...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」
...Notwithstanding its extraordinary sensitiveness, the organs of the sensesin the Actinia are very inferior, consisting only of a few pigment cellsaccumulated at the base of the tentacles...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The number of tentacles throughoutthis group is always eight...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...From the upperend tentacles project (see ), growing more numerous, as in ,though they never exceed sixteen in number...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The tentacles always grow in clusters, but arenevertheless arranged according to a regular order...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...Between every two clusters of tentacles will be observed a short, singleappendage, of an entirely different appearance...
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」
...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」
...We never findthe tentacles multiplying almost indefinitely in them, as in Zygodactylaand Eucope...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The tentacles differ in structureas well as in number for each kind of Hydra...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...The movements andattitudes of the tentacles are most various...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
...There is an unfortunateIdyia, who, by some mistake, has got into the wrong bucket with the largerJelly-fish, where a Zygodactyla has entangled it among his tentacles and isquietly breakfasting upon it...
Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz 「Seaside Studies in Natural History」
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