LT) _D a a i a i m i a /I THE CAMBRIDGE NATURAL HISTORY EDITED BY S. F. HARMER, Sc.D., F.R.S., Fellow of King's College, Cambridge; Keeper of the Department of Zoology in the British Museum (Natural History) A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Christ's College, Cambridge ; Reader in Zoology in the University VOLUME IV .a- MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED LONDON • BOMBAY • CALCUTTA MELBOURNE THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK • BOSTON • CHICAGO ATLANTA • SAN FRANCISCO THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD. TORONTO CRUSTACEA By GEOFFREY SMITH, M.A. (Oxon.), Fellow of New College, Oxford; and the late W. F. R. WELDON, M.A. (D.Sc., Oxon.), formerly Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, and Linacre Professor of Human and Comparative Anatomy, Oxford TRILOBITES By HENRY WOODS, M.A., St. John's College, Cambridge ; University Lecturer in Palaeozoology INTRODUCTION TO ARACHNIDA, AND KING-CRABS By A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., F.R.S., Fellow and Tutor of Christ's College, Cambridge ; Reader in Zoology EURYPTERIDA By HENRY WOODS, M. A., St. John's College, Cambridge ; University Lecturer in Palaeozoology SCORPIONS, SPIDERS, MITES, TICKS, ETC. By CECIL WARBURTON, M.A., Christ's College, Cambridge ; Zoologist to the Royal Agricultural Society TARDIGRADA (WATER-BEARS) By A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., F.R.S., Fellow and Tutor of Christ's College, Cambridge ; Reader in Zoology PENTASTOMIDA By A. E. SHIPLEY, M.A., F.R.S., Fellow and Tutor of Christ's College, Cambridge ; Reader in Zoology PYCNOGONIDA By D'ARCY W. THOMPSON, C.B., M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge; Professor of Natural History in University College, Dundee MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON 1909 All the ingenious men, and all the scientific men, and all the fanciful men, in the world, with all the old German bogy- painters into the bargain, could never invent . . . anyth so curious, and so ridiculous, as a lobster. CHARLES KINGSLBY, The Water- Babies. For, Spider, thou art like the poet poor, Whom thou hast help'd in song. Both busily, our needful food to win, We work, as Nature taught, with ceaseless pains, Thy bowels thou dost spin, I spin my brains. SOUTHEY, To a Spider. Last o'er the field the Mite enormous swims, Swells his red heart, and writhes his giant limbs. ERASMUS DARWIN, The Temple of Nature. PEEFACE THE Editors feel that they owe an apology and some explanation to the readers of The Cambridge Natural History for the delay which has occurred in the issue of this, the fourth in proper order, but the last to appear of the ten volumes which compose the work. The delay has been due principally to the untimely death of Professor W. F. E. Weldon, who had undertaken to write the Section on the Crustacea. The Chapter on the Branchiopoda is all he actually left ready for publication, but it gives an indication of the thorough way in which he had intended to treat his subject. He had, however, superintended the preparation of a number of beautiful illustrations, which show that he had determined to use, in the main, first-hand knowledge. Many of these figures have been incorporated in the article by Mr. Geoffrey Smith, to whom the Editors wish to express their thanks for taking up, almost at a moment's notice, the task which had dropped from his teacher's hand. A further apology is due to the other contributors to this volume. Their contributions have been in type for many years, and owing to the inevitable delays indicated above they have been called upon to make old articles new, ever an ungrateful labour. The appearance of this volume completes the work the Editors embarked on some sixteen years ago. It coincides with the cessation of an almost daily intercourse since the time when they "came up" to Cambridge as freshmen in 1880. S. F. HARMER. A. E. SHIPLEY. March 1909. CONTENTS PAOK SCHEME OF THE CLASSIFICATION ADOPTED IN THIS VOLUME . xi CEUSTACEA CHAPTER I CRUSTACEA GENERAL ORGANISATION" CHAPTER II CRUSTACEA (continued) ENTTOMOSTRACA — BRANCHIOPODA — PHYLLOPODA — CLADOCERA — WATER- FLEAS .....,., CHAPTER III CRUSTACEA ENTOMOSTRACA (continued) COPEPODA . ....... 55 CHAPTER IV CRUSTACEA ENTOMOSTRACA (continued) CIRRIPEDIA — PHENOMENA OF GROWTH AND SEX — OSTRACODA ... 79 vii 18 CONTENTS CHAPTER V CRUSTACEA (continued) PAGE MALACOSTRACA : LEPTOSTRACA— PHYLLOCARIDA : EUMALACOSTRACA : SYN- CARIDA — ANASPIDACEA : PERACARIDA — MYSIDACEA — CUMACEA — ISOPODA — AMPIJIPODA : HOPLOCARIDA — STOMATOPODA . . . .110 CHAPTER VI CRUSTACEA MALACOSTRACA (continued) EUMALACOSTRACA (CONTINUED) : EUCARIDA — EUPHAUSIACEA — COMPOUND EYES — DECAPODA CHAPTER VII CRUSTACEA (continued) REMARKS ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF MARINE AND FRESH-WATER CRUSTACEA . 197 CHAPTER VIII CRUSTACEA (continued) TRILOBITA AEACHNIDA CHAPTER IX ARACHXIDA — INTRODUCTION CHAPTER X ARACHNIDA (continued) DELOBRANCHIATA=MEROSTOMATA — XIPHOSURA . , . CHAPTER XI ARACHNIDA DELOBRANCHIATA (continued) EURYPTERIDA = GlGANTOSTRACA ..... .... 283 CONTENTS CHAPTER XII ARACHNIDA (continued) PAGE EMBOLOBRANCHIATA— SCORPIONIDEA—PEDIPALPI 297 * CHAPTER XIII ARACHNIDA EMBOLOBRANCHIATA (contimted) ARANEAE — EXTERNAL STRUCTURE — INTERNAL STRUCTURE .... 314 CHAPTER XIV ARACHNIDA EMBOLOBRANCHIATA (continued) ARANEAE (COXTINVED) — HABITS — ECDYSIS — TREATMENT or YOUNG — MIGRATION — WEBS — NESTS — EGG-COCOONS — POISON — FERTILITY — ENEMIES— PROTECTIVE COLORATION — MIMICRY — SENSES — INTELLIGENCE — MATING HABITS — FOSSIL SPIDERS ....... 338 CHAPTER XV ARACHNIPA EMBOLOBRANCHIATA (continued) ARANEAE (CONTINUED) — CLASSIFICATION 384 CHAPTER XVI ARACHNIDA EMBOLOBRANCHIATA (continued) PALPIGRADI — SOLIFUGAE = SOLPUGAE — CHERNETIDEA = PSEUDOSCORPIONES . 422 CHAPTER XVII ARACHXIDA EMBOLOBRANCHIATA (continued) PODOGONA = RlCINULEI — PHALANGIDEA = Ol'ILIONES — HABITS — STRUCTURE — CLASSIFICATION ........... 439 CHAPTER XVIII ARACHNIDA EMBOLOBRANCHIATA ACARINA — HARVEST-BUGS — PARASITIC MITES — TICKS — SPINNING MITES — STRUCTURE — METAMORPHOSIS — CLASSIFICATION 454 CONTENTS CHAPTER XIX ARACHNIDA (APPENDIX l) PAOB TARDIGRADA — OCCURRENCE — ECDYSIS — STRUCTURE — DEVELOPMENT — AFFINITIES — BIOLOGY — DESICCATION — PARASITES — SYSTEMATIC 477 CHAPTER XX ARACHNIDA (APPENDIX II) PENTASTOMIDA — OCCURRENCE — ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE — STRUCTURE — DEVELOPMENT AND LIFE-HISTORY — SYSTEMATIC . . . 488 PYCNOGONIDA CHAPTER XXI PYCNOGONIDA 501 INDEX 54:3 SCHEME OF THE CLASSIFICATION" ADOPTED IN THIS VOLUME The names of extinct groups are printed in italics. CEUSTACEA (p. 3). ENTOMOSTRACA (p. 18). Divisions. Orders. Sub-Orders. Tribes. Families. 'Branchipodidae Phyllopoda (pp. 19, 35). Apodidae (pp. 19, 35) (pp. 19, 36). Limnadiidae (pp. 20, 36). BrancMo- poda (p. 18) /- /• Ctenopoda (p. 51) Calyptomera (pp. 38, 51) Anomo- 'Sididae (p. 51). Holopediidae (p. 51). Daphniidae (p. 51). Bosminidae (p. 53). Lyncodaphniidae Cladocera poda (p. 53). (p. 37) (p. 51) Lynceidae = Chydoridae . (P. 53). /"Polyphemidae Gymnomera | (p. 54). . (pp. 38, 54) 1 "i Leptodoridae 1 (p. 54). f ( Amphascandria (p. 57) Calanidae (p. 57). Centropagidae Gymnoplea I (p. 58). (p. 57) 1 Heterartlirandria (p. 58) - Candacidae (p. 60). t^_ iPontellidae (p. 60). m ' Cyclopidae cL, (pp. 61, 62). d Harpacticidae Copepoda "g (pp. 61, 62). (P- 55) $' Peltiidae 1 (p. 63). 1 Podoplea (p. 61) Ainphartlirandria (p. 61) • Monstrillidae (p. 63). Ascidicolidae (p. 66). Asterocheridae (P- 67). Dichelestiidae I , (p. 68). ( Continued on the next page. x SCHEME OF CLASSIFICATION Divisions. Orders. Sub-Orders. Tribes. Families. f fOncaeidae (p. 69). Corycaeidae (p. 69). Lichomolgidae (p. 70). Ergasilidae (p. 71). Bomolochidae (p. 71). Chondracanthidae (p. 72). Copepoda (contd.) ' Eucopepoda (contd.) Podoplea (contd. ) Isokerandria (p. 69) ' Philichthyidae (p. 73). Nereicolidae (p. 73). Hersiliidae (p. 73). Caligidae (p. 73). Lernaeidae (p. 74). Lernaeopodidae (p. 75). Choniostomatidae I I L (p. 76). Branchiura j { Argulidae (p. 76). f Polyaspidae (p. 84). Pentaspidae (p. 87). Pedunculata (p. 84) ^ Tetraspidae (p. 88). I. Anaspidae (p. 89). f Verrucidae (p. 91). IOctomeridae (p. 91). Hexamendae Cirripedia (P- 91)- Tetrameridae (p. 79) 1 (p. 92). Acrothoracica (p. 92). Ascothoracica (p. 93). Apoda (p. 94). 1 Rhizocephala (p. 95). ' Cypridae (p. 107). Cytheridae (p. 107). Halocypridae (p. 108). Ostracoda (p. 107) Cypridinidae (p. 108). Polycopidae (p. 109). Cythcrellidae 1 (p. 109). MALACOSTRACA (p. 110). r ^ Phyllocarida -5 (P. HI). (Continued on the next page.) SCHEME OF CLASSIFICATION Divisions. Orders. Sub-Orders. Families. ( Syncarida f Anaspidacea / Anaspididae (p. 115). (p. 114) 1 (p. 115) \ Koonungidae (p. 117). Mysidacea C Eucopiidae (p. 118). I Lophogastridae (p. 118) (p. 119). , Mysidae (p. 119). [ Cumidae (p. 121). 1 Lampropidae (p. 121). Cumacea } Leuconidae (p. 121). (p. 120) 1 Diastylidae (p. 121). Pseudocumidae 1 (p. 121). 1 Chelifera (p. 122) f Apseudidae (p. 122). Tanaidae (p. 122). f Anthuridae (p. 124). Gnathiidae (p. 124). Flabellifera (p. 124) 1 Cymothoidae (p. 126). I Cirolanidao (p. 126). Serolidae (p. 126). v Sphaeromidae (p. 126). Valvifera (p. 127) / Idotheidae (p. 127). \ Arcturidae (p. 127). Asellota(p. 127) / Asellidae (p. 128). 1 Munnopsidae (p. 128). oT i-i Oniscoida (p. 128). £ Peracarida (p. H8) Isopoda (p. 121) i /• Microniscidae (p. 130). Cryptoniscidae o (p. 130). 03 Cryptoni< scina < Liriopsidae (p. 130). H i (pp. 12 9,130) * Hemioniscidae (p. 130). CQ Q Cahiropsidae (p. 130). 0 Epicarida Podasconidae (p. 130). . 193). j Hymenosomatidae (p. 193). _ pCarcinoplacidae (p. 1 95). I Gonoplacidae (p. 195). J Pinnotheridae (p. 195). I Grapsidae (p. 196). I Gecarcinidae (p. 196). I Ocypodidae (p. 196). SCHEME OF CLASSIFICATION TRILOBITA (p. 221). Families. Agnostidae (p. 2-14). Shumardiidae (p. 245). Trinucleidac (p. 245). Harpedidae (p. 245). Paradoxidae (p. 246). Conocephalidae — Conocoryphida e ( p . 247). Olcniilae (p. 247). Calymenidae (p. 247). Asaphiiltte (p. 249). Bronteidae (p. 249). Phacopidae (p. 249). Cheiruridae (p. 250). Proetidae (p. 251). Encrinuridae (p. 251). Acidaspidae (p. 251). Lichadidue (p. 252;. ARACHNID A (p. 255). DELOBRANCHIATA = MEROSTOMATA (pp. 258, 259). Orders. Families. Sul.-Families. Xiphosura (pp. 258, 259, 276) Xiphosuridae (p. 276) / Xiphosurinae (p. 276) . \ Tachypleinae (p. 276). Eurypterida = Gigantostraca \ Eurm)tei,idac , D 290) (pp. 258, 283) JJSurypte EMBOLOBRANCHIATA (pp. 258, 297). Butliidae (p. 306) Scorpionidea (pp. 258, 297) Pedipalpi (pp. 258, 308) Araneae (pp. 258, 314) ( Continued on the next page. ) Scorpionidae (p. 306) Chaerilidae (p. 307). Chactidae (p. 307) Vejovidae (p. 308). Bothviuridae (p. 308). Thelyphonidae (p. 312). Schizonotidae = Tartavidae (p. 312). Tarantulidae = Phrynidae (p. 312) Liphistiidae (p. 386). Aviculariidae — Mygalidae (p. 386) f Butliinae (p. 306). \ Centrurinae (p. 306). ( Diplocentriuae (p. 307 . Urodacinae (p. 307). -j Scorpioninae (p. 307). Hemiscorpioninae (p. 307). Ischnurinae (p. 307). ( Megacorminae (p. 308). J. Euscorpiinae (p. 308). ( Chactinae (p. 308) ( Tarantulinae (p. 313). •I Phrynichinae (p. 313). ( Charontinae (p. 313). f Paratvopidinae (p. 387). Actinopodinae (p. 387). Miginae (p. 387). Barychelinae (p. 389). Aviculariinae (p. 389). V Diplurinae (p. 390). SCHEME OF CLASSIFICATION Orders. Araneae (contd.) Families. f Atypidae (p. 390). Filistatidae (p. 391). Oecobiidae = Urocteidae (p. 392). Sicariidae = Scytodidae (p. 393). Ilypochilidae (p. 393). Leptonetidae (p. 393). Oonopidae (p. 393). Hadrotarsidae (p. 394). Dysderidae (p. 394) Caponiidae (p. 395). Prodidomidae (p. 395). Drassidae (p. 396) Palpimanidae (p. 398). Eresidae (p. 398). Dictynidae (p. 398). Psechridae (p. 399). Zodariidae = Enyoidae (p. 399). Hersiliidae (p. 400). Pholcidae (p. 401). \ Theridiidae (p. 401) Sub-Families. Epeiridae (p. 406) Uloboridae (p. 410) Archeidae (411). Mimetidae (p. 411). Thomisidae (p. 412) Zoropsidae (p. 415). Platoridae (p. 415). Agelenidae (p. 415) f Dysderinae (p. 394). \ Segestriinae (p. 395). • Drassinae (p. 396). Clubioninae (p. 397). Liocraninae (p. 397). Micariinae (p. 397). f Argyrodinae (p. 402). Episininae (p. 402). Theridioninae (p. 403). -{ Phoroncidiinae (p. 404). Erigoninae (p. 404). I Forniicinae (p. 405). ILinyphiinae (p. 405). Theridiosomatinae (p. 407). Tetragnathinae (p. 407). Argiopinae (p. 408). Nephilinae (p. 408). Epeirinae (p. 408). Gasteracanthinae (p. 409). Poltyinae (p. 410). , Arcyinae (p. 410). Dinopinae (p. 410). Uloborinae (p. 410). Miagramrnopinae (p. 411). fThomisinae — Misumeninae (p. 412). Philodrominae (p. 413). -{ Sparassinae (p. 414). Aphantochilinae (p. 414). l Stephanopsinae (p. 414). ISelenopinae (p. 414). f Cybaeinae (p. 415). I Ageleninae (p. 416). j Hahniinae (p. 416). t Nicodaminae (p. 416). (Continued on the next page.} SCHEME OF CLASSIFICATION Orders. Araneae (contil. , Palpigradi (pp. 258, 422). Solifugae = Solpugae (pp. 258, 423) Chernetidea = Chernetes = Pseudoscor- piones (pp. 258, 430) Podogona = Eicinulei (pp. 258, 439) Phalangidea = Opiliones (pp. 258, 440) Snl>-< H-durs. -Acari = Acaridea (pp. 258, 454) Families. Pisauridae (p. 416). Lycosidae (p. 417. >. Ctenidae (p. 418). Senoculidae (p. 418). Oxyopidae (p. 419). Attidae = Salticidae (p. 419). Galeodidae (p. 428). Solpugidac (p. 429) Hexisopodidae (p. 429). Cheliferidae (p. 436) ( Cryptostemma- \ tidae(p.440). Sab-FunUtea. Rhagodinae (p. 429). Solpuginae (p. 429). Daesiinae (p. 429). Eremobatinae (p. 42'.' . Karshiinae (p. 42!' . ( Cheliferinae (p. 436). - Gaiypinae (pp. 436, 437) I Obisiinae (pp. 436, 437) Mecostethi = Laniatores (p. 448) I Phalangodidae (p. 448). •{ Cosmetidae (p. 449). \ Gonyleptidae (p. 449). Phalaugiidae (p. 449) Plagiostethi = Palpatores -J Iscliyropsalidae (p. 451). (p. 449) | Jfemastomatidae(p. 451). LTrogulidae (p. 452). Vermiform* j ^^^(p.^). [ Deniodicidae (p. 465). ( Sclerosoniatinae (p. 449). \^ Phalangiinae (p. 450). (p. 464) Metastigmata (p. 467) Oribatidae (p. 467}. eS ,—. ^\ [ Sarcoptinae (p. 4 fit! . -! Analgesinac (p. 466). ( Tyroglyphinae (p. 466). Argasidae(p.469). _• I'lxodidae (p. 469). Gamasidae (p. 470) Heterostigmataj Tarsonemidae (l, 471). (P- 471) Prostigmata Bdellidae (p. 4711 Halacaridae (p. 472). Hydrachuidae (p. 472). Trombidiidae (p. 472) L N°tios^ata }0piliowaridae [p. 473 . f Gamasinae (p. 470\ ( Dermanyssinae (p. 471). {Limnocharinae (p. 472). Caeculinae (p. 472\ Tetranychinae (p. 472}. Cheyletinae (p. 473). Erythraeinae (p. 473). v, Trombidiinae (p. 473). SCHEME OF CLASSIFICATION TARDIGRADA (pp. 258, 477). PENTASTOMIDA (pp. 258, 488). PYCNOGONIDA = PODOSOMATA = PANTOPODA (p. 501). Families. Decolopodidae (p. 531). Colossendeidae = Pasithoidae (p. 532). Eurycididae = Ascorhynchidae (p. 533). Ammotheidae (p. 534). Rhynchothoracidae (p. 535) Nymphonidae (p. 536). Pallenidae (p. 537). Phoxichilidiidae (p. 538). Phoxichilidae (p. 539). Pycnogonidae (p. 539). CRUSTACEA CHAPTERS I AND III-VII GEOFFEEY SMITH, M.A. (Oxox.) Fellow of New College, Oxford CHAPTER II THE LATE W. F. E. WELDON, M.A. (D.Sc. OXON.) Formerly Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, and Liuacre Professor of Human and Comparative Anatomy, Oxford VOL. IV CHAPTER I CRUSTACEA GENERAL ORGANISATION THE Crustacea are almost exclusively aquatic animals, and they play a part in the waters of the world closely parallel to that which insects play on land. The majority are free-living, and gain their sustenance either as vegetable -feeders or by preying upon other animals, but a great number are scavengers, picking clean the carcasses and refuse that litter the ocean, just as maggots and other insects rid the land of its dead cumber. Similar to insects also is the great abundance of individuals which represent many of the species, especially in the colder seas, and the naturalist in the Arctic or Antarctic oceans has learnt to hang the carcasses of bears and seals over the side of the boat for a few days in order to have them picked absolutely clean by shoals of small Amphipods. It is said that these creatures, when crowded sufficiently, will even attack living fishes, and by sheer press of numbers impede their escape and devour them alive. Equally surprising are the shoals of minute Copepods which may discolour the ocean for many miles, an appearance well known to fishermen, who take profitable toll of the fishes that follow in their wake. Despite this massing together we look in vain for any elaborate social economy, or for the development of complex instincts among Crustacea, such as excite our admiration in many insects, and though many a crab or lobster is sufficiently uncanny in appearance to suggest unearthly wisdom, he keeps his intelligence rigidly to himself, encased in the impenetrable reserve of his armour and vindicated by the most powerful; of pincers. It is chiefly in the variety of structure and in the multifarious phases of life-history that 3 CRUSTACEA CHAP. the interest of the Crustacea lies. Before entering into an examination of these matters, it will be well to take a general survey of Crustacean organisation, to consider the plan on which these animals are built, and the probable relation of this plan to others met with in the animal kingdom. The Crustacea, to begin with, are a Class of the enormous Phylum Arthropoda, animals with metamerically segmented bodies and usually with externally jointed limbs. Their bodies are thus composed of a series of repeated segments, which are on the whole similar to one another, though particular segments may be differentiated in various respects for the performance of different functions. This segmentation is apparent externally, the surface of a Crustacean being divided typically into a number of hard chitinous rings, some of which may be fused rigidly together, as in the carapace of the crabs, or else articulated loosely. Each segment bears typically a pair of jointed limbs, and though they vary greatly in accordance with the special functions for which they are employed, and may even be absent from certain segments, they may yet be reduced to a common plan and were, no doubt, originally present on all the segments. Passing from the exterior to the interior of the body we find, generally speaking, that the chief system of organs which exhibits a similar repetition, or metameric segmentation, is the nervous system. This system is composed ideally of a nervous ganglion situated in each segment and giving off peripheral nerves, the several ganglia being connected together by a longitudinal cord. This ideal arrangement, though apparent during the embryonic development, becomes obscured to some extent in the adult owing to the concentration or fusion of ganglia in various parts of the body. The other internal organs do not show any clear signs of segmentation, either in the embryo or in the adult ; the alimentary canal and its various diverticula lie in an unsegmented body-cavity, and are bathed in the blood which courses through a system of narrow canals and irregular spaces which surround all the organs of the body. A single pair, or at most two pairs of kidneys are present. The type of segmentation exhibited by the Crustacea is thus of a limited character, concerning merely the external skin with its appendages, and the nervous system, and not touching any SEGMENTATION 5 of the other internal organs.1 In this respect the Crustacea agree with all the other Arthropods, in the adults of which the segmentation is confined to the exterior and to the nervous system, and does not extend to the body-cavity and its contained organs ; and for the same reason they differ essentially from all other metamerically segmented animals, e.g. Annelids, in which the segmentation not only affects the exterior and the nervous system, but especially applies to the body-cavity, the musculature, the renal, and often the generative organs. The Crustacea also resemble the other Arthropoda in the fact that the body-cavity contains blood, and is therefore a " haemocoel," while in the Annelids and Vertebrates the segmented body-cavity is distinct from the vascular system, and constitutes a true " coelom." To this important distinction, and to its especial application to the Crustacea, we will return, but first we may consider more narrowly the segmentation of the Crustacea and its main types of variation within the group. In order to determine the number of segments which compose any particular Crustacean we have clearly two criteria : first, the rings or somites of which the body is composed, and to each of which a pair of limbs must be originally ascribed ; and, second, the nervous ganglia. Around and behind the region of the mouth there is very little difficulty in determining the segments of the body, if we allow embryology to assist anatomy, but in front of the mouth the matter is not so easy. In the Crustacea the moot point is whether we consider the paired eyes and first pair of antennae as true appendages belong- ing to two true segments, or whether they are structures sui generis, not homologous to the other limbs. With regard to the first antennae we are probably safe in assigning them to a true body-segment, since in some of the Entomostraca, e.g. Apus, the nerves which supply them spring, not from the brain as in more highly specialised forms, but from the commissures which pass round the oesophagus to connect the dorsally lying brain to the ventral nerve-cord. The paired eyes are always inner- vated from the brain, but the brain, or at least part of it, is very 1 The muscles are to a certain extent segmented in correspondence with the limbs ; and the heart, in Phyllopoda and Stomatopoda, may have segmentally arranged ostia. CRUSTACEA probably formed of paired trunk-ganglia which have fused into a common cerebral mass ; and the fact that under certain circum- stances the stalked eye of Decapods when excised with its peripheral ganglion1 can regenerate in the form of an antenna, is perhaps evidence that the lateral eyes are borne on what were once a pair of true appendages. Now, with regard to the segmentation of the body, the Crustacea fall into three categories : the Entomostraca, in which the number of segments is indefinite ; the Malacostraca, in which we may count nineteen segments, exclusive of the terminal piece or telson and omitting the lateral eyes ; and the Leptostraca, including the single recent genus Nebalia, in which the segmen- tation of head and thorax agrees exactly with that of the Malacostraca, but in the abdomen there are two additional segments. It has been usually held that the indefinite number of segments characteristic of the Entomostraca, and especially the indefinitely large number of segments characteristic of such Phyllopods as Apus, preserves the ancestral condition from which the definite number found in the Malacostraca has been derived ; but recently it has been clearly pointed out by Professor Carpenter 2 that the number of segments found in the Malacostraca and Leptostraca corresponds with extraordinary exactitude to the number determined as typical in all the other orders of Arthropoda. This remarkable correspondence (it can hardly be coincidence) seems to point to a common Arthropodan plan of segmentation, lying at the very root of the phyletic tree ; and if this is so, we are forced to the conclusion that the Malacostraca have retained the primitive type of segmentation in far greater perfection than the Entomostraca, in some of which many segments have been added, e.g. Phyllopoda, while in others segments have been suppressed, e.g. Cladocera, Ostracoda, It may be objected to this view of the primitive condition of segmentation in the Crustacea that the Trilobites, which for various reasons are regarded as related to the ancestral Crustaceans, exhibit an indefinite and often very high number of segments ; but, as Professor Carpenter has pointed out, the oldest and most primitive of Trilobites, such as Olenellus, possessed 1 Herbst, Arch. Entivick. Mcch. ii., 1905, p. 544. 2 Quart. J. Micr. Sci. xlix., 1906, p. 469. SEGMENTATION OF ARTHROPODS few segments which increase as \ve pass from Cambrian to Carboniferous genera. The following table shows the segmentation of the body in the Malacostraca, as compared with that of Limulus (cf. p. 203), Insecta, the primitive Myriapod Scolopendrella, and Peripatus. It will be seen that the correspondence, though not exact, is very close, especially in the first four columns, the number of segments in Peripatus being very variable in the different species. O 1 £ • o , Illflllll : The appendages of the Crustacea exhibit a wonderful variety CRUSTACEA of structure, but these variations can be reduced to at most two, and possibly to one fundamental plan. In a typical Crustacean, besides the paired eyes, which may be borne on stalks, possibly homologous to highly modified limbs, there are present, first, two pairs of rod- like or filamentous antennae, which in the adult are usually specialised for sensory purposes, but frequently retain their primitive function as locomotory limbs even in the adult, e.g. Ostracoda ; while in the Nauplius larva, found in almost all the chief subdivisions of the Crustacea, the two pairs of antennae invariably aid in locomotion, and the base of the second antennae is usually furnished with sharp biting spines which assist mastication. Following the antennae is a pair of mandibles which are fashioned for biting the food or for piercing the prey, and posterior to these are two pairs of maxillae, biting organs more slightly built than the mandibles, whose function it is to lacerate the food and prepare it for the more drastic action, of the mandibles. So far, with comparatively few exceptions, the order of specialisation is invariable ; but behind the maxillae the trunk-appendages vary greatly both in structure and function in the different groups. As a general rule, the first or first few thoracic limbs are turned forwards toward the mouth, and are subsidiary to mastication ; they are then called maxillipedes ; this happens usually in the Malacostraca, but to a much less extent in the Entomostraca ; and in any case these appendages immediately behind the maxillae never depart to any great extent from a limb-like structure, and they may graduate insensibly into the ordinary trunk-appendages. The latter show great diversity in the different Crustacean groups, according as the animals lead a natatory, creeping, or parasitic method of life ; they may be foliaceous, as in the Branchiopoda, or biramous, as in the swimming thoracic and abdominal appendages of the Mysidae, or simply uniramous, as in the walking legs of the higher Decapoda, and the clinging legs of various parasitic forms. Without going into detailed deviations of structure, many of which will be described under the headings of special groups, it is clear from the foregoing description and from Fig. 1 (p. 10), hat three main types of appendage can be distinguished : first, the foliaceous or multiramous ; second, the biramous ; and, third, the uniramous. APPENDAGES We may dismiss the uniramous type with a few words : it is obviously secondarily derived from the biramous type ; this can be proved in detail in nearly every case. Thus, the uniramous second antennae of some adult forms are during the Nauplius stage invariably biramous, a condition which is retained in the adult Cladocera. Similarly the uniramous walking legs of many Decapoda pass through a biramous stage during development, the outer branches or exopodites of the limbs being suppressed subsequently, while the primitively biramous condition of the thoracic limbs is retained in the adults of the Schizopoda, which doubtless own a common ancestry with the Decapoda. The only Crustacean limb which appears to be constantly uniramous both in larval and adult life is the first pair of antennae. We are reduced, therefore, to two types — the foliaceous and biramous. Sir E. Ray Lankester,1 in one of his most incisive morphological essays, has explained how these two types are really fundamentally the same. He compares, for instance, the foliaceous first maxillipede (Fig. 1, A), or the second maxilla (Fig. 1, B) of a Decapod, e.g. Astacus, with the foliaceous thoracic limb of Branchipus (Fig. 1, D), and with the typically biramous first maxillipede of a Schizopod (Fig. 1, F). In each case there is present, on the outer edge of .the limb, one or more projections or epipodites which are generally specialised for respiratory purposes, and may carry the gills. The 6th and 5th " endites " in the foliaceous limb (Fig. 1, D) are compared with the exopodite and endopodite respectively of the biramous limb, while the endites 4-1 of the foliaceous limb are found in the basal joints of the biramous limb. Lankester presumes that the biramous type of limb throughout has been derived from the foliaceous type by the suppression of the endites 1-4, as discrete rami, and the exaggerated development of the endites 5 and 6, as above indicated. The essential fact that the two types of limb are built on the same plan may be considered as established ; but it may be urged that the biramous type represents this common plan more nearly than the foliaceous. It is, at any rate, certain that in the maxillipedes of the Decapoda we witness the conversion of the biramous type into the foliaceous by the expansion of the basal joints concomitantly with the assumption by the 1 Quart. J. Micr. Sci. xxi., 1881, p. 343. 10 CRUSTACEA maxillipedes of masticatory functions. Thus in the Decapoda the first maxillipede is decidedly foliaceous owing to the expanded OU^C^'-' • *' dp /^<^f\ L&. G FIG. 1. — Appendages of Crustacea (A-G) and Triloliita (H). A, First maxillipede of Astacus ; B, second maxilla of Astai-us ; C, second walking-leg of Astacus ; D, thoracic liml> of Ilrniir/n'/ixs ; E, first maxillipede of Mjjsis ; F, first maxillipede of <;,ii>iilntit>i! female> third runs down the body, x 100. Oxford, beneath the alimentary canal to dilate into a large sinus round the rectum. This ventral blood-channel gives a branch to each limb, which forms a con- siderable dilatation in the epipodite, the blood from the limb returning to the pericardium by a lateral sinus. From the rectum a large sinus runs forwards to the pericardium along the dorsal wall of the body. The blood which enters each half of the carapace is collected in a median vessel and returned through this to the pericardium. Those spaces between the viscera which are not filled with blood are occupied by a peculiar connective tissue, consisting of rounded or polyhedral cells, charged with drops of a fatty material which is often brightly coloured. The reproductive organs are interesting because of the peculiar phenomena connected with the nutrition of the two kinds of eggs. The ovaries or testes are epithelial sacs, one on 44 CRUSTACEA BRANCHIOPODA CHAP. each side of the body, each continuous with a duct which opens to the exterior behind the last thoracic limb. In the female, the opening is dorsal (Fig. 10), in the male it is ventral (Fig. 11). The external opening is usually simple; but in the male there is sometimes a penis-like process, on which the vas deferens opens (Daphnellci). The eggs are of two kinds, the so-called " summer-eggs," with relatively little yolk, which develop rapidly without fertilisation, and the so-called " winter -eggs," containing much yolk, which require to be fertilised and then develop slowly. At one end of the ovary, generally that nearest to the oviduct, there is a mass of protoplasm, containing nuclei which actively divide; this is the germarium (Fig. 15, A, B, C). As a result of proliferation in the germarium, nucleated masses are thrown off into the cavity of the ovary ; each such mass con- tains four nuclei, and its protoplasm soon becomes divided into four portions, one round each nucleus, so that four cells are produced. In the simpler ovaries, such as that of Leptodora (Fig. 15, A), these sets of four cells are arranged in a linear series within the tube of ovarian epithelium ; in other cases, as in Daphnia, the arrangement is more irregular. In the normal development of parthenogenetic eggs, one cell out of each set of four becomes an ovum, the other three feeding it with yolk and then dying. Weismann 1 has shown that the ovum is always formed from the third cell of each set, counting from the germarial end, so that in the ovary of Leptodora drawn in Fig. 15, A, the ova will be formed from the cells marked Er E2, E3. At certain times, one or two sets of germinal cells fail to produce ova ; the epithelial wall of the ovary thickens round these cells, so that they become incompletely separated from the rest in a so-called "nutrient chamber" (Fig. 15, B, N.CT). Germ-cells enclosed in a nutrient chamber degenerate and are ultimately devoured by the ovarian epithelium. The significance of these nutrient chambers is unknown. The production of a winter-egg is a more complicated process. The epithelium of the ovarian tube swells up, so that the lumen is nearly obliterated, and several sets of four germ-cells pass from the germarium to lie among the swollen epithelial cells. All these groups of germ-cells, except one, disintegrate and are 1 Zcitsehr. wiss. Zool. xxiv., 1874, p. 1. OVARY OF LEPTODORA 45 E •EL O.D. G. w FIG. 15. — A, Ovary of a parthenogenetic Leptodma hi/alina ; B, base of another ovary of the same species, showing a so-called " nutrient chamber " ; C, ovary of a female Daphnia, showing the formation of a winter-egg. E, E^E^, Parthenogenetic egg ; Ej), ovarian epithelium ; G, germarium ; N. C, nutrient chamber ; 0. D, oviduct ; W, winter-egg ; 1, 2, 4, the other three cells of the same group ; II, III, two other groups of germ-cells. 46 CRUSTACEA BRANCHIOPODA devoured by the ovarian epithelium, one cell of the remaining group enlarging to form a winter-egg, fed during its growth not only by the three cells of its own set but also by the epithelial cells of the ovarian tube, which have devoured the germ-cells of other sets. An ovary never contains more than a single winter- egg at the same time, the number of germ -cells which are devoured during its formation varying in the different species ; the Daphnia drawn in Fig. 15, C, has produced three groups of FIG. 16. — Sketch of a parthenogenetic Moina rectirostris, x 45,,J;he brood-pouch being emptied and the side of the carapace removed, showing the dome of thickened epithelium on the thorax, by which nutrient material is thrown into the brood- pouch, and the ridge which fits against the carapace in the natural condition so as to close the brood-pouch. germ-cells, of which two (II, III), will die, while the cell W from the remaining group will develop into an ovum ; in Moina, Weismann finds that as many as a dozen cell-groups may be thrown into the ovary before the production of a winter-egg, so that only one out of forty-eight germ-cells survives as an ovum. The summer-eggs are always carried until they are hatched by the parthenogenetic female which produces them. The brood-pouch is the space between the dorsal wall of the thorax and the carapace. This space is always more or less perfectly closed at the sides by the pressure of the carapace against the body, arid behind by vascular processes from the abdominal segments (Figs. 10, 16, etc.). The presence of a large blood-sinus II BROOD-CHAMBER OF CLADOCERA 47 beneath the dorsal wall of the thorax and in the middle line of the carapace suggests the possibility that some special nutrient substances may pass from the body of the parent into the brood - chamber, and in some species the thoracic ectoderm is specially modified as a placenta. In Moina (Fig. 16) the dorsal wall of the thorax is produced into a dome, covered by a columnar ectoderm, which contains a dilatation of the dorsal blood-sinus : and in this form it has been shown that the fluid in the brood- pouch contains dissolved proteids. Associated with the apparatus for supplying the brood- pouch with nutriment is a special apparatus for closing it, in the form of a raised ridge, which projects from the back and sides of the thorax and fits into a groove of the carapace. A somewhat similar nutrient apparatus exists in the Polyphemidae, , ,, -. f i FIG. 17. — Moina rectirostris, ?, x 40, showing the Wfiere tne edges OI tne ephippial thickening of the carapace which pre- small carapace are fused cedes the laying of a winter-egg. with the thorax, so that the brood pouch is completely closed, and the young can only escape when the parent casts her cuticle. In some genera of this family (e.g. Evadne) the young remain in the parental brood- pouch until they are themselves mature, so that when they are set free they may already bear parthenogenetic embryos in their own brood-pouches. . The winter-eggs are fertilised in the same part of the cara- pace of the female in which the parthenogenetic eggs develop, but after fertilisation they are thrown off from the body of the mother, either with or without a protective envelope formed from the cuticle of the carapace. The eggs of Sida are sur- rounded by a thin layer of a sticky substance, and when cast out of the maternal carapace they adhere to foreign objects, such as water-weeds ; those of Polyphemus have a thick, gelatinous coat ; in Leptodora and Bytliotreplies the egg secretes a two- layered chitinous shell. In these forms the cuticle of the 48 CRUSTACEA — BRANCHIOPODA CHAP. parent is not used as a protection for the winter-eggs, although it is generally, if not invariably, thrown off when the eggs are laid. In the Lynceidae the cuticle is moulted in such a way that the winter-eggs remain within it, at least for a time ; the cuticle is occasionally modified before it is thrown off; thus in Camptocercus macrurus the cuticle of the carapace, in the region of the brood - pouch, becomes thickened and darkly coloured, forming a fairly strong case round the eggs. The modification of the cuticle round the brood-pouch is much more pronounced in the Daphniidae, where it leads to the formation of a saddle-shaped cuticular box, the " ephippium," in which the winter-eggs are enclosed. The ripening of a winter-egg in the ovary of a Daphnia is accompanied by a great thickening of the cuticle of the carapace (cf. Fig. 18), so that a strong case is formed in the position of the brood-pouch. The winter-eggs are laid be- tween the two valves of this case, and shortly afterwards the parent Fio. 18. — Newly-cast ephippium of Daphnia, . containing two winter-eggs. moults. Hie eggs are retained within the ephippium, from which the rest of the cuticle breaks away (Fig. 18). After separation, the ephippium, which contains a single egg (Moina rectirostris) or usually two (Daphnia, etc.), either sinks to the bottom, as in Moina, or floats. The winter - eggs usually go through the early stages of segmentation within a short time after they are laid, but after this a longer or shorter period of quiescence occurs, during which the eggs may be dried or frozen without injury. The sides and floor of a dried -up pond are often crowded with ephippia, containing winter -eggs which develop quickly when replaced in water ; and the resting-stage of winter-eggs pro- duced in aquaria can often be materially shortened by drying the ephippia which contain them, though such desiccation does not appear to be necessary for development. Under normal conditions large numbers of winter - eggs remain quiescent through the winter and hatch in the following spring. The individual developed from a sexually fertilised winter- it LIFE-CYCLE OF CLADOCERA 49 egg is invariably a parthenogenetic female : the characters of the succeeding generations differ in different cases. In a few forms, of which Moina is the best known, the parthenogenetic female, produced from a winter-egg, may give rise to males, to sexual females, and to parthenogenetic females, so that the cycle of forms which intervene between one winter- egg and the next is short. A sexual female produces one or two winter -eggs, and if these are fertilised they are enclosed in an ephippium and cast off; if, however, the eggs when ripe are not fertilised, they atrophy, and the female produces partheno- genetic eggs, being thenceforward incapable of forming sexual " winter " eggs. An accidental absence of males may thus lead to the occurrence of parthenogenesis in the whole of the second generation. The regular production of sexual individuals in the second generation from the winter-egg appears to depend on a variety of circumstances not yet understood. Mr. G. H. Grosvenor tells me that Moina from the neighbourhood of Oxford may give rise to several successive generations of parthenogenetic individuals, when grown in small aquaria. In the greater number of Daphniidae, the parthenogenetic female, produced from a winter - egg, gives rise only to parthenogenetic forms, and it is not until after half a dozen parthenogenetic generations have been produced that a few sexual forms appear, mixed with the others. Such sexual forms are fairly common in April or May in this country; they produce " winter " eggs and then die, the generations which succeed them through the summer being entirely parthenogenetic. In late autumn sexual individuals are again produced, giving rise to a plentiful crop of winter-eggs, but many parthenogenetic females are still found, and some of these appear to live and to re- produce through the winter. In Sida, in the Polyphemidae and Leptodoridae, and in most of the Lynceidae, sexual individuals are produced only once in every year, while in a few forms which inhabit great lakes the sexual condition occurs so rarely that it is still unknown. Weismann l has pointed out that the sexual forms, with their property of producing eggs which can endure desiccation, recur most frequently in- species such as 3foin«, which inhabit small pools liable to be dried up at frequent intervals, while the 1 Zeitschr. wiss. Zool. xxvii., xxxiii., 1876, 1879. VOL. IV E 50 CRUSTACEA BRANCHIOPODA CHAP. species which produce sexual forms only once a year are all inhabitants either of great lakes which are, never dry, or of the sea. Many suggestions have been made as to the environmental stimulus which induces the production of sexual individuals, but nothing is definitely known upon the subject. We have said that even in those generations which contain sexual males and females there are always some parthenogenetic individuals ; there is therefore nothing in the behaviour of Daphniidae, either under natural conditions or when observed in aquaria, to suggest that there is any natural or necessary limit to the number of generations which may be parthenogenetically produced. The parthenogenetic Daphniidas are extremely sensitive to changes in their surroundings ; small variations in the character and amount of substances dissolved in the water are often followed by changes in the length of the posterior spine, in the shape and size of crests on the head, and in other characters affecting the appearance of the creatures, so that the deter- mination of species is often a matter of great difficulty. It is remarkable that the green light which has passed through the leaves of water-plants appears to have a prejudicial effect upon some species. Warren has shown that Daphnia magna repro- duces more slowly when exposed to green light, and that in- dividuals grown in this way are more readily susceptible to injury from the presence of small quantities of salt (sodium chloride) in the water than individuals which have been exposed to white light. The majority of the Cladocera belong to the floating fauna of the fresh waters and seas ; a few are littoral in their habits, clinging to water-weeds near the shore, a very few live near the bottom at considerable depths, but the majority belong to that floating fauna to which Haeckel gave the name of " plankton." The Crustacea are an important element in the plankton, whether in fresh waters or in the sea, the two great groups which contribute most largely to it being the Cladocera and the Copepoda. For this reason it will be more convenient to discuss the habits and distribution of individual Cladocera and Copepoda together in a chapter specially devoted to the characters of pelagic faunas (cf. Chap. VII.). We will only add to the present chapter a table of the families with a diagnosis of the British genera. BRITISH GENERA OF CLADOCERA Summary of Characters of the British Genera.1 Tribe I. CALYPTOMKRA, Sars. — The post-cephalic portion of the body enveloped in a free fold or carapace. A. Six pairs of thoracic feet, the first pair not prehensile (CTENOPODA). Fam. 1. Sididae : second antennae biramous in both sexes. tiidn, Straus (Fig. 11) : second antenna with three joints in the dorsal ramus, two in the ventral ; the rostrum large, the teeth on the telson many. Latona, Straus : second antenna with two joints in the dorsal ramus, three in the ventral, the proximal joint of the dorsal ramus provided with a setose appendage. Daphnella, Baird : second antenna with the joints as in Latona, but with no setose appendage. Fam. 2. Holopediidae : second antennae not biramous in the female ; a rudimentary second ramus in the male. Holopedium, Zaddach. B. Four to five or six pairs of thoracic feet, the anterior pair prehensile (ANOMOPODA). A. Ventral ramus of second antenna with three joints, the dorsal ramus with four. Fam. 3. Daphniidae : five pairs of thoracic feet, with a gap between the fourth and fifth pairs. The stomach with two forwardly-directed diverticula. i. First antennae of female short. a A median dorsal spine on posterior margin of carapace. Daphnia, 0. F. Miiller (Fig. 19) : first antennae of female not mobile. The head separated from the thorax only by FIG. 19. — Daphnia obtusa, male, x about 50. Oxford. .1.1, First an- tenna ; Th. 1, first thoracic append- a slight constriction or not at all. Cuticle with a quadrate rhomboid pattern. Ceriodaphnia, Dana : first antennae of 1 Consult Lilljeborg, Nov. Ada Reg. tioc. Upsalensis, 1901 ; Scourfield, J. Quekett Micr. Club, 1903-4. CRUSTACEA BRONCHIOPODA female mobile. The head separated by a deep depression from the thorax. Cuticle with a polygonal pattern. /3 A pair of ventral spines on posterior margin of carapace. Scapholeberis, Schoedler (Fig. 20). FIG. 20. — Scaphole- beris mucronata, female, x 25. Oxford. y No spine on posterior margin of carapace. Simoceplialus, Schoedler (Fig. 10, p. 39) : the cuticle with a pattern of parallel branching ridges. Fia. 21. — Moina rectirostris, female, x 24. Oxford. ii. First antennae of female long, mobile. Moina, Baird (Figs. 16, 17, 21): median eye absent. Posterior margin of carapace without a spine. FIG. 22. — Bosmina sp., female, x about 80. Lake Constance. FIG. 23. — Acroperus leucocephalus, x about 35. Oxford. FAMILIES OF CLADOCERA 53 Fam. 4. Bosminidae : feet equidistant, five or six pairs ; the first antennae of the female immobile, with eense-hairs arranged in rings, not forming an apical tuft. The intestine uncoiled ; no caeca. Bosmina, Baird (Fig. 22). Fam. 5. Lyncodaphniidae : four, five, or six pairs of equidistant thoracic limbs ; the first two pairs prehensile. First antennae of female mobile, with apical sense-hairs. Intestine coiled or straight. i. Four pairs of thoracic limbs. Lathonura, Lilljeborg. ii. Five pairs of thoracic limbs. a. The four-jointed ramus of the second antenna with four swimming hairs. Macrothrix, Baird : the first antennae of the female flattened, curved. The intestine simple, straight. Streblocerus, Sars : first antennae of the female very little flattened, curved backwards and outwards. The intestine coiled, the stomach with two forwardly-directed caeca. b. The four-jointed ramus of the second antenna with only three swimming hairs. Drepanothrix, Sars. iii. Six pairs of thoracic limbs ; the labrum provided with an appendage. Acantholeberis, Lilljeborg : appendage of labrum long, pointed, and setose. Intestine without caecum. Ilyocryptus, Sars : appendage of the labrum short, truncated. Intestine with a caecum. B. Both rami of second antenna three-jointed. Fam. 6. Lynceidae 1 : five or six equidistant pairs of thoracic feet. Intestine coiled. i. Six pairs of thoracic limbs. Head and thorax separated by a deep depression. Intestine with one caecum, stomach with two. Female carries many summer - eggs. Eurycercus, Baird. ii. Five pairs of thoracic limbs. Head and thorax separated by a slight groove or not at all. Anterior digestive caeca absent. Female carries only one or two summer-eggs. A. Body elongate, oval. a. Head carinate, the eye far from the anterior cephalic margin. Camptocercus, Baird : body laterally compressed. Second antennae with seven swimming hairs. Telson more than half as long as the shell. Acroperus, Baird (Fig. 23) : body compressed. Second antennae with eight swimming hairs, of which one is very small. Telson less than half as long as the shell. b. Head not carinate, the eye near the anterior cephalic margin. Alonopsis, Sars : terminal claws of telson with three accessory teeth. Alona, Baird : terminal claws of telson with one accessory tooth (includes sub-genera Leydigia, Alona, Harpo- rhynchus, Graptoleberis). Peracantlia, Baird (Fig. 14) : terminal 1 More properly Chydoridae,but the universally known name Lynceidae is con- venient. 54 CRUSTACEA— BRANCHIOPODA CHAP, n claws of telson with two accessory teeth (includes sub-genera Alonella, Pleuroxus, Peracantha). B. Body small, spheroidal ; the head depressed. Chydorus, Leach : compound eye present. Monopsilus, Sars : compound eye absent. Tribe II. GYMXOMERA, Sars. — -The carapace forms a closed brood-pouch, which does not cover the body ; all the thoracic limbs prehensile. Fam. 7. Polyphemidae : four pairs of thoracic limbs, provided with a gnathobase. Fresh-water genera. — Polyphemus, Miiller, with no rudimentary exites on first three thoracic limbs. Bythotrephes, Leydig (Fig. 13), with no trace of processes on the outer sides of the limbs. Marine genera. — Evadne, Loven, the head not separated by a constriction from the thorax. Podon, Loven, with deep cervical constriction. FIG. 24. — Leptodora hyalina, x 6. Lake Bassenthwaite. A. I, First antenna ; Car, carapace ; I, VI, first and sixth thoracic appendages. Fam. 8. Leptodoridae : six pairs of thoracic limbs, with no gnathobase. Only genus, Leptodora, Lilljeborg (Fig. 24), from fresh water. Note. — For extra - European Cladocera consult Daday, " Microskopische Siisswassertiere aus Patagonien und Chili," Terme's Fiizetek, xxv., 1902, p. 201 ; for Paraguay, Bibliotheca Zooloyica, Heft 44 ; for Ceylon, Terme's Fiizetek, xxi., 1898 ; and for Australia, Sars, Christiania Vidensk. Forhand. 1885, No. 8, and 1888, No. 7 ; and Arch. f. Math, og Naturvid. xviii., 1896, No. 3, and xix., 1897, No. 1.— G. W. S. CRUSTACEA (CONTINUED}: COPEPODA Order II. Copepoda. THK Copepods are small Crustacea, composed typically of about sixteen segments, in which the biramous type of limb pre- dominates. They are devoid of a carapace. Development proceeds gradually by the addition posteriorly of segments to a Xauplius larval form. Paired compound eyes are absent, except in Branchiura, the adult retaining the simple eye of the Nauplius. In a typical Copepod, such as Calanus hyperloreus (Fig. 25), we can distinguish the following segments with their appen- dages : a cephalothorax, carrying a pair of uniramous first an- tennae (1st Ant.} ; a pair of biramous second antennae (2nd 'Ant.} ; mandibles (Md.} with biting gnathobases and a palp, and a pair of foliaceous first maxillae (Ifo.1). Two pairs of appendages follow, which were looked upon as the two branches of the second maxillae, but it is now certain that they represent two pairs of appendages, which may be called second maxillae (Mx.~\ and maxillipedes (Mxp.~) respectively. Behind these are five pairs of biramous swimming feet, the first pair (Th.1} attached to the cephalothorax, the succeeding four pairs to four distinct thoracic somites. Behind the thorax is a clearly delimited abdomen composed of five segments, the first of which (Abd.1} carries the genital opening, and the last a caudal furca. The Copepods exhibit a great variety of structure, and their classification is attended with great difficulties. Glaus l based his attempt at a natural classification on the character of 1 Grundziige der Zoologie, 4. Aufl. 1880, p. 543. 55 CRUSTACEA COPEPODA CHAP. the mouth and its appendages, dividing the free-living and semi-parasitic forms as Gnathostomata from the true parasites or FIG. 25. — Calanus hyperboreus, x 30. Abd1, First abdominal segment ; 1st Ant, 2nd Ant, 1st and 2nd antennae ; Md, mandible ; Mxl, My?, 1st and 2nd maxillae ; Mxp, maxillipede ; Tfi1, 1st thoracic appendage. (After Giesbreclit. ) Siphonostomata. This division, although convenient, breaks down in many places, and it is clear that the parasitic mode of life has been acquired more than once in the history of Copepod in EUCOPEPODA GYMNOPLEA AMPHASCANDRIA 57 evolution, while the free-living groups do not constitute a natural assemblage. Giesbrecht has more recently l founded a classification of the free-living pelagic Copepods upon the segmentation of the body and certain secondary sexual characters, and he has hinted 2 that this scheme of classification applies to the semi-parasitic and parasitic forms. Although much detail remains to be worked out and the position of some families is doubtful, Giesbrecht's scheme is the most satisfactory that has hitherto been suggested, and will be adopted in this chapter. The peculiarity in structure of the Argulidae, a small group of ectoparasites on fresh water fish, necessitates their separation from the rest of the Copepods (Eucopepoda) as a separate Branch, Branchiura. BRANCH I. EUCOPEPODA. Sub-Order 1. Gymnoplea. The division between the front and hind part of the body falls immediately in front of the genital openings and behind the fifth thoracic feet. The latter in the male are modified into an asymmetrical copulatory organ. TRIBE I. AMPHASCANDRIA. The first antennae of the male are symmetrical, with highly- developed sensory hairs. Fam. Calanidae. — The Calanidae are exclusively marine Crustacea, and form a common feature of the pelagic, plankton in all parts of the world. Some species of the genus Calanus often occur in vast shoals, making the sea appear blood- red, and they furnish a most important article of fish food. These swarms appear to consist chiefly of females, the males being taken rarely, and only at certain seasons of the year. Some of the Calanidae are animals of delicate and curious form, owing to the development of plumed iridescent hairs from various parts of their body, which may often exhibit a marked asymmetry, as 1 Fauna aiul Flora G. v. Neapel, Monograph 19, 1892. 2 Ibid. Monograph 25, 1899. CRUSTACEA — COPEPODA in the species figured, Calocalanns plumulosus (Fig. 26), from the Mediterranean. Sars makes a curious observation l with regard to the distribution of certain Calanidae. He reports that along the whole route of the " Fram," species such as Calanus hyperboreus and Euch- aeta norwegica were taken at the surface, which, in the Nor- wegian fjords, only occur at depths of over 100 fathoms. He suggests that the Nor- wegian individuals, instead of migrating northwards as the warmer climate super- vened, have sought boreal conditions of temperature by sinking into the deeper waters. FIG. 26. — Calocalanus plumulosns, x 15. (After Giesbrecht. ) TRIBE II. HETERARTHRAN- DRIA. The first antennae of the male are asym- metrical, one, usually the right, being used as a clasping organ. The males of the Centropagidae, Candacidae and Pontellidae, besides possessing the asymmetrically modified thoracic limbs of the fifth pair also exhibit a modification of one of the first antennae, which is generally thickened in the middle, and has a peculiar joint in it, or geniculation, which enables it to be flexed and so used as a clasping organ for holding the female. Fam. 1. — Centropagidae. — These Copepods are very common in the pelagic plankton, and some of the species vie with the 1 Norwegian North Polar Exp. Sci. Results, vol. i. part v. , 1900. in GYMNOPLEA HETERARTHRANDRIA 59 Calanidae in plumed ornaments, e.g. Augaptilus filigerus, figured by Giesbrecht in his monograph. The use of these ornaments, which are possessed by so many pelagic Copepods,. is entirely obscure.1 Certain of the Centropagidae live in fresh water. Thus Diaptomus is an exclusively fresh-water genus, and forms a most important constituent of lake - plankton ; various species of Heterocope occur in the great continental lakes, and certain Eurytemora go up the estuaries of rivers into brackish water. An excellent work on the fresh-water Copepods of Germany has been written by Schmeil,2 who gives analytical tables for distinguishing various genera and species. The three fresh-water families are the Centropagidae, Cyclopidae, and Harpacticidae (see p. 62). The Centropagidae may be sharply distinguished from the other fresh- water families by the following characters : — The cephalothorax is distinctly separated from the abdomen ; the first antennae are long and composed of 24-25 segments, in the male only a single antenna (generally the right) being geniculated and used as a clasping organ. The fifth pair of limbs are not rudimentary ; a heart is present, and only one egg-sac is found in the female. The second antennae are distinctly biramous. Diaptomus. — The furcal processes are short, at most three times as long as broad ; endopodite of the first swimming appendage 2-jointed, endopodites of succeeding legs 3 -join ted. Heterocope. — -The furcal processes are short, at most twice as long as broad ; endopodites of all swimming legs 1-jointed. Eurytemora. — The furcal processes are long, at least three and a half times as long as broad ; the endopodite of the first pair of legs 1-jointed, those of the other pairs 2-jointed. It has been known for a long time that some of the marine Copepods are phosphorescent, and, indeed, owing to their numbers in the plankton, contribute very largely to bring about that liquid illumination which will always excite the admiration of seafarers. In northern seas the chief phosphorescent Copepods belong to Metridia, a genus of the Centropagidae ; but in the Bay of Naples Giesbrecht 3 states that the phosphorescent species are the following Centropagids : Pleuromma abdominale and P. gracile, Leuckartia flavicornis and 1 They may assist the animal by retarding its sinking. Cf. Chun, "Ausden Tiefen des Weltmeeres," 1905. 2 Schmeil, Bibliotheca Zoologica, Hefte 11, 15, and 21. 3 Giesbrecht, Mitth. Zool. Stat. Neap, xi., 1895, p. 648. 6o CRUSTACEA COPEPODA CHAP. Heterochaeta papilligera ; Oncaea conifera is also phosphorescent. It is often stated that Sapphirina (p. 69) is phosphorescent, but its wonderful iridescent blue colour is purely due to interference colours, and has nothing to do with phosphorescence. Giesbrecht has observed that the phosphorescence is due to a substance secreted in special skin-glands, which is jerked into the water, and on coming into contact with it emits a phosphor- escent glow. This substance can be dried up completely in a desiccated specimen and yet preserve its phos- phorescent properties, the essential condition for the actual emission of light being contact with water. Similarly, specimens preserved in glycerine for a long period will phosphoresce when compressed in distilled water. From this last experiment Giesbrecht concludes that the phosphorescence can hardly be due to an oxidation process, but the nature of the chemical reaction remains obscure. Fam. 2. Candacidae. - - This family comprises the single genus Oandace, with numerous species distributed in the plankton of all seas. Some species, e.g. C. pectinata, Brady, have a practically world- wide distribution, this species being recorded from the Shetlands and from the Philippines. Fam. 3. Pontellidae. — This is a larger family also comprising widely distributed species found in the marine plankton. Anomalo- is one of the commonest elements FIG. 27. — Dorsal view of Anomalo- cera pattersoni, ,->• n, 6. A, A', 1st and 2nd antennae; most abundant being btenoc/iot/ieres M, mouth ; MX, 2nd maxilla ; egregius, parasitic on the Gammarid T, 1st thoracic leg. (After Han- *_ y sen.) Metopa OTUzeln, Goes. The male bears a median glandu- lar thread on the forehead by which it attaches itself to the females or to the host. Hansen considers that the family is most closely allied to the Lernaeopodidae. BEANCH II. BEANCHIUEA. Fam. Argulidae.3— We have yet to mention this group of fish -parasites, related to the Copepoda, but occupying an isolated 1 Glaus, Zeitschr. iviss. Zool. xi., 1861, p. 287. '2 Hansen, "The Choniostomatidae," Copenhagen. 3 Glaus, Zeitschr. wiss. Zool. xxv., 1875, p. 217. BRANCHIURA ARGULIDAE 77 position. They are ectoparasites upon various species of fish, Argulus foliaceus being common in the fresh waters of Europe, infesting the branchial chamber or the skin of fresh-water fish, but being frequently taken swimming freely in the water. FIG. 48. — Argulus foliaceus, young ', brain ; E, eye ; //, frouto-lateral horn ; J/, mandible ; S, stomach. (After Groom.) or stalk of the adult ; the larval bivalve carapace is cast off and on the external surface of the mantle the calcifications begin which will give rise to the exoskeletal plates of the adult. This r-'iiiun is known as the " capitulum " of the adult, as opposed to the " peduncle." The young Cirripede is now known as a pupa, and from this stage the adult form is reached by a gradual transition. VOL. IV G 82 CRUSTACEA CIRRIPEDIA The body of the adult Lepas is retracted into the mantle, Or M.C FIG. 50. — Cypris-stage in the development of Lepas australis, x 15. A, Peduncle : A.M, adductor muscle; C, caecum of oesophagus; C.g, cement-glands; Cr, cirri (thoracic appendages) ; K, compound eye ; El, simple eye ; G, ventral ganglia ; 7, intestine ; J/, mouth ; M.C, mantle-cavity ; 0, ovary ; X, stomach. (After Hoek.) and lies free in the mantle-cavity, but is continuous anteriorly with the tissues of the peduncle, into which the mantle does not extend. The thorax, with its six pairs of legs, can be protruded from the mantle-cavity through the slit- like opening which separates the -two valves of the mantle along the ventral middle line ; and when the animal is feeding, the thoracic legs are so protruded, and by their concerted waving action they drive the food-particles in the water along the channel between them, until the particles reach the oral cone, where they are masticated by the A mandibles and two pairs of maxillae, and Fco. 51.— Pupa of Lepas so passed into the alimentary canal. When pectinata, x 8. A, An- tne animal is disturbed it rapidly retracts tenna ; C, carina ; M, . , . , adductor muscle ; s, its limbs, the valves of the mantle are scutum ; T tergum. c}oseci by means of a strong adductor muscle (After Gruvel.) ° in the head, and the animal is protected from all external influences. In the acorn-barnacles (Operculata), ANATOMY which live in great numbers attached to rocks and other objects between tide-marks, the body is constructed on a similar plan, save that there is no stalk, and the body is completely enclosed in a hard calcareous box formed from the mantle, which, when the valves are closed, as they always are during low tide, completely protect the animal iiiside from desiccation or danger of any kind. Besides the cement-glands situated in the peduncle, we can distinguish the generative organs, consisting of a pair of ovaries and testes, the majority of Cirripedes being hermaphrodite. The testes open at the end of an elongated median penis behind the thoracic limbs, tm FIG. 52.- — A, Dwarf male of Scalpellum vulgare, x 27 ; B, diagram of Stalked Barnacle, a, Peduncle ; al, alimentary canal ; b, brain ; c, carina ; e, remains of Nauplius eye ; gl, cement-gland ; m, mantle-cavity ; o, its opening ; cm, ovary ; p, penis ; s, scutum ; t, testis ; (M, terguin, seen in A as the shaded body above the reference-line of e and to the right of the carina, on the left of the figure. while the ovaries, situated in the peduncle, have paired openings into the mantle-cavity on either side of the head. A pair of maxillary glands or kidneys are present, and the alimentary canal is provided with various digestive glands. Special branchial organs are not present in the Pedunculate Cirripedes, but in the Operculate genera two branchiae are formed from the plications of the internal surface of the mantle. There is no contractile heart, and the circulatory system is poorly developed. The Cirripedes are badly furnished with sensory organs ; the remains of a simple Nauplius eye may persist, situated on the upper part of the stomach, but the chief sense- organs are the sensory hairs upon the limbs. The recent Cirripedes fall into six clearly denned Sub-orders. 84 CRUSTACEA — CIRRIPEDIA Sub-Order 1. Pedunculata. In this division, sometimes combined with the Operculata as THORACICA, owing to the extremely reduced state of the abdomen, the body is borne on a distinct stalk, and the bivalve arrangement of the mantle is clearly retained. The mantle is protected externally by a number of calcareous plates, the arrangement of which is typical of the various genera. It appears that in the most primitive and geologically- oldest Cirripedes, the probable ancestors of the Pedunculate and Oper- culate sub-orders, the arrangement of the plates was somewhat irregular, and they were far more numerous than in the modern forms, so that passing from these older types to modern times we witness a reduction in the number and a greater precision in the arrangement of the skeletal parts. One of the most ancient Cirripedes known is Turrilepas, which occurs in the Silurian deposits of England, but it is also known from earlier deposits, while undoubted /~f Cirripedes have been found in the Cam- brian of North America. The body of Turrilepas is enclosed in imbricating plates, as shown in Fig. 53, A. In Archaeolepas of the Upper Jurassic (Lithographic slates of Bavaria) the ar- rangement of scutes typical of the Lepa- didae is foreshadowed, but the whole of the peduncle is protected by rows l; B, Archaeolepas redten- of plates (Fig. 53, B), as in Turrilepas. backeri, (Jurassic), x 1. C. mi i T T carina ; R, rostrum; s, -Lne above-mentioned genera did not scutum ; T, tergum. (After survive into the Cretaceous period, their places being taken by the genera Pollicipes and Scalpellum, which first appeared in the Silurian and persist to the present time, the older and more primitive Poll-it- ipf* being represented by about half a dozen living species, while the species of Scalpellum are exceedingly numerous. Fam. 1. Polyaspidae. — This family includes the three genera, Pollicipes, Scalpellum, and Lithotrya. Pollicipes is not only very ancient geologically (being found from the Ordovician upward), but it preserves the primitive character- 1'EUUXCULATA POLLICIPES AND SCALPELLUM istic of numerous skeletal plates, the peduncle being frequently covered with small calcareous pieces, which graduate into the larger more regularly placed scutes on the capitulum (Fig. 54). The species of this genus, many of which are among the largest Cirripedes, are widely distributed in the temperate and tropical seas, living for the most part attached to rocks and often in deep water. P. cornu- rajiia occurs off the English and Scottish coasts. The members of the genus Scalpellum, which is represented by exceedingly numer- ous species in the Cretaceous period, also possess a large number of plates on the capitulum, and often on the peduncle as well, but never so many as in Pollicipes. Although the arrangement of the plates varies much in the different species, we may i -i f • i • i -I c ,, FIG. 54. — Pollicipes mitella, describe a fairly typical case, that of the x j (After i>anvin ) common Scalpellum vulgare (Fig. 55, B). The valves of the capitulum are held together by the median dorsal piece called the " carina " ; the other unpaired skeletal piece is the " rostrum," in front, just below the place where the valves gape to allow the protrusion of the limbs. The paired pieces receive the names " scutum," " tergum," and " laterals," and the peduncle is covered with rows of small plates. The genus Scalpellum is a very large one, and is widely distributed, though at the time at which Darwin wrote only six species were known. The reason for this is to be found in the fact that the great majority of the species live at great depths, so that they remained unknown until the expeditions of the Challenger and other deep-sea expeditions brought them to light. They may affix themselves, generally in considerable numbers together, on branching organisms, such as Corals, Polyzoa, and Hydroids, but often also on empty shells, rocks, and other foreign bodies. The body is colourless or of a pale flesh colour, but a colony of these animals, expanded and drooping in various attitudes from a piece of coral, gives the appearance of some graceful exotic flower. Perhaps the most interesting feature of the genus is the 86 CRUSTACEA CIRRIPEDIA remarkable variation in the sexual constitution of some of the species. The great majority of the Pedunculata and all the Operculata are hermaphrodites, which habitually cross-fertilise one another, and this they are well fitted to do, since they all live gregariously and are provided with a long exsertile penis for transferring the spermatozoa from one to the other. In Pollicipes, however, the individuals of which often live solitarily, it appears that self - fertilisation may occur. In Sccdpellum FIG. 55. — A, Complemental male of Sccdpellum peronii, x 20 ; B, hermaphrodite individual of S. vulgare, x 2. a, Complemental males, in situ ; b, rostrum. (A, after Gravel ; B, after Darwin.) three different kinds of sexual constitution may occur: (1) According to Hoek in S. balanoides, taken by the Challenger, the individuals are ordinary cross-fertilising hermaphrodites. (2) In the great majority of species, including the common S. vulyare, as originally described by Darwin, and since confirmed by Hoek and Gruvel,1 the individuals are hermaphrodite, but there are present affixed to the adult hermaphrodites, just inside the opening of the valves in a pocket of the mantle, a varying number of exceedingly minute males, called by Darwin " com- plemental males." These tiny organisms are really little more 1 Arch. Biol. xvi., 1899, p 27. IV than bags of spermatozoa, but they possess to varying degrees the ordinary organs of the adult in a reduced condition. The male of $.j>c/'on.ii (Fig. 55, A) retains the shape and skeletal plates of the ordinary form, and differs chiefly in its reduced size ; but the more common condition is exhibited by the male of S. rulgare (Fig. 52, A), where the scutes are reduced to vestiges round the mantle-opening, and almost the whole of the body is occupied by the greatly developed generative organs. (3) In a few species, e.g. S. velutinum and S. ornatum, the individuals are purely dioecious, being either females of the ordinary structure resembling the hermaphrodites of the other Lepadidae, or dwarfed males resembling closely the complemented males described above for >S'. rulf/cur. The nature and derivation of these various conditions will be discussed when the parallel cases found in Ibla and among the Rhizocephala have been described. The remaining genus of the Polyas- pidae, also characterised by the presence of numerous skeletal plates on the capitulum, is Lithotrya (Fig. 56), which bores into rocks and shells, and is an inhabitant of the warm and tropical seas. The peduncle of the full-grown animal is completely imbedded in the rock or shell to which it is attached, and at the basal end of the peduncle is situated a cup com- posed of large irregular calcined pieces. This cup is, however, not formed until the animal has ceased to burrow. The excava- tion of the substratum is effected by means of a number of small rasping plates which cover the peduncle, the whole being set in motion by the peduncular muscles. Fam. 2. Pentaspidae. — In this family are placed a number of genera, and among them the common Lepas, the species of which possess typically five skeletal plates, viz., a carina and a pair of scuta and of terga, the peduncle being naked. These forms are a later development of Cirripede evolu- tion, and did not come into existence till Tertiary times. Some Fi. B — . 56. — Lithotrya dorsal is, x 1 . B, Basal calcareous cup : C, cariua ; R, ras- truni ; S, scutum ; T, tergum. (After Darwiu.) 88 CRUSTACEA CIRRIPEDIA CHAP. x 1. (Mter i)a™in.f' of them, e.g. Oxynaspis, live at considerable depths attached to T corals, etc., but large numbers float on the surface of the sea, fixed often on logs and wreckage of various kinds. Dichelaspis is found attached to the shells of large Crustacea. Cotirhoderma is an interesting genus, the species of which live affixed to various floating objects, the keels of ships, etc. ; the mantle is often brilliantly coloured, as in C. rirgata, and the skeletal plates are reduced to the merest vestiges, leaving the greater part of the body fleshy. Fam. 3. Tetraspidae. — This family includes the single genus Ibla (Fig. 58), which possesses only four skeletal plates, FIG. 57. — Conchodenna vir- * G, Carina ; a pair of tcrga and of scuta, coloured blue, while the peduncle is covered with brown spines. There are only two very similar species known, /. ciimingii, which is found attached to the peduncle of Pollicipes mitella, and I. qna- between the Valves of from the right side. A, Antennae, the size of , . , . , which is exaggerated ; A.M, adductor muscle ; Which it Can protrude its B, basis ; 0, carina ; Or, cirri or thoracic appen- limbs for obtaining food. dages ; D, oviduct ; G, ovary ; L, lateral com- . ° partment; Lb, labrum or upper - lip ; M, M, -Lhe relation ot the depressor muscles of scutum and tergum ; M.C, animal to its shell is mantle-cavity ; O, ontice of excretory organ ; O.M, opercular membrane; R, rostrum; S, shown in Fig. 61. The scutum ; St, region of stomach ; T, tergum. ghell in the Qperculata is not merely secreted as a dead structure on the external surface of the epidermis, but repre- (After Darwin.) FIG. 62. — Diagrammatic section of the growing shell of BaJ- anus porcatus. G, Canals ; Ct, cuticle ; H, hypodermis ( = epidermis) ; H', part of shell secreted by the hypo- dermis ; HI, hypodermal lamina ; M, part of shell secreted by the mantle. (After Gruvel.) sents a living calciferous tissue interpenetrated by living laminae iv FAMILIES OF OPERCULATA 91 (Fig. 62, HI) derived partly from the external hypodermis and partly from the lining of the mantle. The hard parts of the shell usually also contain spaces and canals (C). The various forms of Acorn-barnacle may be classified accord- ing to the number of pieces that go to make ^ — ^ /-J->N a/L*L u p the skeleton ; thus starting with the typi- cal number eight (Fig. 63, A), we find that RL' in various degrees a fusion between neigh- bourino" Dieces has ^I0' ®^' — Diagrams of shells of Operculata. A. Cato- phragmus (Octomeridae) ; B, Balanus, Coronula, etc. taken place 111 the (Hexameridae) ; C, T?t,;«'i;t» (Tetrameridae). C, different families. ™ ; C'L\ 37 '. 3 Quart. J. Mia: Sci. xxx., 1890, p. 107. 94 CRUSTACEA — CIRRIPEDIA very much in the state characteristic of the Cypris larvae of other Cirripedes, being furnished with two terminal hooks by which attachment is effected. The thoracic appendages, of which there are the normal number six, are reduced flabellate structures, and the abdomen forms an indefinitely segmented lobe of consider- able size. The animal appears to be in an arrested state of development, and so retains some of the characteristics of the Cypris larvae, but it is very doubtful how far these characters can be considered primitive. Other forms are Dendrogaster astericola on Echinoderms, and Synagoga mira on the " Black Coral," Parantipathes larix, at Naples. Sub-Order 5. Apoda. Darwin described a small hermaphrodite parasite in the mantle chamber of Alepas cor- nuta from Saint Vin- cent, West Indies, which lie named Pro- teolepas birincfu. The body (Fig. 65) is distinctly seg- mented into eleven somites, the last three of which are supposed to belong to the ab- A--4I X^^^a*te^Lii-»^^S^^i^ domen; there are no appendages except the antennae by which fixation is effected. FIG. 65. — Proteolepas bivincta, x 26. A, Antennae; a, b, 1st and 2nd abdominal segments ; O. ovary ; P, penis; T, telson ; 1-8, thoracic segments. (After The mouth-parts are of Darwin.) normal constitution. This animal has not been found again since Darwin's dis- covery, but Hansen 1 describes a number o£ peculiar Nauplins larvae taken in the plankton of various regions, which he argues probably belong to members of this group. A wide field of work is offered in attempting to find the adults into which various larvae grow. 1 Plankton Expedition, ii. G. d. 1899. RHIZOCEPHALA 95 Sub-Order 6. Rhizocephala.1 These remarkable animals are Cirripedes which have taken to living parasitically on various kinds of Crustacea ; the majority infest species of Decapoda, e.g. Peltogaster on Hermit- Crabs, Sacculina on a number of Brachyura, Sylon on Shrimps, Lernaeodiscus on Galathea ; but one genus, Duplorlis, has been found in the marsupium of the Isopod Calathura bracliiata from Greenland. Most of the species are solitary, but a few, e.g. Peltogaster sulcatiis, are social. In the adult state the body consists of two portions : a soft bag- like structure, external to the host, carrying the reproductive, nervous, and muscular organs, and attached to some part of the host's abdomen by means of a chitinous ring ; and a system of branching roots inside the host's body, which spring from the ring of attachment and supply the external body with nourishment. The structure of the external bag-like portion is very simple, and varies only in details, chiefly of symmetry, in the different genera. In Peltogaster, mom which preserves the simplest symmetrical arrangement of the organs, a diagrammatic section through the long axis of the body (Fig. 66) shows that it consists of a muscular mantle (m) surround- ing a visceral mass, and enclosing a mantle- cavity (me) or brood- pouch, which stretches everywhere between mantle and visceral mass, except along the surface by which the parasite is attached to its host, where a mesentery (mes') is formed. The ring of attachment is situated in the middle of this mesentery; the man tie -cavity, which is completely 1 Y. Delage, Arch. Zool. Exp. (2), ii., 1884, p. 417 ; G. Smith, Fauna u. Flora G. von Ncapel, Monogr. 29, 1906. vd gn ring 5. 66. — Nearly median longitudinal section (diagram- matic) of Peltogaster. gn, Brain ; m, mantle ; me, mantle-cavity ; mes, mesentery ; op, mantle-open- ing ; ov, ovary ; ovd, oviduct ; ring, ring of attach- ment ; t, testis ; ml, vas defereus. 96 CRUSTACEA — -CIRRIPEDIA CHAP. lined externally and internally with chitin, opens anteriorly by means of a circular aperture (0/>) guarded by a sphincter muscle. The visceral mass is composed chiefly of the t\v<> ovaries (ov), which open on either side of the mesentery by means of a pair of oviducts (ovd) ; the paired testes (t) are small tubes lying posteriorly in the mesentery, and the nervous ganglion (gn) lies in the mesentery between oviducts and mantle-opening. A comparison with the condition of a normal Cirripede (Fig. 67) shows us that the mesenterial surface of the parasite by which it is fixed corresponds to the dorsal surface of an ordinary Pedunculate Cirripede, and that the ring of attachment corresponds with the stalk or peduncle of a Lepas. The root-system passes out through the ring of attachment into the body of the host, and ramifies round the organs of the crab ; the roots are covered externally with a thin chitinous investment, Flo. 67. — Diagrammatic median longitudinal section and Consist of ail epi- through a normal Cirripede, gn, Brain ; op, mantle- fi i- i opening ; ovd, oviduct ; r,l, vas defereus. ternal mass of branch T ing cells continuous with the lacunar tissue in the visceral mass. The developmental history of the Ehizocephala is one of the most remarkable that embryology has hitherto revealed. It has been most accurately followed in the case of Sacculina. The young are hatched out in great numbers from the maternal mantle-cavity as small Nauplii (Fig. 68, A) of a typical Cirripede nature, but without any alimentary canal. They swim near the surface of the sea, and become transformed into Cypris larvae of a typical character (Fig. 68, B). The Cypris larva, after a certain period of free existence, seeks out a crab and fixes itself by means of the hooks on its antennae to a hair on any part of the crab's body. Various races of Sacculina are known which infest about fifty different species of crabs in various seas; the best known are S. carcini parasitic on Carcinus maenas at Plymouth and n RHIZOCEPHALA LIFE-HISTORY 97 Koscoff, and /$'. neglecta on Inachus mauritanicus at Naples. The antenna, by which the Cypris is fixed, penetrates the base of the hair ; the appendages are thrown away, and a small mass of undiffereutiated cells is passed down the antenna into the body- cavity of the crab. Arrived in the body-cavity it appears that this small mass of cells is carried about in the blood-stream until it reaches the spaces round the intestine in the thorax. Here it becomes applied to the intestine, usually at its upper A B FK;. 68. — Development of &(cculiitM neglecta. A, Nauplius stage, x about 70 ; B, Cypris stage, x about 70. A\, A2, 1st and 2nd antennae of Nauplius ; Ab, abdomen ; Ant, antenna of Cypris ; E, unditterentiated cells ; F, frontal horii ; G, glands of Cypris ; //, tendon of Cypris ; M, mandible ; T, tentacles. part, immediately beneath the stomach of the crab (Fig. 69), and from this point it proceeds to throw out roots in all directions, and as it grows to extend its main bulk, called the central tumour (c.£), towards the lower part of the intestine. As the posterior border of the central tumour grows down towards the hind gut, the future organs of the adult Sacculina become differentiated in its substance ; the mantle-cavity being excavated and surrounding the rudiment of the visceral mass, while as the central tumour grows downwards it leaves behind it an ever extending system of roots. When the central tumour in process of differentiation has reached the unpaired diverticulum VOL. IV H 98 CRUSTACEA CIRRIPEDIA CHAP. of the crab's intestine, at the junction between thorax and abdomen, all the adult organs are laid down in miniature, and the whole structure is surrounded by an additional sac formed by invagination known as the perivisceral space (Fig. 70). The young " Sacculina interna " remains in this position for some time, and being applied to the ventral abdominal tissues of the crab just at the point where thorax and abdomen join, or d.i FIG. 69. — The mid-gut of Tnachus mauritanicus with a young Saccu- lina overlying it, x 2. c.t, " Cen- tral tumour" of the parasite; d.i, d.s, inferior and superior diverticula of alimentary canal of host ; n, "nucleus," or body- rudiment of Sacculina ; r, its roots'; x, definitive position of the parasite. FlG. 70. — Later stage in the develop- ment of the "Sacculina interna." x 2. b, Body of Sacculina ; c.t, "central tumour"; d.i, d.s, in- ferior and superior diverticula of alimentary canal of host ; o, open- ing of perivisceral cavity of Saccu- lina ; r, its roots. a little below it, it causes the crab's epithelium to degenerate, so that when the crab moults, a little hole is left in this region of the same size as the body of the Sacculina, owing to the failure of the epithelium to form chitin here ; and thus the little parasite is pushed through this hole and comes to the exterior as the adolescent " Sacculina externa." From this point onwards the crab, being inhibited in its growth through the action of the parasite, never moults again ; so that the Sacculina occupies a safe position protruding from the crab's abdomen, which laps over RHIZOCEPHALA COMPLEMENTAL MALES 99 it and protects it. The remarkable features of this development are, firstly, the difficulty of understanding how the developing embryo is directed in its complicated wanderings so as always to reach the same spot where it is destined to come to the exterior ; and, secondly, the loss after the Cypris stage of all the organs and the resumption of an embryonic undifferentiated state from wMch the udult is newly evolved. A certain parallel to this history is found in that of the Monstrillidae, described on pp. 64-66. The Ehizocephala are hermaphrodite with the possible exception of Sylon, which appears to be female and perhaps parthenogenetic, no male having been seen ; but unlike most other hermaphrodite Cirripedes, they reproduce by a continual round of self-fertilisation. This is the more remarkable in that the vestiges of what appears to be a male sex are still found in Saccidina and Peltogaster] certain of the Cypris larvae in these genera, instead of fixing on and inoculating other crabs, become attached round the man tie -open- ings of young parasites of the same species as themselves, which have recently attained to the ex- terior of their hosts (Fig. 71). These larvae, which remind us of the complemental males in Scal- pellum, etc., never produce sper- matozoa, but rapidly degenerate where they are fixed, and appeal- never to play any role in the repro- duction of their species. The nature of this remarkable phenomenon, together with the sexual condition of the Cirripedes in general, will be discussed in the next section. Much remains to be elucidated in the life -hi stories of these curious animals, and it seems probable that intermediate stages may exist, showing us how the extreme discontinuity of develop- ment has been reached. Suggestive in this respect is the newly discovered parasite of the Isopod, Calathura, which the author has named Duplorbis calatkurae.1 This animal does not appear 71. — Fourteen Cypris lavvac, fixed round the mantle -opening (o) of a young Sacculina externa, x 20. 1 G. Smith, Fauna, u. Flora d. Golfes v. Neapcl, Mouogr. xxix., 1906, pp. 60-64, 119-121. I OO CRUSTACEA to possess a root-system, but is attached to its host by a tube which passes right through the mesentery and opens into the mantle-cavity of the parasite. It may be suggested that this tube corresponds to the stalk of the normal Cirripede, but its exact mode of formation would certainly throw much light on the question of Rhizocephalan development. Phenomena of Growth and Sex in the Crustacea. In the foregoing account of the Cirripedia we have met with certain peculiar sexual relations in which closely allied species exhibit marked differences in regard to the distribution of the qualities of sex among their individuals ; we have seen that the majority of species are hermaphrodite, unlike most Crustacea which, with the other exception of the parasitic Isopoda, are normally dioecious ; and that in some species complemental males exist side by side with the hermaphrodites, while, in yet others, the individuals are either females or dwarf males. Before examining the causes of these conditions, it will be opportune to consider a number of facts which throw light on the question of sex and hermaphroditism in general. We may then return to the discussion of the hermaphroditism found in particular in the Cirripedia and Isopoda. Parasitic Castration. — Giard * was the first to observe that a number of parasites exert a remarkable influence on the sexual characters of their host, such that the generative glands become reduced, or may completely degenerate, while the secondary sexual characters become materially altered. This was proved to occur in the most widely different hosts, affected by the most widely different parasites (e.g. Crustacea, Insecta, Worms). Moreover, it was apparent that the affection does not consist in the parasite merely destroying the generative organs, with which it often does not come into contact, but rather in the general disturbance of the metabolism set up by its presence. The most completely studied cases of parasitic castration are those of the Rhizocephalous Sacculina neglecta, parasitic on the spider-crab, Inachus mauritanicus? and of Peltogaster curvatus 1 Bull. Se. D4p. Nord (2), 10 Ann. xviii., 1887, p. 1. Ibid. (3), i., 1888, p. 12 • and other papers. 2 G. Smith, loc. cit. chap. v. /. scorpio should be /. mauritanicus throughout this Monograph. PARASITIC CASTRATION 10 I on the Hermit-crab, Eupagurus excavatus, var. meticulosa.1 The ordinary males of /. mauritanicus have the appearance shown in Fig. 72, A. The abdomen is small and bears a pair of copulatory styles, while the chelipedes are long and swollen. In the female (B) the abdomen is much larger and trough-shaped, FK;. 72. — Illustrating the effect of parasitic Sacculina neglecta on Inachus •mauri- tanifus, nat. size. A, Normal male ; Inachus ; B, normal female ; C, male infested l>y tiicculinu (final stage) ; D, abdomen of infested female ; E, infested male in an early stage of its modification. and carries four pairs of ovigerous appendages ; the chelae are small and narrow. Now it is found that in about 70 per cent of males infected with Sacculina the body takes on to varying degrees the female characters, the abdomen becoming broad as in the female, with a tendency to develop the ovigerous appendages, while the chelae become reduced (Fig. 72, C). This assumption of the female characteristics by the male under the influence of the parasite may be so perfect that the abdomen and chelae become typically female in dimensions, while the abdomen develops not only the 1 F. A. Potts, Quart. J. J//o-. Sci. 1., 1906, p. 599. 102 CRUSTACEA copulatory styles typical of the male, but also the four pairs of ovigerous appendages typical of the female. The parasitised females, on the other hand, though they may show a degenerate condition of the ovigerous appendages (Fig. 72, D), never develop a single positively male characteristic. On dissecting crabs of these various categories it is found that the generative organs are in varying conditions of degeneration and disintegration. The most remarkable fact in this history is the subsequent behaviour of males which have assumed perfect female external characters, if the Saceidina drops off arid the crabs recover from the disease. It is found that under these circumstances these males may regenerate from the remains of their gonads a perfect hermaphrodite gland, capable of producing mature ova and spermatozoa. The females appear quite incapable, on the other hand, of producing the male primary elements of sex on recovery, any more than they can produce the secondary. Exactly analogous facts have been observed in the case of the hermit- crabs parasitised by Peltogaster, but here the affected males produce small ova in their testes before the parasite is got rid of. Here, too, the females seem incapable of assuming male characters under the influence of the parasite. To summarise shortly the conclusions to be deduced from these facts — certain animals react to the presence of parasites by altering their sexual condition. This alteration consists in the female sex in an. arrest of reproductive activity, in the male sex in the arrest of reproductive activity coupled with the assumption of all the external characters proper to the female. But in these males it is not merely the external characters that have been altered ; their capacity for subsequently developing hermaphrodite glands shows that their \vhole organisation has been converted towards the female state. That this alteration consists in a reorganisation of the metabolic activities of the body is clearly suggested, and in the succeeding paragraph we furnish some further evidence in support of this view. Partial and Temporary Hermaphroditism. High and Low Dimorphism. The reproductive phases of animals are frequently rhythmic, periods of growth alternating with periods of reproduction. TEMPORARY HERMAPHRODITISM 103 This is well exemplified in the case of the ordinary males of IiiacU-us mauritanicus, of some other Oxyrhynchous crabs, and of the Crayfish Cambarus.1 During the breeding season the males of /. mauritanicus fall into three chief categories : Small males with swollen chelae (Fig. 73, A), middle-sized males with flattened chelae (B), and large males with enormously swollen chelae (C). On dissecting specimens of the first and third categories it is found that the testes occupy a large part of the thoracic cavity and are full of spermatozoa, while in the middle-sized males FIG. 73. — Iiiachus mauritanicus, x 1. A, Low male ; B, middle male ; C, high male ; the great chela of the right side is the only appendage represented. with female-like chelae the testes appear shrivelled and contain few spermatozoa. These non-breeding crabs are, in fact, under- going a period of active growth and sexual suppression before attaining the final state of development exhibited by the large breeding males. This phenomenon is obviously parallel to the " high and low dimorphism " 2 so common in Larnellicorn beetles, where the males of many species are divided into two chief categories, viz. " low males " of small size in which the secondary sexual characters are poorly developed, and " higli males " of large size in which these characters are propor- 1 Faxon, Ann. May. Nat. Hist. (5), xiii., 1884, p. 147. - G. Smith, Mitth. Zool. Stat. Neapel, xvii., 1905, p. 312. 104 CRUSTACEA tionately much more highly developed than in the low males. The only difference between the two cases is that whereas in the beetles growth ceases on the attainment of maturity in the low degree, in the Crustacea the low male passes through a period of growth and sexual suppression to reach the high degree of development. The condition of the middle-sized males may be looked upon as one of partial hermaphroditism, indications of the female state being found in the flattened chelae and in the reduced state of the testes. This interpretation is greatly strengthened by the state of affairs observed in the life-history of the male Sand-hoppers, Amphipods of the genus Orchestia.1 In the young males of several species of this genus, at the time of year when they are not actively breeding, small ova are developed in the upper part of the testes of more than half of the male individuals, these ova being broken down and reabsorbed as the breeding season reaches its height. Nor is this phenomenon confined to this genus ; in the males of a number of widely different Crustacea these small ova are found in the testes at certain periods of the life-history (e.fj. Astacus 2), when the animal is not breeding. The foregoing facts indicate unmistakably that the males of a number of Crustacea under certain metabolic conditions, i.e. when a stage of active growth as opposed to a stage of re- productive activity is initiated, alter their sexual constitution in such a way that the latent female characteristics are developed, and the organism appears as a partial hermaphrodite. In the preceding paragraph we saw that the males of a number of animals, especially Crustacea, react to the metabolic disturbance set up by the presence of a parasite in exactly the same way, i.e. by developing into partial or total hermaphrodites. From these two converging bodies of facts we may conclude, firstly, that sex and metabolism are two closely connected phenomena ; and, secondly, that the male sex is especially liable to assume hermaphrodite characters whenever its metabolic requirements are conservative, assimilatory, or in a preponderating degree anabolic, as when a phase of active growth is initiated, or the drain on the system, due to the presence of a parasite, is to be made good. 1 C. L. Boulenger, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1908, p. 42. 2 Gamier, C.R. Soc. Biol. liii., 1901, p. 38. NORMAL HERMAPHRODITISM 1 05 Normal Hermaphroditism in Cirripedia and Isopoda Epicarida. The above-mentioned groups contain the only normally hermaphrodite Crustacea, and since they are in most respects highly specialised, we may be certain that they have been secondarily derived from dioecious ancestors. They bpth lead a sessile or parasitic life, and it is noteworthy that this habit is often associated with hermaphroditism, e.g. in Tunicates. A sessile or parasitic mode of life is one in which the metabolic functions are vegetative and assimilatory rather than actively kinetic or metabolic. It is in this state that we have seen the males of a number of Crustacea taking on a temporary or partial hermaphroditism. We may, therefore, inquire, whether in these cases of normal hermaphroditism there is any evidence to show that here too the hermaphroditism has been acquired by the male sex as a response to the change in the metabolic conditions. In the parasitic Isopoda Epicarida (see pp. 129-136) the herm- aphroditism is of a very simple kind ; all the individuals are at first males, whose function it is to fix on and fertilise the adult parasites. These subsequently develop into females which are in their turn cross-fertilised by the young larvae derived from a previous generation. All the individuals being alike, it seems probable that they have been derived from one sex, and the general nature of hermaphroditism deduced above may lead us to suppose that that sex was originally male, the female having been suppressed. In certain Cirripedia, e.y. most species of Scalpellum, there exist, besides the hermaphrodite individuals, complemented males, so that here a superficial conclusion might be drawn that the hermaphrodites represent the female sex. But if we can suggest that the complements! males are in reality similar in derivation to the hermaphrodite individuals, we shall be in a position to claim that the hermaphrodite Cirripedes are similar to the Isopoda Epicarida, and have probably also been derived from the male sex. There is decided evidence pointing to this conclusion. In the first place, the complemented males of at least one species of Scalpellum, X peronii, do show an incipient hermaphroditism 1 in the presence 1 Gravel, Monographic des Cirrhipidcs, 1905, p. 152. IO6 CRUSTACEA CHAP. of small ova in their generative glands, which, however, never come to maturity. The condition of the degenerate males in the Rhizocephala may also be interpreted in the same manner. These never pass beyond the Cypris stage of development, in which they resemble in detail the Cypris larvae of the ordinary hermaphrodite individuals, and they are quite useless in the propagation of their species. It is more reasonable to suppose that these Cypris larvae, which fix on the mantle-openings of adult parasites, are in reality identical with the ordinary Cypris which infest crabs and develop into the hermaphrodites, than that they represent a whole male sex doomed beforehand to uselessness and degenera- tion. If we suppose that the Cirripedes have passed through a state of protandric herrnaphroditism similar to that of the Isopoda Epicarida, it is plain that all the larvae must have originally possessed the instinct of first fixing on the adult parasites, and we may suppose that this instinct has been retained in the Ehizocephala, but is now only actually fulfilled by a certain proportion of the larvae, which, under existing circumstances, are useless and fail to develop further ; while the rest of the larvae, not finding an adult parasite to fix upon, go straight on to infect their hosts and develop into the adult hermaphrodites. The same explanation would apply to the complemental males in Scalpellum, etc., these individuals being also potential hermaphrodites, which are arrested in development, though not so completely as in the Ehizocephala, owing to the position they have taken up. This theory throws light on another dark feature of Cirripede life -history, namely, the gregarious instinct. The associations of Cirripedes are not formed by a number of Cypris larvae fixing together on the same spot, but rather by the Cypris larvae seeking out adolescent individuals of their own species and fixing on or near them. Now, if we suppose that the Cirripedes have passed through a condition of protandric hermaphroditism similar to that of the Isopoda Epicarida, it is clear that a slight modification of the sexual instinct of the larvae would lead to the gregarious habit, while its retention in some individuals in its original form accounts for their finding their way to the OSTRACODA 107 mantles of adult individuals and developing into the so-called complemental males. Certain Cirripedes, viz. certain species of Scalpellum and Ibla and all the Acrothoracica, are dioecious. It is impossible to decide at present whether these species retain the primitive dioecious condition of the ancestral Cirripedes, or whether they too have been derived from an hermaphrodite state, but in the present state of knowledge they hardly affect the validity of the theory that has been proposed to account for the nature of the complemental males and the hermaphrodite individuals. Order IV. Ostracoda. The Ostracoda are small Crustacea, the body consisting of very few — about eight — segments, and being completely enclosed in a carapace, which has the form of a bivalve shell. Develop- ment is direct, without a Nauplius stage. The Ostracoda l are marine and fresh-water animals that can be divided into several families, differing slightly in habits and in structures correlated with those habits. The Cypridae and Cytheridae include all the fresh- water and a vast majority of marine genera, adapted for a sluggish life among water-plants, though some can swim with consider- able activity. The common Cypris and Candona of our ponds and streams are familiar instances. The move- ments of these animals are effected by means of the two pairs of uni- ramous pediform antennae which move together and in a vertical straight line. FlG. -j 4.— Candona ,-eptans. A, In the Cypridae (Fig. 74) there are, Natural size; B, x 15. «, i>t 1-1 i • antennae ; b, 2nd antennae : besides the mandibles, tWO pairs ot c, walking legs. (After Baird.) maxillae, a pair of walking legs, and, lastly, a pair of appendages, which are doubled up into the carapace, and are used for cleaning purposes. In the marine Cytheridae there is only one maxilla, the last three appendages 1 Glaus, rntcrsiichiinijcn ~ur Erf<>rsclniii