and of these oval bodies new animals are produced, exactly similar to the parent.
If these minute bodies be eggs, they are of a singular kind, being destitute of any covering, and are neither membranaceous nor crustaceous; we cannot with propriety say the young ones are hatched from them; we can, however, perceive these oviform bodies to unfold themselves gradually. The developement is accomplished in a few minutes, and an animalculum appears like the parent.
Trembley amassed a great number of these eggs, and carried them from England with him, keeping them quite dry; on putting them into water, they gradually developed, and became as perfect as the tubularia from which they proceeded.
There is a very great similarity in the construction of this little creature and many of the marine polypes, who, like it, exist in tubes of the same growth with themselves.
Fig. 32 represents three tubulariæ campanulatæ or plumed polypes very much magnified, namely, one, b f a c d d e h g i, which is out of its cell; e h, the oesophagus; f g, the stomach; a f, the rectum; a c d d e, the plume, consisting of the base a e, which is but little seen, and the arms c d d, which proceed from the edges of this base; a second polype, A B I, which is within its cell, and in which the skin containing the plume is reversed. The third polype, s t u u, is a young one exhibited out of its cell; g o o, threads which are fixed at one end to the intestines of the animal, by the other to the bottom of the cell, l k.
CHAP. VIII.
OF THE ANIMALCULA INFUSORIA.
Our knowledge of the microscopic world is at present very contracted, but we know enough to give us high conceptions of its concealed wonders, and to fill us with profound astonishment at the infinite variety of forms that are made recipient of life. A few of the inhabitants of this minute world have been discovered. The figure and apparent habits of life of these, resemble so little those with which we are more acquainted, that it is often difficult to find terms to express what is represented to the eye.