The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861.

The tank, having been prepared and seasoned with the same precaution used for the river aquarium, and having a clear bottom and a supply of good water, is now ready for planting.  Many beautifully colored and delicately fringed Algae and Sea-Wracks will be found on the rocks at low tide, and will sadly tempt the enthusiast to consign their delicate hues to the aquarium.  All such temptations must be resisted.  Green is the only color well adapted for healthy and oxygenating growth in the new tank.  A small selection of the purple or red varieties may perhaps be introduced and successfully cultivated at a later day, but they are very delicate; while the olives and browns are pretty sure to die and corrupt the water.  It must be remembered, too, that the Algae are cryptogamous, and bear no visible flowers to delight the eye or fancy.  Of all marine plants, the Ulva latissima, or Sea-Lettuce, is first and best.  It has broad, light-green fronds, and is hardy and a rapid grower, and hence a good giver of oxygen.  Next to this in looks and usefulness comes the Enteromorpha compressa, a delicate, grass-like Alga.  After a while the Chondrus crispus, or common Carrageen Moss, may be chosen and added.  These ought to be enough for some months, as it is not safe to add too many at once.  Then the green weeds Codium tomentosum and Cladophora may be tried; and, still later, the beautiful Bryopsis plumosa.  But it is much better to be content with a few Ulvae, and others of that class, to begin with; for a half dozen of these will support quite a variety of animal life.

After a few hardy plants are well set, and thriving for a week or two, and the water is clear and bubbly with oxygen, it will be time to look about for the live stock of the marine aquarium.  Fishes, though most attractive, must be put in last; for as they are of the highest vitality, so they require the most oxygen and food, and hence should not be trusted until everything in the tank is well a-going.

The first tenants should be the hardy varieties of the Sea-Anemones, or Actiniae,—­which are Polyps, of the class Radiata.  The Actinia mesembryanthemum is the common smooth anemone, abounding on the coast, and often to be found attached to stones on the beach.  “When closed,” says Mr. Hibbert, “it has much resemblance to a ripe strawberry, being of a deep chocolate color, dotted with small yellow spots.  When expanded, a circle of bright blue beads or tubercles is seen within the central opening; and a number of coral-like fingers or tentacles unfold from the centre, and spread out on all sides.”  It remains expanded for many days together, if the water be kept pure; and, having little desire for locomotion, stays, generally, about where it is placed.  It is a carnivorous creature, and seeks its food with its ever-searching tentacles, thus drawing in fishes and mollusks, but, most frequently, the minute Infusoria.  Like other

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.