ANIMAL, an organized and sentient living being. Life in the earlier periods of natural history was attributed almost exclusively to animals. With the prog ress of science, however, it was extended to plants. In the case of the higher ani mals and plants there is no difficulty in assigning the individual to one of the two great kingdoms of organic nature, but in their lowest manifestations, the vegetable and animal kingdoms are brought into such immediate contact that it becomes almost impossible to assign them precise limits, and to say with cer tainty where the one begins and the other ends.
With regard to internal structure no line of demarkation can be laid down, all plants and animals being, in this re spect, fundamentally similar; that is, alike composed of molecular, cellular, and fibrous tissues. Neither are the chemi cal characters of animal and vegetable substances more distinct. Animals con tain in their tissue and fluids a larger proportion of nitrogen than plants, while plants are richer in carbonaceous com pounds than the former. Power of mo tion, again, though broadly distinctive of animals, cannot be said to be abso lutely characteristic of them. Thus many animals, as oysters, sponges, cor als, etc., in their mature condition are rooted or fixed, while the embryos of many plants, together with numerous fully developed forms, are endowed with locomotive power by means of vibratile, hair-like processes called cilia.
The distinctive points between animals and plants which are most to be relied on are those derived from the nature and mode of assimilation of the food. Plant', feed on inorganic matters, consist ing of water, ammonia, carbonic acid, and mineral matters. They can only
take in food which is presented to them in a liquid or gaseous state. The excep tions to these rules are found chiefly in the case of plants which live parasiti cally on other plants or on animals, in which cases the plant may be said to feed on organic matters, represented by juices of their hosts. Animals, on the contrary, require organized matters for food. They feed either upon plants or upon other animals. Animals require a due supply of oxygen gas for their sus tenance, this gas being used in respira tion. Plants, on the contrary, require carbonic acid. The animal exhales or gives out carbonic acid as the part result of its tissue waste, while the plant tak ing in this gas is enabled to decompose it into its constituent carbon and oxygen. The plant retains the former for the uses of its economy, and liberates the oxygen, which is thus restored to the atmosphere for the use of the animal. Animals re ceive their food into the interior of their bodies, and assimilation takes place in their internal surfaces. Plants, on the other hand, receive their food into their external surfaces, and assimilation is ef fected in the external parts, as are ex emplified in the leaf surfaces under the influence of sunlight. All animals pos sess a certain amount of heat or tem perature which is necessary for the per formance of vital action. The only classes of animals in which a constantly elevated temperature is kept up are birds and mammals.