Fig. 352.—Sea-Anemones.

1. Actinia rubra, tentacles displayed and retracted; 2. Heticictis bellis; 3. H. bellis, seen from above.

Hexactinia (six-rayed polyps) are not limited to six rays, as the name given them may seem to imply; they are, in fact, very numerous in some of the largest and most gorgeous of the sea-anemones. All are distinguished by their solitary manner of life, their size, and their vivid and variedly beautiful colouring. The endoderm is firm, and when the animal withdraws its tentacles and shuts its body substance in, there is some difficulty in penetrating to the interior. It does not, however, secrete a calcareous skeleton inside or out, as do the true coral polyps. Among the Hexactinia the sea-anemone ([Fig. 352]) takes the first place.

These beautifully coloured creatures are, for the most part, found attached to the spot selected by the larvæ; a few species bore into the sand with the posterior part of the body, or build a sheath, which they inhabit. They are voracious feeders, and devour large pieces of flesh, and even mussel and oysters, sucking them in by means of their long grasping tentacles. Well-fed anemones change their skin frequently, during which process they remain closely retracted; the shed skin forms a loose girdle around the base. Actinia bellis not infrequently attach themselves to the shells of crabs and whelks, and are thus carried to pastures new.

Fig. 353.—Larvæ of Sea-Anemones, Actinia effœta, highly magnified.

On account of the ease with which anemones are kept in captivity, their mode of reproduction can be closely observed. With but few exceptions they develop from eggs, and in the course of a few weeks are hatched into ciliated infusorial larvæ, presenting most curious and exquisite representations of jugs and jars, with cover lids (as seen in [Fig. 353], Actinia effœta). These evince the handiwork of a master hand in the ceramic art. They are, however, of so translucent a nature as to permit of the internal structure being seen to consist of nerves and vessels, and which are rendered more apparent by staining. These settle down in a week or ten days, and then shed their cilia, the first tentacle appearing during the process of attachment.

In some species the young Actiniæ are seen to pass through their whole development within the body cavity of the parent. Most anemones are provided with several circles of more or less cylindrical tentacles, and there are a few specially beautiful species which, besides tentacles of the usual form, have, either within or without the ordinary circle of tentacles, lobed or leaf-like tactile and seizing organs. These belong to the family of the beautiful Crambactis of the Red Sea. Below these grasping tentacles comes a circle of thicker arms unlike the former, being spindle shaped. All the tentacles of the sea-anemones are hollow with a fine aperture at the tip, through which, on closing rapidly, it is seen to expel a jet of water.

True Corals.—It will have been noticed in the foregoing remarks that in the soft body-division of the Hexactinia there are both single individuals and colonies joined together to form stocks. The same diversity in this respect will be found among corals proper, with this difference, that the skeleton-forming polyps, by combining, build up substantial structures in the most secure and advantageous positions. Now it so happens that all the corals found about our coasts are generally small and solitary dwellers, one of the best known of which is the scarlet crisp coral, Flabellum, and is characterised by the slit-like form of the mouth. Viewed sideways it resembles a small fan fastened along the edges, and just inside a row of fully developed tentacles is seen protruding. An interesting form of budding occurs in these corals: the buds fall off, and in this budding condition the coral might pass, and indeed has been described as a different species of Flabellum. The colour of the coral is a beautifully transparent red. Remarkable as the solitary corals are, they are surpassed both in number and in form by those which form compound stocks, that is to say, in which the buds do not fall off, but go on building up coral islands and barrier reefs in the warmer seas. Some very few typical forms only are given in the group accompanying, shown in [Fig. 358].

A different kind of stock is developed in a number of forms, some producing many buds, as in the Madrepores, in which selected polyps spring up above the rest, their sides also becoming covered with small buds, each one of which is a living, feeding, coral animal surrounded by a crown of tentacles. These Madrepores play a very important part in the building up of coral reefs.