(2) Some of the median buds become foster forms ("phorozooids"), which, like the preceding trophozooids, do not become sexually mature, but, unlike them, are eventually set free as cask-shaped bodies having the Doliolum appearance, with eight encircling muscle-bands, and having, moreover, a ventral outgrowth (not a stolon), which is formed of the stalk by which the body was formerly attached to the dorsal process of the oozooid. On this ventral outgrowth the "gonozooids" (3) are attached while still very young buds, and after the phorozooids are set free these reproductive forms gradually attain their complete development, become sexually mature, and are eventually separated off, finally losing all trace of their temporary connexion with the foster-forms. They resemble the foster-forms in having a cask-shaped body with eight muscle-bands, but differ in the absence of a ventral process, and in having the sexual reproductive organs fully developed.
Occurrence.—The best-known member of the genus is Doliolum tritonis, Herdman, which was captured in the tow-nets in thousands by Sir John Murray during the cruise of H.M.S. "Triton" in the summer of 1882 in the North Atlantic. Since then that species, or the closely allied D. nationalis, Borgert, have been found on more than one occasion in the English Channel and other parts of our south-west coast, and so Doliolum may be regarded as an occasional member of the British surface fauna.
It is probable that the occasional phenomenal swarms of Doliolum which have been met with in summer in the North Atlantic are a result of the curious life-history which, under favourable circumstances, allows of a small number of oozooids producing from minute buds an enormous number of phorozooids and gonozooids.
As the result of the careful quantitative work of the German "Plankton" expedition, Borgert thinks that the temperature of the water has more to do with both the horizontal and the vertical distribution of these Thaliacea in the sea than any other factor.
Other Genera.—Anchinia, of which only one species is known, A. rubra, Vogt, from the Mediterranean, has the sexual forms permanently attached to portions of the dorsal outgrowth from the body of the unknown oozooid ("nurse"). The stolon is probably much longer than in Doliolum, and curves round so as to reach and lie along the dorsal outgrowth, upon which it places the buds.
The body of the adult is elongated dorso-ventrally. The test is well developed and contains branched cells. The musculature is not so well developed as in Doliolum. There are two circular bands at the anterior end, two at the posterior, and two muscles on the middle of the body, which unite to form the characteristic S-shaped lateral bands. The stigmata are confined to the obliquely-placed posterior end of the branchial sac. The alimentary canal forms a U-shaped curve. The reproductive organs are placed on the right side of the body. The life-history is still imperfectly known. As in the case of Doliolum the sexual generation is polymorphic, and has three forms, two of which remain in a rudimentary condition so far as the reproductive organs are concerned. They are known as the first and second sterile forms, or "trophozooids." In Anchinia, however, the three forms do not occur, so far as we know, together at the same time on the one outgrowth, but are produced successively, or in different regions, the reproductive forms of the sexual generation being independent of the "foster-forms."[[106]]
The third genus, Dolchinia, contains also only a single species, D. mirabilis, found by Korotneff[[107]] in the Gulf of Naples. It must have three different forms in its life-history—oozooid, phorozooid, and gonozooid, but the first of these is still unknown. On what must be body processes detached from the oozooid are found phorozooids somewhat like those of Doliolum, bearing sexual forms attached to ventral stalks. Dolchinia is intermediate on the whole between Anchinia, the most simple member of the family, and Doliolum the most complex; and may eventually come to be united with the latter genus.
Sub-Order 2. Hemimyaria.
Free-swimming pelagic forms which exhibit alternation of generations in their life-history, and in the sexual condition form colonies. The body is more or less fusiform, with the long axis antero-posterior, and the branchial and atrial apertures nearly terminal and opposite. The test is well developed but transparent. The musculature of the body-wall is in the form of a series of transversely-running bands which do not usually form complete independent rings as in the Cyclomyaria. These partially-encircling muscles in the Salpidae (see Fig. 61, m.b) are probably to be regarded as modified branchial and atrial sphincters which have spread over the intervening body. The branchial and peribranchial (cloacal) cavities form a continuous space in the interior of the body, opening externally at the ends by the branchial and atrial apertures, and traversed obliquely from the dorsal and anterior to the ventral and posterior end by a long narrow vascular ciliated band, which represents the dorsal lamina, the dorsal blood-sinus, and the neighbouring parts of the dorsal edge of the branchial sac of an ordinary Ascidian. The alimentary canal is placed ventrally. It may either be stretched out so as to extend for some distance anteriorly, or, as is more usual, be concentrated to form along with the testis a rounded opaque mass near the posterior end of the body, known as the visceral mass or "nucleus." The embryonic development is direct, no tailed larva being formed. The embryo is united to the parent for a time by a "placenta."
This sub-order contains, in addition to its typical members, the Salpidae, another still somewhat problematical family the Octacnemidae, including a single very remarkable deep-water genus (Octacnemus), which in some respects does not conform with the characters given above, and exhibits a certain amount of affinity with the primitive fixed forms from which Salpidae have been derived.