ay tel te THE VOYAGE OF H.M.8. CHALLENGER. ZOOLOGY. “REPORT on the Crrriepia collected by H.M.S. Challenger during the Oe Wi years. 1873-716 7 By Dew Paes C: Horx, Member of the Royal Academy of Science of the Netherlands. ANATOMICAL PART. INTRODUCTION. One of my principal reasons for wishing to investigate the Cirripedia dredged during the cruise of H.M.S. Challenger was the hope that I should be able by the aid of the deep-sea material to enlarge our knowledge of the morphology of the order. It was possible that among the forms from considerable depths there might be some which on account of their great size, or for other reasons, would be especially favourable for anatomical research, as was the case with some of the Pycnogonids from the abysses. It was possible also that among them a new form might occur, the investigation of which would cast light on details in the organisation which had not hitherto been suthi- ciently understood. In this respect, however, the study of the deep-sea material has somewhat disappointed my expectations ; the new forms for the most part are represented by single specimens only, or are too small to be dissected advantageously. I have therefore been obliged to limit’ my researches entirely to such forms as were previously known and had served for the researches of former investigators. They belong to the genera Lepas, Conchoderma, and Scalpellum of the pedunculated Cirripedia, and to the genus Balanus of the sessile Cirripedia. What I have been able to work out does not form a connected whole, but may conveniently take the form of separate chapters in the morphology of the group. (ZOOL, CHALL, EXP,—PART XXVIII,—1884.) bo THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. I. THE COMPLEMENTAL MALES OF SCALPELLUM. Since 1851, when Darwin issued the first volume of his Monograph on the Sub-class Cirripedia, nothing has been published on the so-called complemental males of Scalpellum, though the subject was far from exhausted by his treatment of it. The truth of this assertion in no way diminishes the respect which we feel to be due to the labours of the great master in this department of investigation as well as in so many others. For when we consider that the methods of microscopic research have been greatly improved in the thirty years which have since elapsed, and that the male of Scalpellum vulgare, which Darwin investigated, has a size of only 0°7 mm., we can only wonder at the thoroughness of the information which he has given, and at the soundness of the conclusions at which he arrived. When dissecting Scalpellum vulgare, Leach, Darwin observed one or more very minute parasites on the margins of both scuta, close to the umbones. He dissected one or two specimens and at first concluded that they belonged to some new class or order amongst the Articulata. By repeated and more careful dissection he was able to make out the general appearance of the animal, the form of the thorax and abdomen, the generative system, the antenne and the mode of its attachment; he found that the prehensile antenne of the little parasite showed an absolute correspondence with the same organs of the hermaphrodite Sca/pellum vulgare, and that it belonged exclusively to the male sex. From this knowledge, together with its fixed condition and its short existence, he thought himself justified in provisionally considering the little parasite as the complemental male of the Cirriped to which it was attached. The results of Darwin’s investigation of the complemental males of the other species of Scalpellum known to him are, shortly, the following :—The complemental male of Scalpellum ornatum, Gray, sp., shows a close general resemblance to that of Scalpellum vulgare ; but as Darwin had only dried specimens of that species, his description is not so exhaustive ; he found males of Scalpellum rutilum, Darwin, also, but in so extremely decayed a condition that they could not be examined. What Darwin considered to be the complemental male of Scalpellum rostratum, Darwin, is a little animal constructed like an ordinary Cirriped and furnished with a mouth, thorax, and cirri, enclosed in a capitulum (with a carina and a pair of scuta), and supported on a peduncle of moderate size. Specimens were found attached to the integument of the hermaphrodite in a central line between the labrum and the adductor scutorum muscle. The complemental male of Scalpellum peronii, Gray, sp., is a pedunculated Cirriped with a capitulum of six valves, firmly cemented to the integument of the hermaphrodite in a fold between the seuta, in the middle line a little below the adductor scutorum muscle. Finally, the complemental male of Scalpellum villosum, Leach, sp., is attached in the same position as that of Scalpellum peronii; it is also six-valved, and it has a close general REPORT ON THE CIRRIPEDIA. 3 resemblance to that of Scalpellum peronii. Whereas the parasites in the first three species (Scalpellum vulgare, Scalpellum ornatum, and Scalpellum rutilum) are in such an extraordinarily modified and embryonic condition, that they can hardly be compared with other Cirripeds, those of the other three (Scalpelluin peronii, Scalpellum rostratum, and Scalpelluin villosum) ave pedunculated Cirripedia, remarkable for their smallness. These are the facts which were known to Darwin; he then enters into a masterly discussion of the evidence that these parasites are really the males of the Cirripedia to which they are attached. Curious and novel as was the fact, his reasoning was so con- vineing that this theory has been generally accepted. With respect to the occurrence and the structure of these complemental males, I believe I have been enabled to augment our knowledge not inconsiderably. Though the princi- pal result of my investigations has been to convince me of the exactness of Darwin's theory, I think the question is important enough to justify me in giving all the informa- tion which I possess in the following pages. I observed the complemental male in nineteen out of the forty-one new species of Scalpellum described in my Report.’ I found them all in or about the same place, viz., at or near the occludent margin of the scutum at the interior side of this valve, a little above the adductor muscle. As a rule they are placed in a pouch formed by the mantle ; very often, but not always, I found them on the left as well as on the right hand scutum. In five different species I took either from one or from both scuta two or more specimens, in the other species each, or one only, of the two scuta was furnished with a single male. In one species (Scalpellum marginatum) the male was seated ata considerable distance from the occludent margin of the scutum, and hence it happened that at first I did not find it out. In one species (Scalpellum recurvirostrum) the only male observed was still in the Cypris-larval or pupa stage ; in three other species (Scalpellum regium, Scalpellum eximium, and Scalpellum velutinum) males in the pupa stage were attached along with full-grown males. The male of Scalpellum brevecarinatum could not be studied, being in a very unsatisfactory condition. In eighteen out of the nineteen cases I was able to form an opinion as to the condition of the male when the testis was ripe, and the little creature therefore full-grown or nearly so. In five of these eighteen cases the condition can be said to correspond with that. of the male of Scalpellum vulgare. In thirteen the males are still more degenerate. These five are Scalpellum tritonis, Scalpellum intermedium, Scalpellum parallelogranma, Scalpellum elongatum, and Scalpellum triangulare. 1 think they correspond with Scalpellum vulgare in as far as there are rudimentary valves visible in them. The thirteen remaining species all, no doubt, belong as regards the structure of their males 1 Zool. Chall. Exp., part xxv. The small species represented by single specimens have not been investigated so thoroughly as would have been necessary to make out whether a male really occurred or not. I often found myself unable to do so without spoiling the specimen. 4 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. to one and the same division of the genus. I have been able to study the male of one of these (Scalpellum regium [Wyv. Thoms.], Hoek) more in detail; in all essential respects the males of the other twelve agree with it. The twenty-four species of Scalpellum, the males of which are known at present, may be classified with regard to the structure of these males in the following way :— A. Species, the males of which show a distinct capitulum and peduncle :— Scalpellum peroni, Gray, sp. Scalpellum rostratum, Darwin. Scalpellum villosum, Leach, sp. All these are shallow water species. B. Species, the males of which do not show a division of the body into a capitulum and a peduncle, but yet are furnished with rudimentary valves :— Scalpellum vulgare, Leach. Scalpellum parallelogramma, Hoek. rutilum, Darwin. elongatum, Hoek. ornatum, Gray, sp. tritonis, Hoek, intermedium, Hoek. triangulare, Hoek. Species occurring in depths varying between shallow water and 700 fathoms. C. Species, the males of which do not show a division of the body into a capitulum and a peduncle, and are not furnished with rudimentary valves :— Scalpellum marginatum, Hoek. Scalpellum gigas, Hoek. strémii, Sars. regium (Wyv.Thoms.), Hoek. compressum, Hoek. darwinit, Hoek. nymphocola, Hoek. tenue, Hoek. velutinum, Hoek. dubiwm, Hoek. eximium, Hoek. flavum, Hoek. Scalpellum pedunculatum, Hoek. With the exception of three (Scalpellum pedunculatum, Scalpellum strémi, and Scalpellum nymphocola), these species occur in depths of upwards of 1000 fathoms. The depths at which Scalpellum strémii and Scalpellum nymphocola were collected are less considerable ; these species, however, belong to the arctic fauna, which, as is well known, shows numerous instances of deep-sea animals occurring in rather shallow water. Scalpellum pedunculatum was taken from a depth of 150 fathoms only. REPORT ON THE CIRRIPEDIA. 5 a. DESCRIPTION AND CoMPARISON OF Cypris-LARVA. At first I experienced great difficulties in identifying the parts of the body of the complemental male; however, I believe I have solved the problem by comparing the full-grown male with a younger stage of its development, and the latter with the corresponding stage of an ordinary species of Lepas. The occurrence of a Cypris-larva between the two complemental males at the ordinary place enabled me to make this comparison ; from its structure as well as from the place whence it was taken there can be no doubt, I believe, that this latter creature was destined to develop (retro- eressively of course) into a complemental male. The species of Lepas, the Cypris-larvee of which have served me for comparison, was the Lepas australis, Darwin. It is not only very characteristic on account of its great size, but it is also the best known Cypris-larva, as it served first for the investigations of Darwin, and again some years ago for the studies of Claus. The latter has given a very good figure of the internal structure of this larva as seen in a sagittal section. My figs. 1 and 2 on Pl. I. very closely correspond to that of Claus. My fig. 1 was drawn from a preparation made by dividing the body of the Cypris-larva of Lepas australis into two nearly equal halves by means of a sagittal section. The rounded spot (A M) is the adductor muscle of the two valves of the Cypris-larva; the straight line at the under side of the valve represents the ventral side, the convex one the dorsal side; the extremity on the left of my figure the frontal (cephalic), the one facing it the hinder (abdominal) extremity of the body ; from the way in which the spines of the legs are stretched out at the ventral side it is clear that there is a slit-like opening between the adductor muscle and the hinder extremity of the body. In fig. 2 of Pl. L, representing a longitudinal section parallel to and at a little distance from the ventral margin, this orifice is also distinct. This is the only place where the interior of the sack or mantle (as Darwin calls it) is in open communication with the surrounding water. The body of the future Lepas is enclosed within the sack and has also a wall of its own; on one side (the right hand side of the figure) this wall is very distinct, and it passes over near the middle of the dorsal margin into a transverse invagination which almost reaches up to the ventral side. It is by this invagination that the division of the body into a capitulum and a peduncle is brought about; what in fig. 1 of Pl. II. is placed on the right hand side of the invagination (Jnv.) is the capitulum, what is placed on the left hand side the peduncle. As the invagination of the dorsal wall does not reach as far as the ventral side, a direct communication remains between the capitulum and the peduncle. Through this commissure, which is very narrow in the full-grown animal, pass the oviducts and the nerves destined for the peduncle. On the ventral side an invagination is seen at a distance of about one-fourth of the total length from the peduncular extremity ; at the bottom of this invagination, when 6 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. studied in a sagittal section as figured, the compound eyes—which, according to Darwin, are attached to the basal joints of the antennee—are visible. The structure of the interior of the body can easily be made out by the aid of the figure. MM. is the mouth; it is surrounded by darkly pigmented parts, the exact shape of which is not very distinct ; the mouth gives entrance to the esophagus (@Z); the latter has a horizontal direction, is furnished with a pair of cceca (C), and leads into a very capacious stomach (S), from which a narrow intestine (Int.) is seen to start. Csophagus, coeca, stomach, and intestine are all very darkly pigmented. The six pairs of cirri and the caudal appendages present nothing particularly interesting ; the different cirri have only to shed their skin to change into the cirri of the Lepas; the caudal appendages will have to undergo a very marked retrogressive metamorphosis to change into the rudimentary, uniarticulate, and smooth appendages of the full-grown Lepas australis. The nervous system is already quite distinctly visible; it consists of the supracesophageal ganglion (GS), and the six thoracic ganglia (@1—-G' VI). The first is situated very close to the coeca of the cesophagus and has a simple eye (e), represented by a small triangular spot of pigment attached to it (fig. 2, ¢). The chain of thoracic ganglia is on the right hand side of the stomach, between this organ and the ventral wall of what is properly the body. The ganglia are not yet separated by commissures, but are placed close to one another ; the first has an oval shape, and is much larger than the following ones The ganglionic cells which cover the surface of the different ganglia are extremely small. In the peduncular part of the body nearly all the room is filled up by a mass of con- nective tissue with very large meshes ; between this mass of reticular connective tissue and the layer of cells which represents the mantle a double layer of muscular fibres may be discerned. The fibres of the two layers are at right angles to each other, and both layers run parallel to the surface of the body and the valves of the Cypris; in the figure, one of these layers is represented by the lines running parallel to each other, and also to the curved frontal line of the larva. This layer is composed of rather broad fibres (each fibre has an oval, not very elongate nucleus) and a breadth of 0012 mm., which will develop into the layer of longitudinal muscles of the peduncle of the Lepas. The other layer is situated between the former and the mantle, and shows much narrower fibres, with very narrow and elongate nuclei (each fibre has a breadth of only 0°003 mm.) ; this latter layer forms the circular muscular layer of the peduncle in the full-grown Lepas. The cells which constitute the mantle are relatively small, and are furnished with large nuclei (0°01 mm.); at different places they are richly pigmented. Between the fibres and nuclei of the connective tissue numerous fatty bodies are visible which are more like vesicles than grains; they have an elongate shape, are pointed at both extremities, and belong to what still remains of the yolk. The cell-masses which Claus' describes as the cement-glands were very strongly * Claus, C., Untersuchungen zur Erforschung der genealogischen Grundlage, &c., Wien, 1876, p. 87. REPORT ON THE CIRRIPEDIA. a developed in the larvee of Lepas australis which I studied. Claus says that these glands consist of groups of cells which have either still the form of a sinuous string (‘eines gewundenen Stranges”), or which lie scattered by the side of one another; the latter is the case in Lepas australis. Claus has not observed the communication of these glands with the cement-duct which he figures; at least in his figure they are at a very considerable distance from one another. I have not been more fortunate; I even failed to observe the cement-duct. The different cells (Pl. II. fig. 5) do not show much resemblance to the cement-glands of the full-grown animal ; yet I think that Claus’ supposition as to the nature of these elements is right. As regards the place they occupy in the Cypris-larva, it quite corresponds to the place they occupy in the full-grown animal, viz., in the most posterior (when the animal changes its position, the most superior) part of the peduncle. The Cypris-larva which furnished the drawing fig. 2 is a little older than the one figured in fig. 1. In the former the cement-cells are much more separated from one another than in the latter ; moreover, their nuclei are much more easily distinguish- able, and many of them are not so richly furnished with fatty granules as was the case in the younger condition. Very delicate and flat fibres in the later Cypris-stage are visible between the cement-cells; probably they represent the canals figured by Claus and considered by him as branches of the cement-ducts. A pair of club-shaped bodies is situated near the ventral wall of the animal, the thickest part of which is directed towards the front of the Cypris and the narrower part of which can be traced as far as under the cceca of the cesophacus of this larva. These are described by Claus as the ovarium (figs. 1 and 2, Od). I observed these bodies also, and I think it very probable that they represent the female genital apparatus; they are especially distinct in the longitudinal section of the body shown in fig. 2. In this figure the valves of the Cypris are not represented ; the clear margin round the body represents the chitinous wall of the future Lepas; the cells of the mantle serve as a matrix for its formation. When we look now at the figure of the Cypris-larva of Scalpellum regium which is destined to develop into a complemental male, we observe great analogy as well as considerable difference. PI. II. fig. 3 represents a larva which has probably attached itself lately, and which therefore is exactly in the same stage as the larva of Lepas australis which I have just described. It is somewhat different from the latter in general outline, being more elongate and not so high. At the hinder extremity the Cypris of Lepas australis is obliquely truncated and bluntly pointed, and that of the male of Scalpellum almost entirely transversely truncated, Like the former it is enclosed within a shell consisting of two valves of a very brittle constitution. The antennse (An) are stretched forward out of the ventral slit between the two valves; they have in all essential respects the same structure as those of the full-grown complemental male, which will be described further on, At their base in the interior of the body of the larva a cellular 8 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. body is visible which, I think, must necessarily represent the cement-gland. However, neither the place it occupies nor its structure shows any resemblance to the same glands— or what we must consider as such—in the Cypris of Lepas australis. Nor have these glands in the male of Scalpellum regium great conformity with those organs in the younger Cypris-stage of another species of Scalpelluin (Scalpellum triangulare), which I figure in Pl. IIL. fig. 4. In this stage the antennee (Av) are still totally hidden within the valves, and the cement-elands (C g/) form very large cellular masses situated on both sides of the thoracie part of the body between it and the valves. I think it is in this stage that the Cypris-larva leaves the mantle cavity of the mother. What we called the mantle in the Cypris of Lepas australis takes in the male Cypris of Scalpellum regium the form of a bag closed on all sides, with only a very small opening at the hinder extremity. This opening no doubt corresponds to the slit-like opening at the ventral side of the Cypris of Lepas. It also serves the same purpose. We see the very delicate and slender spines placed at the extremity of the legs come forth from this opening. For want of material I have not been able to study in detail the structure of the mantle, nor its musculature. I can only say that the mantle is composed of flat and pale rounded cells of 0°01 mm. in diameter, with a small clear nucleus, and that these cells are placed at a little distance from each other; that the muscular fibres form a single layer only, and are built up of elongate oval cells placed in longitudinal rows and each furnished with a distinct nucleus (PI. I. fig. 7). Besides the body the interior of the mantle contains a mass of connective tissue with little grains and small fatty corpuscles scattered irregularly throughout its meshes. With regard to the body it is not difficult to observe the mouth (PI. IL. fig. 3, M), the cesophagus (Cd), and the stomach (St); the nervous system consisting of a supracesophageal ganglion (G S) and a single, rather large thoracic ganglion (G 7’); six pairs of very slender cirri with delicate spines at their extremities; a pair of long and well developed caudal appendages (CA).