...The upper margin of the body is fringed by hollow tentacles, each of whichopens into one of the chambers...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The tentacles, alwayscorresponding to the cavity of the chambers, may betherefore said to ride this second set of partitions arising just in thecentre of the chambers...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...They may, on the contrary, be dropped from the parent indifferent stages of development, sometimes even after the tentacles havebegun to form, as in Figs...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The Actinia is exceedingly sensitive, contracting the body and drawing inthe tentacles almost instantaneously at the slightest touch...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...at themonth end, are a few short, stout tentacles...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...By the play of their tentacles,they can always produce a current of water about the mouth, by means ofwhich food passes into the stomach...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...They are very complicated (), incomparison with the tentacles of the lower orders, being deeply lobed,and fringed around the margin...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...These are the so-calledauricles, and though so unlike tentacles in the adult animal, when in theirearlier stages () they resemble each other closely...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...But as theirdevelopment goes on, the tentacles stretch out into longer, more delicateflexible organs, while the auricles remain short and compact throughoutlife...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...We have seen that the Oceania begins life with only two tentacles...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...If the Oceania be disturbed it flattens its disk, and folds itself upsomewhat in the shape of a bale (see ), remainingperfectly still, with the tentacles stretching in every direction...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The adult Clytia () issomewhat smaller and more active than the Oceania, andis easily recognized by the black base of its tentacles, at their point ofjuncture with the margin of the disk...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The four tentacles are of an immense length when compared tothe size of the animal...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...) which lifts a rather largernumber of tentacles than is usual among these Jelly-fishes...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...In a depressionhas taken place at the upper end, presently to be an opening, the proboscisis enlarged, and the tentacles lengthened, but still turned inward...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...In the appendages of the proboscis are quite conspicuous, the tentacles areturned outward, and theJelly-fish is almost ready to break from itsattachment, having assumed its ultimate outline...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
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