The hydra which hatches from the egg of the Cunina is free, like the hydra-larva of Liriope. It has a short globular body, and
Turritopsis is shown at k in Fig. 15; and Fig. 11, which I have copied from McCrady, the discoverer of this remarkable case of parasitism, shows the outline of the inner surface of the bell, and of the stomach of Turritopsis, with three of the parasitic Cunina larvæ in place, fastened by their tentacles, and with their mouths inserted into the stomach of their host.
Thus protected by the bell, and supplied with abundant food, which it neither captures nor digests, but sucks, all ready for assimilation, into its own stomach, the larva has a very "soft thing," and is naturally in no hurry to complete its development or to seek its fortune in the open water. It grows rapidly, acquires more tentacles, and, as its stomach grows larger, and it becomes able to suck in and to assimilate more food than it needs