The Cubomedusæ

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Nature
Cover of the book The Cubomedusæ by Franklin Story Conant, Franklin Story Conant
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Franklin Story Conant ISBN: 9788826039336
Publisher: Franklin Story Conant Publication: March 16, 2017
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Franklin Story Conant
ISBN: 9788826039336
Publisher: Franklin Story Conant
Publication: March 16, 2017
Imprint:
Language: English

Jelly-fish offer to the lover of natural history an inexhaustible store of beauty and attractiveness. One who has studied them finds within him a ready echo to Haeckel’s statement that when first he visited the seacoast and was introduced to the enchanted world of marine life, none of the forms that he then saw alive for the first time exercised so powerful an attraction upon him as the Medusæ. The writer counts it a rare stroke of fortune that he was led to the study of a portion of the group by the discovery of two new species of Cubomedusæ in Kingston Harbor, Jamaica, W. I., while he was with the Johns Hopkins Marine Laboratory in June of 1896.
The Cubomedusæ are of more than passing interest among jelly-fish, both because of their comparative rarity and because of the high degree of development attained by their nervous system. One fact alone suffices to attract at once the attention of the student of comparative morphology—that here among the lowly-organized Cœlenterates we find an animal with eyes composed of a cellular lens contained in a pigmented retinal cup, in its essentials analogous to the vertebrate structure. Perhaps this and other facts about the Cubomedusæ would be more generally known, had they not been to a certain extent hidden away in Claus’s paper on Charybdea marsupialis (’78), which, while a record of careful and accurate work, is in many respects written and illustrated so obscurely that it is very doubtful whether one could arrive at a clear understanding of its meaning who was not pretty well acquainted with Charybdea beforehand.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Jelly-fish offer to the lover of natural history an inexhaustible store of beauty and attractiveness. One who has studied them finds within him a ready echo to Haeckel’s statement that when first he visited the seacoast and was introduced to the enchanted world of marine life, none of the forms that he then saw alive for the first time exercised so powerful an attraction upon him as the Medusæ. The writer counts it a rare stroke of fortune that he was led to the study of a portion of the group by the discovery of two new species of Cubomedusæ in Kingston Harbor, Jamaica, W. I., while he was with the Johns Hopkins Marine Laboratory in June of 1896.
The Cubomedusæ are of more than passing interest among jelly-fish, both because of their comparative rarity and because of the high degree of development attained by their nervous system. One fact alone suffices to attract at once the attention of the student of comparative morphology—that here among the lowly-organized Cœlenterates we find an animal with eyes composed of a cellular lens contained in a pigmented retinal cup, in its essentials analogous to the vertebrate structure. Perhaps this and other facts about the Cubomedusæ would be more generally known, had they not been to a certain extent hidden away in Claus’s paper on Charybdea marsupialis (’78), which, while a record of careful and accurate work, is in many respects written and illustrated so obscurely that it is very doubtful whether one could arrive at a clear understanding of its meaning who was not pretty well acquainted with Charybdea beforehand.

More books from Nature

Cover of the book Regional Geology and Tectonics: Principles of Geologic Analysis by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Camp Colt to Desert Storm by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Microbiology Practice Questions: Eukaryotes by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Advances in Radiation Biology by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Natural and Engineered Clay Barriers by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Knoxville's WNOX by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Cure Your Own Cattle by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book 貓事大吉 by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Toward Functional Nanomaterials by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Misteaks by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book ENVIRONMENTAL OIL DRILLING IN WATERWAYS by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book 50 Years of Urban Planning in Singapore by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Marches (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 118) by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book So This Is Heaven by Franklin Story Conant
Cover of the book Church Reform by Franklin Story Conant
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy