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REPORT, FOR 1899

ANCASHIRE SEA-FISHERIES LABORATORY

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LIVERPOOL,

AND THE

DRAWN UP BY

-—-—s- Professor W. A. Herpman, D.Sc., F.B.S., Hon. Director of the Scientific Work ;

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Report on the INVESTIGATIONS carried on in 1899 in connection with the LANCASHIRE SEA - FISHERIES LaABporatory at University College, Liverpool, and the SrA-FisH Hatcuery at Piel, near Barrow.

Drawn up by Professor W. A. Herpman, F.R.S., Honorary Director of the Scientific Work; assisted by Mr. ANDREW Scort, Resident Fisheries Assistant at Piel, and Mr, JAMES JOHNSTONE, Fisheries Assistant at Liverpool.

With Six Plates and a Map.

CONTENTS.

1. Introduction and General Account of the ems : - : 1 2. Oyster Memoir and Oyster Bill - : - 12 3. Sea-Fisheries Conferences, and the need ofa ‘‘ Gengua” = lz! 4. Hatchery Work at Piel—Fish and Lobsters - - - 19 5. Note on the American Shad - - - - - 29 6. Notes on the White Fluke or Wonder = 30 7. The Structure of the Cockle, with an Appendix 0 on Cockling

in the Lancashire District - - 884

INTRODUCTION AND GENERAL ACCOUNT OF THE WORK. (W. A. HeRpDMAN.)

As in the case of last year’s Report, I shall give first a brief sketch of the work of the year, dealing with those minor matters which require mention, and merely referring here to those larger investigations which are treated fully in the separate sections which follow.

I mentioned last year that I had then set Mr, James Johnstone, as part of his work in the Liverpool laboratory, to make a detailed examination of the complete structure, and as much as could be ascertained of the life-history of the common cockle. This investigation has been Mr. Johnstone’s chief work during the year, and, as the result,

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he has now drawn up the exhaustive account of the structure of this important economic Mollusc which I have put at the end of the present Report. In addition to the account of the structure—illustrated by six plates— there is an Appendix upon Cockling in the Lancashire District, based upon statistics supplied by Mr. Dawson, Mr. Ascroft, some of the bailiffs, and the Furness Railway Co., and illustrated by a map showing the distribution of the cockle beds.

It is interesting to notice that, from comparison of these figures for last year with the Report of the Commissioners (Mr. F. Buckland and Mr. Spencer Walpole) who examined the Morecambe Bay fisheries in 1879, we can come to the important conclusion that there is no reason to suppose that there has been any serious falling off in the produc- tiveness of these beds during the 21 years, or, at least, that the annual produce of the Morecambe district is very much the same now that it was 21 years ago.

Mr. Johnstone has, however, found it no easy matter to get statistics for the two periods that are really comparable. It is not easy to realise, until one goes into the matter, how difficult it is to get full and reliable statistics in regard to any fishery in our own district, even as recently as last year, and it is quite exceptional to have any infor- mation in regard to one 20 or 50 years ago. This is another example of the necessity for a more perfect system of recording the extent, nature, and value of our coast fisheries than we at present have, an additional argument in favour of the scheme for obtaining an approximate census of our territorial waters, which I suggest further on in this Report (see p. 14).

The rest of Mr. Johnstone’s time—in addition to helping me with general work, correspondence, the examination of any specimens that arrive, the preparation of ‘‘ memo-

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randa”’ throughout the year, and of this Report—has been taken up with the removal of the travelling Fisheries Exhibition from town to town. The packing and unpack- ing of specimens, the renewal of labels, &c., takes up a good deal of the time both of Mr. Johnstone and also of the laboratory boy—for the first half of the year Thomas Mercer, now William Raw.

The Exhibition, it will be remembered, was opened by Mr. Fell in Liverpool in October, 1897, and has now been exhibited at the following institutions in Lancashire :— University College, Liverpool, from Oct., 1897, to March, 1898; Royal Museum, Peel Park, Salford, from March, 1898, to Oct., 1898; Free Public Museum, Preston, from Oct., 1898, to April, 1899 ; Chadwick Museum, Bolton, from May, 1899, to Oct., 1899; and is now at University College, Liverpool, from Oct., 1899, to March, 1900.

Mr. Mullen has reported that while the exhibition was at Salford it was visited by 120,000 persons, Mr. Bramwell has estimated that during the six months at Preston it was visited by, on an average, 500 persons daily, say 75,000 in all, while Mr. Midgley writes to me—‘‘ During the time of its exhibition in Bolton it has been visited by upwards of 50,000 people, and no doubt some in the district have been led to take a deeper interest in the subject of our food supply, and in the work of the County Council in respect to fish-culture than previously.”” The Exhibition is at present in Liverpool being re-fitted and re-arranged and re-labelled. Early in spring it will be removed to the Gamble Institute, St. Helens, where it will remain for six months; after that it is promised to Warrington; South- port will, I believe, apply for it, and visits to Barrow and other places have been suggested.

I am disappointed that the scheme for Fisheries Scholar- ships and studentships, which was outlined in the last

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Report, has not yet come into active operation. There seems now, however, a fair prospect that this branch of Technical Instruction will soon receive here the attention that it merits. The principle of the scheme—the course of instruction and the allotment of the money—have been approved by the Sea-Fisheries Committee, the County Technical Instruction Committee, and the Senate of University College, Liverpool. The Lancashire County Council has decided to offer two Fisheries Scholarships of £60 a year each for two years, and a number of Fisheries Studentshipsof £10 to£15 each. The details of the entrance examinations were, however, not arranged in time to permit of the scheme being started at the beginning of the present College Session. The Liverpool City Technical Instruction Committee have allowed certain of their scholarships to be used by ‘‘ Fisheries”? students, and two such scholars have already (Oct., 1899) commenced work in the Zoological department. It is to be hoped that at least one Lancashire County ‘‘ Fisheries”’ scholar may be enabled to start his curriculum in January, 1900. Turning to still higher Fisheries Education and Research, the Committee will be interested to know that I have now working with me at University College one of the holders of the ‘1851 Exhibition”’ from the University of Wales, Mr. J. T. Jenkins, B.Sc.; who, in addition to other pieces of work, is engaged on an investigation of the digestive glands of oysters, and other edible shell-fish, and the changes they undergo with varying conditions of health. We have had as visitors during the year, at the Liverpool Laboratory and at the Piel Hatchery, Mr. Woodall of Scarborough, Mr. Fryer of the Board of Trade, Mr. Gray of © Millport Biological Station, Dr. Knut Dahl of Throndhjem, Dr. Oscar Nordgaard of Bergen, and finally, Mr. K. Oku (Chemist to the Imperial Fisheries Bureau at Tokyo) who

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was sent to me by Professor Kishinouye, the head of the Bureau, to gain information as to ‘‘ the recent methods of investigation, and also the technical teaching of the Science of Fisheries”’ in our country. In addition to these profes- sional fisheries authorities and workers, we have had a number of non-professional visitors at Piel during the year, including —The Duke of Buccleuch, Sir John Hibbert, Admiral Barnett, Mr. Fell, Mr. KE. Wadham, Mr. Bennion, Dr. Allan, Dr. Carmichael, the members of the Barrow Field Naturalist’s Club, and many others. Mr. F. W. Gamble, M.Se., of Owens College, Manchester, carried on some work on the colours of Crustacea in the Piel Laboratory during last winter, and he proposes to continue his work there during a part of the present Christmas vacation.

I think it will be of interest if I quote here, as an example of what is being done in Sea-Fisheries Instruction and Research elsewhere, the following passage from a report upon “The Work at the Biological Laboratory of the United States Fish Commission at Woods Holl, Massa- chusetts.”” It is taken from the American journal ““Science’”’ for July 22nd, 1898 :—

“Three months ago the United States Fish Commis- “sion announced that its Biological Laboratory would “‘be re-opened; that it would be equipped for investiga- “tion; that men of science would be welcome, and that ‘every effort would be made to collect all needed ‘material, and to furnish, within certain limits, all “necessary instruments and apparatus for research. “The Station has the most extensive plant for the study “of marine life and practical fish-culture in the world. “There are four buildings: The Hatchery, Laboratory, “and Aquarium ; the Residence; the Shops and Store ‘House ; and the Power House. It is in possession of

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‘“‘a small fleet of steam and sailing vessels, and by “special enactment the officers are empowered to use, ‘“‘at their discretion, any means for the capture of fish “or other marine organisms.

“The Commission has refurnished the Biological ‘“Taboratory and added ten new rooms for research. “Tt has equipped a laboratory for physiology. It has ‘purchased a bacteriological outfit, and a creditable “library of biology and fish-culture has been installed. “Two steam launches and the schooner ‘Grampus’ have “been attached to the Station, several fine-mesh seines, ‘“‘trawls and tow-nets have been purchased, and a large ‘fish-trap has been placed at a favourable locality.

“From the day of the opening of the laboratory, ‘April 1st, several tables have been continuously occu- ‘nied, and, at the present time, the scientific force “numbers twenty-four. Several have expressed the “desire of extending their work during the autumn and ‘‘ winter months, and it 1s proposed to keep the labora- ‘tory open throughout the year.

“The Commission does not attempt to instruct or to ‘‘ dictate as to what lines of research are to be pursued, ‘how the work shall be carried on, or where the results “shall be published. It is convinced that all lines of ‘biological research are indirectly, if not also directly, ‘helpful to its more immediately practical work, and it “happens that fully one-half of the investigators are ‘busy with problems bearing directly upon the anatomy, ‘embryology, physiology and pathology of fish. The “large corps of collaborators has made it possible to ‘secure definite data respecting the breeding habits of “many marine forms. The floating fauna has been “systematically examined; valuable information has ‘been gained respectmg the larval life of the star-fish,

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“the developmental stages of the clam, the rate of ‘“orowth of the scallops, the causes of mortality of ‘lobster fry, and the pathogenic bacteria infesting fish.

“With the co-operation of the Marine Biological ‘“‘ Laboratory, it is proposed to make a series of syn- ‘“‘chronous observations on the temperature and floating “fauna of Vineyard Sound. The combined vessels of “the two laboratories provide a sufficiently large fleet “to make these observations of special interest. It is ‘also proposed to resume again the deep-sea work ‘“beoun by the Commission many years ago, though the “temporary use of the Fish Hawk’ by the United States “navy will prevent the work from being undertaken “the present season.

Mr. Andrew Scott’s work at the Piel Laboratory and Hatchery has consisted in the hatching of young food fish and lobsters, and certain experiments in their rearing, in the examination of tow-nettings taken by the bailiffs along the coast, and in carrying on observations for me in regard to the conditions under which oysters and other shell-fish become green. A little further on (p. 19) will be found Mr. Scott’s own report upon the hatching operations, but I desire to make a few remarks here as to the conclusions to be drawn from the experiments.

In the first place, hatching must be carefully distin- guished from rearing. So far as regards the hatching out of a very large proportion of the ova supplied to the tanks, the operations at Piel have been entirely successful.

Out of about four million of healthy fertilised ova sup- plied, a total of 3,319,000 larvee were hatched and set free in suitable localities on the off-shore grounds.

In the case of lobsters, the ova on 13 berried females were, with almost no loss, retained in a healthy condition

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on the appendages during the embryonic stages, and were hatched out as larve.

These numbers of successfully hatched fish and lobsters compare favourably with the proportions given by other similar institutions abroad and in America; and with an adequate supply of spawn—which the absence of a spawn- ing pond has prevented us from having in the past—there could be no difficulty in rivalling the grand totals of Capt. Dannevig in Norway and of the United States Fish Com- mission.

We have not, however, been content with merely hatching the ova, and setting free the larve, but have endeavoured to keep them for a time with the view of tiding over the younger and more defenceless stages. It is in this second attempt—the rearing, not the hatching— that we have had as yet poor success. The larval fish have lived with us for a short time, and have continued to erow and develop up to a certain stage. But there has been no evidence that they have fed systematically upon what we have supplied, and eventually all have died off before reaching the period of metamorphosis into small flat fish.

In regard to the rearing of the young lobsters, although Mr. Scott took great pains to try to supply them with various kinds of food, and kept them under varied condi- tions in the hope of hitting upon the environment they required, the larvee seemed unable to get over the succes- sive periods of ecdysis, or casting of the shell—always a critical period in the life of a Crustacean. Some lived as long as three weeks after being hatched, but none survived the third moult. However, the matter will be tried again with further variations in the food and surrounding conditions.

With a view of seeing what was done elsewhere with

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the young fish larvee after hatching, Mr. Dawson and I visited in April the hatchery at Dunbar, an institution established by the Fishery Board for Scotland, and very similar to our own hatchery in equipment and in purpose. There we were shown, by Mr. Harold Dannevig, how the millions of young plaice were kept only a few days, or at most a week, and were then transferred to the upper parts of Lochfyne on the west coast—an operation which is conducted with very little loss. I sent a special report on the visit to Dunbar to the Chairman in April, and this was printed as an appendix to Mr. Dawson’s quarterly report in June. Many of the little details we saw at Dunbar may be useful to us in our further work at Piel.

Although it was Mr. H. Dannevig at Dunbar who had been most successful in keeping and feeding the young plaice, still it must be remembered that those he dealt with were a comparatively small number of isolated specimens, and not the bulk of the season’s hatching.

We propose, then, to continue our rearing experiments, but only to make use of the odd hundreds and tens— setting free at a very young stage (as they do in Scotland and America) the round millions and thousands. I do not say that I regard this as absolutely satisfactory. It still leaves in doubt the ultimate fate of the fry set free. We do not know what proportion of them are killed off at early stages in the sea, although we suspect that propor- tion to be a large one. But it is the only practical method until we determine by further experiment the conditions under which it is possible to rear large numbers of larve through their metamorphosis into small fishes.

We are certainly greatly retarded in our work at Piel by the want of a large open-air tank, which could be used as a spawning pond. Of the various schemes that have been before the Committee of late years in regard to

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such a pond, the only one that now seems possible to biologists and engineers alike, is to build the concrete tank above the ground on the garden site close to the engine- house. Here there is space for a pond 60 feet by 20 feet, and 10 feet deep, which would have a capacity of about 75,000 gallons. Our present pumps are capable of supply- ing about 2,500 gallons per hour, and the tides allow of pumping for about 4 hours out of 12, two and a half hours before and one and a half hours after high water. When the pond is full it would be possible to change at least one-seventh of the whole contents each tide, and in the intervals between the periods of pumping this seventh part, over 10,000 gallons, would be used for working the apparatus in the tank room. It is most desirable that permission to proceed with the erection of the required pond be obtained from the Board of Trade with as little delay as possible. Such a pond could be made available for various useful purposes, such as fish spawning, lobster hatching and rearing, and oyster spatting and cultivation. In the early spring over 600 mature fish could be accom- modated, which should provide an abundant supply of eggs for the hatching boxes.*

At the close of each fish-spawning season it would pro- bably be necessary to set the spawners free, and collect a fresh stock in time for the next season in order to ensure having healthy parents. As Jobster hatching and oyster spatting both take place in summer, the pond would then be free from fish, and it would be a simple matter to arrange temporary partitions across the pond, dividing it into two or more compartments, one of which would be used for the berried lobsters and another for oysters and collecting tiles. It is, perhaps, unnecessary to go further

* The Scottish Fishery Board aim at having 2,500 adult plaice in their spawning pond this season.

va Ne Th A Ane Rg GRD +

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into the details of such proposed additional work until the scheme for the formation of the pond has been approved of. The primary object of the pond is the provision of an abundant supply of healthy fish spawn for the hatchery, but its use will be by no means restricted to that object. A spawning pond in which the eggs can be produced naturally from healthy parents is essential to successful hatching on a sufficiently large scale.

The special parts of this Report which follow consist of :—my remarks upon the Oyster Bill, and a discussion of Fisheries Conferences and the need of a ‘‘ Census”’ of our territorial waters; Mr. Scott’s account of the hatching operations at Piel; notes by Mr. Ascroft on the American Shad and the White Fluke; and finally, Mr. Johnstone’s detailed account of the structure of the edible Cockle, with an Appendix on the Cockling Statistics of our District. This section on the Cockle is illustrated by six plates, and a map showing the distribution of the cockle beds.

I desire, in conclusion, to ask for a very careful considera- tion by the Committee of my remarks and recommendations on pages 14 to 18 in regard to a scheme for obtaining an approximate ‘‘ Census” of our fisheries district.

W. A. HERDMAN.

University CoLLicr, LIVERPOOL, December, 1899.

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OysTER MEMOIR AND OysTER BILL. (W. A. HERDMAN.)

The work 1 have been doing at intervals during the last few years, along with my colleague Professor Boyce, upon oysters and their supposed connection with disease in man having come to a conclusion, the Committee have printed and issued an account of the investigation as a thin quarto volume* of about 60 pages and 8 partly coloured plates, under the heading of ‘‘ Lancashire Sea-Fisheries Memoir No. I.” I hope it may be regarded as creditable to the Committee to have undertaken the publication, in this manner, of researches which add to our knowledge of an important shell-fish, and havea bearing upon public health questions, upon proposed legislation, and upon valuable fishing industries. +

As this Oyster Memoir has recently been sent to all members of the Committee, I need not refer to it further than to say that it brought out clearly the need of some control of the oyster trade in order that injurious oysters might not be offered for sale. 'T’'wo events have recently occurred, either of which might lead to the effective con- trol required. These are the formation of the Oyster Industries Association and the introduction of an Oyster Bill into the House of Lords by Lord Harris. The Bill met with considerable criticism, and was referred to a Select Committee of the House, which reported in July; but the Bill was eventually dropped. It is to be hoped

* Oysters and Disease,’ published by Geo. Philip and Son, London and Liverpool, 1899 ; price 7s. 6d. net.

+ It may serve to remove in part the reproach levelled against the Sea- Fisheries Committees when, in the evidence given last June before Lord Harris’s Select Committee on the Oyster Bill, it was said by the medical authorities at the Local Government Board, that these Comnuttees had never done anything to investigate the sanitary condition of our fisheries.

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that it will come up in an amended form next session. Lord Harris’s Bill, although it certainly did much to meet the present want of control, was susceptible of improve- ment in several respects, and it may be useful that I should state briefly what the more important of the amendments should be, in my opinion :—

1°. The duty of inspecting and the power of prohibiting removal of oysters from the layings should rest with the Sea-Fishery Committees rather than with the County and Borough Councils :—that is, these important functions should be given to an authority concerned neither with the trade aspects of the oyster industries nor with the medical aspects of the sanitation of the neighbourhood, but to one primarily concerned with the prosperity of the fisheries— which includes their cultivation under healthy conditions. The Sea-Fishery Committees are in a position to hold the balance fairly between trade interests and sewage schemes. It is true that at present some of the more important oyster layingsare not topographically within the jurisdiction of the local Sea-Fishery Committees ; but thatis a matter which should be capable of easy remedy by an extension of the powers of the Committees in so far as regards oysters and other shell-fish.

2°. From the point of view of public health, the sale of oysters from any suspected laying should be stopped forth- with. ‘Ten days’ notice, or twenty-one days’ notice in the case of an appeal, if the oysters are infected, allows of the possibility of an indefinite amount of damage to health. Several epidemics might be started before the sale of the oysters could be stopped. In this respect the provisions of the Bill do not meet the present difficulty.

3°. It is necessary that oysters should be protected from insanitary environment, not merely in the layings

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but also when in storage, markets, cellars, and shops—in short, until they reach the consumer.

4°. Foreign oysters, unless imported direct from layings which are periodically inspected and certified by an authority approved of by, say, the Fisheries Department of the Board of Trade, must be relaid or subjected to quarantine before entering our markets. Many foreign oyster layings are situated in pure water, others are not. The reasons given, in the evidence taken by the Select Committee, for regarding all Dutch oysters as being free from any sewage contamination will not bear careful ex- amination.

5°. Finally, shell-fish industries should not be forced, in all cases, to give way to sewage schemes. There ought to be power given in the Bill to consider in each case whether, in the interests of the general public, it is the oyster laying or the sewage that should be removed.

SrA-FISHERIES CONFERENCES AND THE NEED OF A ‘‘ CENSUS OF OUR SEAS.”

(W. A. HERDMAN.)

During the last few years there have been a large number of conferences, congresses, and other meetings, which have dealt either formally or informally with the subject of Sea-Fisheries, and especially their control and scientific investigation. At several recent meetings of the British Association discussions have taken place in the section of Zoology bearing upon artificial hatching, the life and growth of sea-fishes, and the closure of areas of territorial water ; in July, 1898, an International Fisheries Congress was held at Bergen under the auspices of the Society for the Encouragement of Norwegian Fisheries; in September, 1898, a Conference met at

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Dieppe; in July, 1899, a Conference took place at Biar- ritz ; in September of the same year a meeting was held at Boulogne, in which some members of the French and British Associations took part; finally, and perhaps most important of all, because of the extent to which the governments concerned took official part in the meeting, was the International Conference for the Exploration of the Sea which met at Stockholm in June, 1899, on the invitation of the Swedish government.

At most of these meetings something of interest arose, such as, e.g., the description of the remarkable natural oyster culture ponds on the west coast of Norway, given by Herman Friele at the Bergen Congress; but it may well be doubted whether such results are at all commen- surate with the time, trouble, and money that has been expended upon the meetings. The discussions of vexed questions have certainly been in most cases quite inade- quate, and have led to no definite results. Perhaps one cause of this partial failure has been that the men who can afford the time to attend such meetings have not always been really representative of the fisheries science of their countries ; but a still more important cause of the futility of many discussions, and of the reason why the arguments used do not always carry conviction, is the absence of definite observations and reliable statistics.

Consequently, I am of opinion, an opinion in which I am confirmed by conversation with many fisheries authori- ties and investigators during the last few years, that what we stand most in need of at present is full and accurate statistics in regard to our fisheries, and much more detailed information than we have as to the distribution round the coast of both fishes, in all stages of growth, and the lower animals with which they are associated and upon which they feed, Holding an opinion such as this,

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one is naturally much disappointed that the Report of the International Conference for the Exploration of the Sea held at Stockholm last June does not contain a definite programme of biological investigation which would lead to the acquisition of the desired knowledge.

Last summer, when the arrangements for that Confer- ence were announced, hopes of detailed explorations on a crand scale ran high, and it was very naturally and confidently anticipated that the Report when issued would contain strong representations to the governments con- cerned involving the use of sufficient boats and men to carry out a definite scheme of biological investigation during a definite period. For surely what we need most at the present time in the interests of more exact fisheries knowledge is the nearest possible approximation to a census of our seas—beginning with the territorial waters and those off-shore grounds that supply them and are definitely related to them. Most fisheries disputes and differences of opinion are due to the absence of such exact knowledge.

If anything approaching a census or a record of trust- worthy fisheries statistics had been taken fifty years ago, it would now be invaluable to fisheries committees, inspectors, superintendents, and other local authorities, as well as to biologists. Our successors will justly reproach us if, with increased knowledge and opportunity, we let the twentieth century commence without inaugurating a scheme of practical work which will give us the desired statistics.

As, unfortunately, the Stockholm Report says nothing to the point in regard to all this, it remains for each nation or district to carry out the plan that it considers best according to its convictions and means; and I venture to hope that Lancashire will lead the way. I would submit that our Joint Committee. owes it-to its position, reputa-

ee ¢

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tion, organisation, and opportunities to start during the coming year this ‘‘CENSUS OF THE T'ERRITORIAL WATERS ”’;

and I now ask that if the Committee approve of this sug- gestion, they should forthwith refer the matter to the Scientific Sub-Committee for a detailed practical scheme. The investigation would naturally fall into two great divisions: first, the collection of fisheries statistics to replace or supplement those at present taken by the Board of Trade, and which are admittedly inadequate and incor- rect ; and secondly, what may, for the sake of brevity, be called the ‘scientific’? part, in contra-distinction to the “statistical.”’ The scientific investigation would consist of periodic (weekly, if possible) observations at fixed points on the distribution and approximate numbers of the adult and young fishes, of the spawners, of the embryos and larve, and of the Molluscs, Crustacea, and other inverte- brates on the feeding grounds of the fish. I have thought out some of the further details of the work, but pending the approval by the Committee of the general principle of the scheme, I need not yet go further into that part of the matter.

I must, however, say in conclusion, that it seems to me that it is only by such a scheme as this that it is possible for us to settle such important questions as :—

(1) The proportionate number of fishes on: the different grounds,

(2) the seasonal or periodic distribution (and migration) in our district,

(3) the existence, or not, of definite localities as ‘‘ feed- ing grounds”’ and nurseries,” and their extent,

(4) the proportionate number that spawn in the year,

(5) the ratio between the annual production of spawn

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and the number of young fish that appear in-shore some weeks later,

(6) and thus the death rate in the larval and post-larval stages,

(7) the effect of adding artificially hatched larvee to a district the population of which is approximately known,

(8) whether any areas are overstocked with young fish and any others not sufficiently occupied,

(9) and, therefore, whether transplantation, such as is carried on in Denmark, would probably be an economic success,

(10) whether, in the course of years, a coast fishery is increasing or diminishing.

I do not think that I am under-estimating the magni- tude, the difficulties, and the probable imperfections of such a scheme as I propose. I am aware that all we can hope to attain to is a rough approximation, but even that will be of use, and it is an approximation which will approach more and more nearly to the truth with each successive year of work.

In the first of these Annual Reports, in 1892, I printed a scheme of observations at sea which has been carried out by the steamer in her trawling over the district. The observations on each occasion have been recorded on a separate sheet, and as the result of this eight year’s work, we have accumulated about a thousand of these sheets of statistics. These local fishery statistics are now being arranged and summarised in our laboratory. Mr. John- stone is taking out for me, in the first place, every entry in regard to certain fish, such as the plaice, and is arrang- ing them, in each year, under months, localities, and sizes. The analysis and consideration of these observa- tions will form an important part of our work during the coming months,

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There is a great deal of valuable material in these statistics which, whether or not it leads to any definite conclusions, will at least help us to see what further observations are required, and what measure of success we may hope to attain in the proposed census of the sea.

HATCHING WoRK AT PIEL. (ANDREW SCOTT.) I, Fis HatcHina.

At the conclusion of the spawning season of 1898 it was found that, in order to deal with large quantities of fish egos we should have to increase the capacity of our hatching apparatus. After careful consideration it was decided that the Dannevig system,’’ which has given satisfactory results in Norway and in Scotland, should be adopted. This appar- atus for incubating fish eggs consists of a series of movable boxes, each of about a cubic foot in capacity, all floating in separate compartments of a tank. The bottom of each box is covered with fine silk gauze or hair cloth, the meshes of which are of sufficient size to allow the water to pass through freely and yet keep back the smallest size of egg. Each box is placed in a separate water-tight compartment, to one side of which it is hinged. The water enters the box over a small shoot, and passes out into the compartment through the perforated bottom and then overflows into the next box. The apparatus is constructed in sets, each set consisting of a double row of five boxes in their compartments. At the ends of each row there are smaller compartments, one at the top for the distribution of the inflowing water, and one at the bottom for collecting the waste, which is led away to the nearest drain by an overflow pipe. The whole apparatus, when placed in working order, is set on the floor at a

20

sufficient incline to ensure a good current of water passing through. Five sets of these boxes were obtained, which gives us accommodation for at least 25 millions of cod eggs, each box holding with ease 500,000 eggs. In the case of plaice eggs 300,000 can be incubated in each box.

In order to make room for the new apparatus, the movable tanks, &c., were removed into the adjoining verandah, which had been enclosed and sufficiently lighted, and to which an entrance had been made from the tank room. A wooden bench running along the whole length of the new room was fitted up, on which were placed the smaller tanks and other apparatus. This left the whole floor of the tank room free for the Dannevig boxes, which were placed in position with the necessary supply pipes from the filter, a branch being also led into the new room. It is usual when hatching operations are going on to have the movable boxes rising slowly and falling rapidly once every half minute. This keeps the egés moving and prevents them from gathering together in masses on the surface. During the past season no move- ment was given, but in future, motion will be used for at least some of the boxes. There is still room for some additional sets of apparatus, which can be added when we have better facilities for collecting the eggs.

The three. wooden tanks, used in previous hatching work, were also fitted with floating boxes, each box being of the same capacity as those of the Dannevig set, but in this case there was a separate jet of water to each box, . the method adopted in America.

As soon as the whole apparatus was ready for work— about the end of January—the crew of the steamer com- menced to look out for eggs. They visited the spawning grounds and trawled with the steamer’s gear, and also boarded the commercial trawlers in order to examine the

21

condition of the fish caught. This work was continued practically till the end of May, when the spawning season had finished.

With the exception of a few eggs obtained by the tow- nets from the surface of the sea, no fertilised eggs were secured until the end of February. From that time onwards to the end of the spawning season eggs in various quantities, from a few thousands to nearly four millions on some occasions, were collected. The total number landed during the season was just a little over nine millions. Owing, however, to their unripe condition more than half of these 9 millions were unfertilised or otherwise unsuitable for incubation. These were, therefore, rejected, leaving about four millions fit to incubate in the boxes. As in the previous season, the Fishery Board for Scotland kindly allowed the steamer to trawl for a few days, for scientific purposes, in the closed waters of the Firth of Clyde, and it was there, on February 28th, that the first fertilised eggs were collected. They were taken from plaice. A small lot of cod and another lot of witch eggs were also collected at the same time, but these were not fertilised. On March 10th, 14th, 16th, 17th, and 28rd, and on April 6th and 12th, supplies of cod, haddock, plaice, and flounder eges were collected from fish caught by the trawlers work- ing on the off-shore grounds. On April 28th another small supply was obtained from the Clyde.

The incubation of the various lots of eggs, after the unsuitable ones had been removed, proceeded satisfactorily. The plaice eggs collected in the Clyde on February 28th began to hatch out on March 17th. Four days later 113,000 fry from these eggs were set free from the steamer near the Morecambe Bay Light Vessel. On the morning of March 31st, 2,751,660 fry, comprising cod, haddock, plaice, and flounders were set free, about eight miles from

22

the above vessel. On April 6th, 364,250 plaice fry were set free on the way to the off-shore grounds between Lancashire and the Isle of Man. On April 9th, 90,000 flounder fry were distributed about the same locality as the last, making 3,318,910 in all.

Besides bringing in the eggs, the steamer also, on various occasions, collected numbers of nearly mature fish, chiefly plaice and flounders. These were kept alive in our tanks, where the eggs were shed as they became ripe, and the majority of them were fertilised. The emission and fertilisation of these eggs, which always took place in the dark, went on in the tanks probably much in the same way as under natural conditions in the sea. The eggs rose to the surface and were carried along by the water, which was allowed to overflow into a floating collecting box, where they were retained, and afterwards transferred to the hatching apparatus. The subsequent incubation of these eggs and hatching out of the larvee was accompanied by a much smaller mortality than in the case of the eggs obtained by the steamer. The fry hatched out from these eggs numbered 78,000 plaice and 90,000 flounders (included in the 3,318,910).

When the spawning period of the sole approached, special visits were made to the off-shore grounds to collect mature fish, which were brought in and kept alive in the tanks. In the course of a few days some of them began to shed their eggs, which rose to the surface and were collected from the overflowing water. On being submitted to microscopic examination it was found, however, that not a single egg was fertilised. Various attempts were then made to bring about fertilisation by dissecting the male fish and squeezing up the reproductive organ amongst the eggs, but all attempts failed owing probably to the imma- turity of the male fish.

23

The fact that mature or nearly mature fish eggs may float at the surface is not conclusive proof that they have been fertilised. From a number of experiments made at Piel during the past season it was found that unfertilised plaice eggs would remain floating even up to five days after being emitted by the fish. 'T'o the unaided eye these eggs looked healthy enough, but when submitted to microscopic examination, were at once seen to be dead. Therefore, although nine millions of floating eggs were landed at Piel, probably less than half were in a suitable condition for incubating. Indeed, it must be evident that a very large proportion of the eggs belonging to the pelagic group, which are obtained by pressing the sides of the fish, are not mature enough to be fertilised. From previous observations it is known that a female plaice may take at least two weeks to discharge the whole contents of her ovaries. In nature only a small proportion of the eggs are emitted at a time. Eggs that naturally incubate on the bottom of the sea, on the other hand, may be entirely deposited in a day. Much of the above-noted very con- siderable loss would be avoided if we had a suitable open- air pond where we could keep mature fish and allow them to spawn of their own accord. We have already tried this on a small scale, with satisfactory results, but our present indoor tanks are much too small to accommodate a sufficient number of fish to produce enough eggs to fill the hatching boxes.

The present capacity of the whole hatching apparatus may be conveniently stated by representing it in plaice eggs. The number of these that can be incubated at one time is 23 millions. Under favourable circumstances two such quantities could be dealt with in one season. ‘To put it in another way :—a mature female plaice produces, on an average, 300,000 eggs, it would therefore take 75

24

female plaice to fill the boxes once, and counting in the males required to fertilise the eggs, another 25 would be wanted, making 100 in all, or 200 to fill the boxes twice.

Under the existing arrangements, where we have no spawning pond, and only a small steamer to depend on for our supplies, it is practically impossible to collect the number of eggs required. This has been fully demon- strated during the past season. Instead of even 23 millions, only about 4 millions in good condition could be obtained. The weather, on the whole, was suitable for ‘the work; with unfavourable weather the results would have been much worse, as the steamer is not of sufficient size to carry on such work in a rough sea.

The system of collecting eggs by means of the steamer has some disadvantages. It is liable to be interrupted at any time through accidents to trawl gear, or by a continuation of bad weather, and a large number of eggs are necessarily collected which are not suitable for incubation. At the same time, it ought to be remembered that the fry hatched out from eggs collected in such a manner and afterwards set free, as has been done this season, represents a great gain. Practically 95 % of the fry set free were hatched out from eggs taken from fish ' caught by the trawlers for the market, and these eggs would, in the ordinary run of work, have been entirely lost. Much could be done to minimise the enormous loss to the fish population of the sea which accompanies the capture

of ripe fish during the spawning season if the steamer |

were of sufficient size to visit the trawlers for the purpose of collecting eggs in all ordinary weather.

The scheme advocated by Professor McIntosh and others, that trawlers should be furnished with suitable vessels for the collection and fertilisation of the eggs, which would then be returned to the sea, is certainly a good one if it

=.

25

could be carried out. Unfortunately, the whole time of a trawler’s limited crew is fully taken up in reaping the harvest from the sea, in attending to their gear, and in preparing the fish for market. This leaves them little opportunity to collect and plant fresh seed, even although it be practically placed in their hands.

The results accomplished this year, again under certain difficulties, clearly show that eggs can be successfully incubated in the water of this part of the Lancashire coast. At times care is required in filtering the water, especially during a prevalence of southerly gales, when much mud is brought up. On the whole, the water after passing through the filter, is sufficiently clear. In the earlier part of the year ‘‘ white felt’’ was used for covering the filter frames, but latterly we have adopted ‘‘ Turkish towelling,’ which gives quite as good results, and is more economical. The specific gravity of the water was again satisfactory, and during the hatching season only varied from 1°0026 to 1:0027.

Preparations are now being made for next season, and already a considerable number of nearly mature flounders have been collected and placed in the tanks for spawning in the spring. We have chosen the flounder or white fluke for work this year as being a fish that is of importance in the neighbourhood, is hardy in captivity, and which naturally spawns nearer the coast than most other flat fish, and is therefore the more likely to shed and fertilise its eggs successfully in our tanks. Mr. Ascroft gives a brief sketch (see p. 30) of its life-history and habits as known in our district, which is of interest in this connec- tion.

TABLE showing number of FisH Fry set free :—

March 21. 113,000 plaice, Morecambe Bay Light Vessel. » ol. 88,960 ,, 8 miles from above ship.

26

March 31. 2,700 flounder, on off-shore grounds. ,, ol. 340,000 haddock, », ol. 2,320,000 cod, April 6. 286,250 plaice, ot tinGrn tay BO00 dense is +, ,, 12. 90,000 flounder,

9 ”?

2)

Total 3,318,910

Il. LossterR HatTcHIne.

A temporary stoppage of the gas supply for working the engine and pumps, which was due to the necessary re-con- struction of the local gasholder, besides proving fatal to our stock of fish, &c., prevented us from doing as much work at lobster hatching as had been intended... We were only able to secure a small number of berried females, and that close upon the hatching season.

Karly in July the steamer brought thirteen egg-bearing females from Holyhead. On examining the eggs it was found that in four individuals the larvee were at the point of hatching out, and all the others were well advanced. It was therefore not thought advisable to take the eggs off the swimmerets, so they were left attached, and the parents placed in two sets of the Dannevig apparatus, one lobster in each compartment, except the lowest of the rows. ‘The movable boxes had previously been taken out, excepting those in the bottom compartments, which were left in for the purpose of collecting the larvae when they were hatched out in the upper compartments and came down with the overflowing water. The parent lobsters were kept in the dark as much as possible, previous experiments having demonstrated that when in the lght they had a tendency to shake off and destroy their eggs. This plan proved satisfactory, so far as keeping the eggs

27

on was concerned, very few being shaken off. In the course of a week after arrival, hatching of the larve com- menced from the more advanced eggs, and continued during the next few weeks, but only in small numbers at atime. With one or two exceptions no larve hatched out in the day-time, practically all emerged at night, between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m.

Hach morning the larve were removed from the collect- ing boxes. At first they were kept in glass aquaria, where a constant circulation of water was maintained. After- wards we tried keeping them in the dark, and finally in the floating boxes of the Dannevig apparatus, all light being carefully excluded.

During the first few days the larve fed vigorously, and swam about actively. Towards the end of the first week of their life they ceased feeding, and kept more to the bottom of the apparatus. From seven to ten days after hatching the larve commenced to moult for the first time. Many died at this stage, some with the skin partly shed. Many of the survivors failed to recover from the strain of moulting a second time, and before the period of the third moult had arrived, all had gradually died off. The longest time that any lived was just over three weeks.

Various methods were tried to keep the larve alive. The food, water supply, and light were varied from time to time, but with no effect.

The food found most suitable was minute fragments of the liver of freshly-killed shore crabs. Some larve took it readily, clinging tenaciously to the pieces, which could be seen gradually passing into the stomach; while others refused it altogether, although it was held in front of them at the end of a thin piece of wood. The larve made no attempt to follow this food if it fell to the bottom, but sometimes, when walking over the fine grave], they would

28

come across it accidentally, and occasionally eat it. It was found that when light was entirely excluded the larve kept more on the bottom, and advantage was taken of this to keep a good supply of food there for them, the stale pieces being removed each day and a fresh supply added. Other forms of food were also tried, such as minute Crustacea, chiefly young Copepoda, which were collected amongst the Zostera, and the larve of shore crabs that were occasionally sent off in swarms from a stock of berried shore crabs kept in one of the tanks. The young lobsters swam amongst these little Crusta- ceans where they had gathered on the lighted side of the jars, and sometimes even appeared to pursue them, but the most careful observations failed to show that they were capturing them. Fragments of freshly-killed mussels, shrimps, and fish were tried, and although sometimes eaten, at other times such food would be refused, so that no particular kind of food could finally be adopted with success. ‘The larvee were also kept in both filtered and unfiltered sea-water, but with no definite results. On the whole, it was found that the larve kept entirely in the dark and supplied with a mixture of crab liver and crushed shrimps lived longer than those treated in any other way ; but the moulting process always proved fatal in the end.

‘here is thus apparently considerable difficulty in rear- ing the larve of lobsters in confinement. Unless future experiments bring out some satisfactory method of dealing with them, it will be necessary to set them free almost as soon as hatched.* Berried lobsters have occasionally been found on the rocky scars in the Barrow Channel, so that these places would, no doubt, be suitable ground on which to set our larve free.

* Professor Herdman has discussed this matter both in regard to young fish and lobsters in the introduction (see page 7).

29

NOTE ON THE AMERICAN SHAD. (R. Li. ASCROFT.)

The American Shad (Clupea sapidissima) which is nearly allied to our Shad (C. alosa), but has no markings on the back, is a native of the rivers of the Eastern States and part of Canada. It is found from eastern Florida to the entrance of the gulf of St. Lawrence.

It is a fish of the herring tribe, but of far larger growth, reaching a weight of eight pounds, and an average of four pounds each. When the spawning fish are approaching maturity, and the temperature of the river waters have reached 60° F., they migrate up the streams. If a freshet caused by warm rains exists in a river it is followed by a rush upward of many fish at the same time; but if the rise in the temperature is slow, the fish come in small numbers at a time. If the waters on the flats, at the side of a stream, are warmer than those in the main channel, the fish will keep in the warmer waters.

They mostly choose for spawning places sandy shores or bars of sand, and during spawning a pair of fish swim along together at the surface, the female emitting her spawn and the male his milt. The fishermen on the Potomac, at Washington, D.C., call it ‘‘ washing.” The time is between sunset and 11 p.m. The number of eggs averages 25,000 per fish, but sometimes a female has given 100,000. The eggs take from three to six days to hatch out, and the young, although incumbered with a larger yolk sac than young salmon, are, unlike them, quick, active, little fish. The fry stay about six months in the river, growing to 23 to 33 inches in length, migrating to the sea when the temperature falls below 60° F.

Their food consists almost entirely of Crustaceans, such as Copepoda, and as they grow they do not despise any

30

small fish, such as minnows, that come in their way. The larger fish during their stay in the river do not feed, and do not remain very long after they have deposited their spawn.

Plants have been made of the shad in the Sacramento River in California, with the astounding result that they are now found in every river of the west coast from California to Puget Sound. This success has suggested the idea that it might be worth while to experiment on their introduction into Lancashire rivers. Before under- taking the placing of any American shad in our rivers, it is desirable, if not already done, that accurate records of temperature be taken in the Ribble, Lune, and Kent, during the months of March, April, and May, to see if our temperatures are high enough for the shad.

It would certainly be a great addition to our food supply, and, although it may be a little trouble, yet, now with refrigerating chambers, I do not see that there could be any real difficulty in getting a supply of impregnated eggs brought over from the United States.

NOTES ON THE WHITE FLUKE OR FLOUNDER. (R. L. AScROFT-)

The fish known by the name of ‘‘ White Fluke”’ on the north west coast of England, ‘‘ Butt’? in Lincolnshire, “Flounder” in the rest of England and Scotland, ‘‘ Bot” in Holland, ‘‘ Butt’? in Germany, But Flynder” in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, and ‘“ Flet” in France, is one of the flat fishes. The scientific name is Pleuro- nectes flesus, given to it by Linneus, the founder of scientific nomenclature.

The flounder is the fish having the greatest number of eggs for the weight of the body—one million for each

31

pound weight. They are, like the great majority of food fish eggs, pelagic or floating on or near to the surface during the period of hatching. The flounder on this coast proceeds to sea to a depth of 17 fathoms or over to spawn. It has been thought by many fishermen that the egg sacs of some of the Polychete worms that are found on the shore, of bladder. shape and moored by filaments in the sand, are the eggs of the flounder; and when the embryo worms had attained to the development of the eyes (which are red) causing the whole bladder to appear red instead of sreen (the colour before development), it was then taken to be plaice spawn because of the plaice having red spots on them.

Spawning takes place in our district from the beginning of the year to the end of April. The hatching period is not so long as that of the plaice egg, being from 12 days at the beginning of the season, to as little as 6 days at the end, but regulated in a great measure by the temperature of the water.

Very little is known of the development of the egg until the young fry enter the rivers in June. When they arrive in the rivers they are about three-quarters of an inch in length, perfectly transparent, without any colour, but their eyes are dark blue and iridescent, and one is able to detect them by that.

They proceed up the rivers, and live in the fresh-water and estuaries until they return to the sea for spawning purposes in November and December. The old fish, after spawning, return to the rivers in the middle of May and during June. They proceed up the rivers for long dis- tances, having been taken at Clitheroe and Whitewell in Bowland, distances of over 80 miles from the sea.

The flounder is easily distinguished from the plaice or dab by the china-white colour of the under-surface, resem-

32

bling the halibut in that respect. The name of the halibut is derived in Dutch, German, and French from the name for flounder—‘“ Heilbot,” ‘‘ Heilbutt,”’ and “‘ Fletan.”

Under favourable conditions the flounder has a very rapid growth. They have been known to reach the weight of 5lbs. <A few years ago some young flounders, under an inch in length, were taken from the Ribble, at Preston, and placed in a reservoir near to Blackburn, and they arrived at 1 lb. weight each in two years. They would be most valuable fish to keep the water snails down in reservoirs used for the supply of towns.

All flat fish rest on one side of the body, and that one of the eyes which is underneath in the young, passes over the nose, so that both eyes are on the same cheek in the mature fish. The flounder generally rests on the left side, but one finds many reversed individuals resting on the right side; while it is a very rare occurrence in the other flat fish to so vary.

The flounder, as a food fish, is highly esteemed in London, but it is not so much esteemed in Lancashire. In my opinion you cannot have a much worse tasted fish when going from the rivers to the sea for spawning pur- poses, or a much better or firmer fish when returning from the sea after spawning.

The food of the flounder consists principally of worms and Crustacea. It is very fond of Corophiwm longicorne, which frequents in enormous numbers the mudflats in our estuaries. The flounders follow the rise of the tide on to the mudflats, and retiring to the channels on its return, they bury themselves in the sand until the tide again enables them to reach feeding grounds. They also eat a quantity of bi-valve Molluscs and fresh-water snails. I have seen their borings for bi-valve Molluscs close to high-water line on the flat sands of Morecambe Bay.

33

Flounders are taken by stake nets, trawl nets, and many have been taken by salmon nets drifting over the banks at high-water time. Some few are taken by means of “Tees,” a method of set-line fishing, but having pins instead of hooks. The pins are bent to an obtuse angle, and form a toggle when taken by the fluke, they are baited with worms (Arenicola), shrimps, cockle, or mus- sels. Many are also taken by means of the fluke rake, that is, a rake about 3 feet wide with teeth 6 inches apart and of the same length, but lineable with the shaft and not at right angle to it, as in the ordinary rake. Kach tooth is barbed on one side, and the rake is used from a boat drifting slowly with the current (the drift is regulated by a heavy stone to the cable over the centre of the length of the boat, and so she is kept broadside to the current), by a man probing (‘‘ probbing”’ locally) the rake into the sand to a depth of 4 to 5 inches. When he feels any. extra resistance to the rake entering the sand, he lifts the rake above water to see if he has a fish or not. Half a hundred weight is not an uncommon catch in a tide by this method of fishing.

The white fluke, being for the most part of its life within reach of our fishermen using second class boats, it is the fish, above all others, which it would be most profitable to hatch and set free in large numbers with the view of assisting our local fisheries. wes

{ t

34

ON THE STRUCTURE AND LIFg-HISTORY OF THE COMMON CocKLE, WITH AN APPENDIX ON THE LANCASHIRE CockLE FISHERIES, with Pls. I—VI. and Map.

(J. JOHNSTONE.)

[Notz :— This investigation into the structure of the cockle was carried out mainly in the Fisheries Labora- tory at University College, Liverpool; but in part also at the Sea-Fish Hatchery at Piel—which was found most convenient for the study of living specimens. Most of the material used was obtained from the cockle beds in the Mersey estuary, and was collected and sent to the Laboratory by Mr. G. Eccles, chief fishery officer at New Brighton. Specimens were also sent by Mr. Andrew Scott from the Baicliff beds and those in the immediate neighbourhood of Piel. |

THE edible cockle (Cardiwm edule) is by far the commonest member of the genus Cardiwm, a group of eulamelli- branchiate Mollusca having a world-wide distribution and containing a great number (about 200) of species. The number of British species is, however, limited to ten, most of which (C. echinatum, C. fasciatum, C. edule, C. minimum, C. norvegicum, C. nodosum) are recorded as being present in the Irish Sea; of these the only abundant species is C. edule; C. norvegicum (Lavicardium) is fairly common, the others being only occasionally found. The different species seem to have a fairly well-marked bathy- metrical range, but C. edule is found from between tide marks out to 1360 fathoms. Here and over the greater part of Europe C. edule is the only species of any economic importance; in Jersey, however, C. norvegicum is used for food, and in the Mediterranean various other species are eaten.

The edible cockle is gregarious all along the coast line where suitable bottoms exist, kut the great cockling beds

35

are, as a rule, found only in sheltered waters, in shallow bays, and at the mouths of estuaries. There is great con- stancy in the characters of the cockles from the various parts of the Lancashire and Cheshire coasts, no well-marked varieties being found. The difference in size observed in specimens from various parts of this district are most probably due to the extent to which the beds have been fished or disturbed in late years. Generally the influence of some fresh water* seems to be favourable in that cockles are more abundant in the neighbourhood of the mouths of rivers, but the largest specimens are found only in areas far removed from the influence of fresh water. Large cockles, with shells two inches in length, are found on some parts of the North Coast of Devon, in Barra, in the Western Hebrides, and in the Scilly Isles. In Barra these large cockles are sufficiently numerous to form the material for an important fishery. Such giant forms are not found on the Lancashire coast, where the average length is about one and a half inches. Here the market- able cockle has a minimum breadth of # inch, the size being fixed by the Sea-Fisheries Committee’s Bye-law. With the exercise of proper care on the part of fishermen to take only well-grown animals, there can be no doubt that the Lancashire and Cheshire cockle fisheries might be more largely developed, since the physical conditions are

‘so suitable.

The cockle inhabits the topmost layer of the sand, burying itself to the depth of an inch at most. It lies in an oblique position, and, when the bed is covered with water, with the siphons projecting slightly above the surface

* The influence of extreme salinity or freshness, as might be expected, is to produce well-marked variations in the character of the shell. See Bateson, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc., vol. CLXXX. B., pp. 297—330, 1889; and Forbes and Hanley, History of the British Mollusca, 1850, vol. II., p. 21.

36

An exceptional habit has been noted by R. D. Darbishire* when the cockles become anchored by the byssus threads of Mytilus and grow and develop freely in the water. Only on the posterior margin of the shell, from which the siphons protrude, are there any other attached animals or plants. Among these are green or brown Alow (Sphace- laria), Zoophytes (Obelia), small anemones (Actinia), and rarely, barnacles (Balanus). In some places the cockles commonly bear a tuft of algee, and the position of the animal in the sand can be determined by the presence of this projecting tuft. The animal, as a rule, remains in nearly the same position, but is able to shift about by means of the strongly developed muscular foot. Where the sand is not much disturbed by the tidal current, as round the stake of a net for instance, the cockles are generally more abundant.

A current of water continually entering the mantle cavity by the lower, and passing out again by the upper siphon, bears the food supply in the form of suspended microscopic animals and plants. The cockle feeds on spores and other young stages of lower alge, fragments of filamentous alge, vegetable debris, Foraminifera, Diatoms, and probably also the smaller micro-crustacea. The animal exercises no selective action on the food taken in; all that is contained in the entering current of water, including a large quantity of sand and suspended inorganic matter, 1s carried in by the cilia of the labial palps and passed on into the stomach. The greater part, therefore, of the contents of stomach and intestine is sand and fine mud.

The chief enemies of the cockle are fishes and birds. They also are eaten by starfish and bored by dog whelks. They form an important food for many fishes, chiefly

* Fauna of Liverpool Bay. Report I., p. 241,

37

plaice and dab. ‘There is said to be enormous destruction by the larger sea-birds. According to the fishermen who gave evidence to the Commissioners of 1879, the decrease in some cockle beds may be directly attributed to the increase in sea-gulls due to the operation of the Sea-Birds Preservation Act. Whole cockle beds may be destroyed by a hard frost or by an encroachment of sand.

At the beginning of the year the reproductive glands are nearly ripe, and spawning commences at the end of February or the beginning of March. The spawning period is prolonged, and ends about June or July. The reproductive glands then pass into the ‘‘ spent’ condition and after a short time begin to ripen again. Eggs and milt are shed freely into the water, where fertilisation and development go on. The minute larva swims freely in the water for some time, then settles down im the sand as a small shelled cockle.

After a detailed account of the anatomy of the cockle as a typical Lamellibranchiate Mollusc, an Appendix follows, containing an account of the animal from the economic aspect, with special reference to the cockle fisheries in the Lancashire Sea-Fisheries district.

THE SHELL.

As in the case of most Lamellibranchs, the shell is equivalve, that is, the two valves are precisely alike in shape ; it is inequilateral, the straight central rib or groove on each valve dividing it into unequal anterior and posterior parts; as regards the form and relative proportion of the two parts so delimited, and the ratio of length to lateral breadth or depth, great variability is found. The number of ribs varies from 20 to 24. The external surface is marked by a series of fine concentric grooves and ridges indicating the growth of the shell margin. Some of these

38

srooves are very prominent, and, in a full grown shell, 3 to 6 such can readily be observed which probably mark the limits of as many successive years of growth. Occasion- ally these grooves are very distinct. Looked at from the outside the margin is nearly even; on the inside it is deeply notched, the depressions corresponding in position with the ribs on the outside (see fig. 1, Pl. I., and fig. 10, PL).

The hinge line is gently curved, and the concavity of the shell is continued dorsally beyond the hinge into the umbo; along this hinge line is a series of double teeth on each valve which interlock when the valves are closed. On the right valve the central cardinal tooth has the form of a deep depression with sharp cusps arranged anteriorly and posteriorly. On the left valve this arrangement is reversed, there being a single median cusp with depressions in front and behind; similarly on the right valve each of the two lateral teeth (which are really anterior and pos- terior) consists of a prominent ventral and a smaller dorsal cusp with an elongated depression between. On the left valve this arrangement is reversed. The hinge ligament, which represents the dorsal uncalcified portion of the shell, hes posterior to the umbones and is external; it is hollow and arched, underneath it the dorsal margin of the valves do not come into contact when the shell is closed, and a median glandular fold of the mantle projects up into the cavity beneath the arch of the hgament, and is in contact with the internal surface of the latter. The ligament is very elastic and serves for the divarication of the valves when the adductor muscles are relaxed.

There is little pigmentation on the shell except at the posterior margin, where, particularly on its internal surface, it is tinted a chocolate brown or green. This pigmentation may extend on to the scar of attachment

$9

of the posterior adductor muscle, which is often striped with brownish yellow and white. This posterior margin is much denser than any other part of the shell, and dissolves slowly in dilute acid, always remaining after the rest of the shell has disappeared; the organic matrix is more abundant here than at any other part.

The scars indicating the attachment of the imuscles show plainly on the dry shell (fig. 10). The posterior adductor scar (Adil.p'.) is large and usually pigmented. The anterior adductor scar (Add.a’.) is rather smaller, and is always unpigmented. Both approach very near the margin of the shell, and lie just beneath the hinge line. On the dorsal margin of the posterior adductor is a small oval scar (Ret.p'.), sometimes not very obvious. This indicates the place of attachment of the posterior retractor of the foot. Two scars are to be seen in a similar position over the anterior adductor scar. The more dorsal of these (Ret.a’.) is the scar of attachment of the anterior retractor pedis. The other (Pro'.) shows the attachment of the protractor pedis. The pallial line indicating the place of attachment of the radial series of muscle fibres serving for the retraction of the mantle edge runs parallel to the ventral shell margin, at a distance of about 8 mm., and is slightly indented in correspondence with the notches on the margin. There is no siphonal sinus, but at the posterior margin of the shell the pallial line becomes much broader as the retractor muscle of the mantle edge passes into the retractor of the siphons. A small scar hidden in the umbo serves for the attachment of a small bundle of muscle fibres attached to the dorsal margin of the wall of the viscero-pedal mass.

The shell in the region of the umbones is always thin, and the periostracum is worn off in the fully grown specimen. ‘Towards the margin, and especially at the

40

posterior margin, it is much thicker, and both periostracum and organic matrix are present. The internal structure is very peculiar, differing from that of most lamellibranch shells, and corresponding closely to what Ehrenbaum,* who has investigated various species of Cardiwm, describes as the gastropod type of shell structure. The calcareous substance is distributed in two ill-defined layers (fig. 29, Pl. V., Sh.t., Sh.e.), which must be termed inner and outer shell layers since the terms prismatic and nacreous layers are not applicable here. The shell is composed of a great number of exceedingly thin laminz which lie, for the most part, parallel to the shell surface. But since the mantle edge is folded over the shell edge, each lamina begins as a curved plate, the convexity of which is turned towards the margin, and since the whole shell grows by the addition of successive lamine to those already formed, its most external layer is formed by the edges of the laminz coming out on the surface at an angle of from 45° to 60°. The deposition of calcareous matter seems to be effected principally by a rather wide zone of the external surface of the mantle, extending back from the margin. Hence the dorsal parts of the shell are thin, since there seems to be little, if any, formation of lime over the general mantle surface.

Each lamina has a very fine fibrous structure, the fibres lying longitudinally in the thickness of the layer. In any two successive laminz the directions of the fibres are at right angles to each other. Thus, starting from any one, in lamine 1, 3, 5, 7, the fibres are parallel to each other, but in lamine 2, 4, 6, 8, they are at right angles to the fibres in the first set. This is not easily observed in sections perpendicular to the surface of the shell and to the margin, owing to the excessive thinness of the lamine.

* Zeitschr. f. wissensch. Zool. Bd. XLI., pp. 1—47, 1885.

41

In sections taken in a plane perpendicular to this, that is, perpendicular to the surface of the shell and tangential to a line of growth, it is evident that in the centre of the section the laminze must lie in planes approximately parallel to the surface, since, owing to their upward bending near the surface of the shell, they must le at one point in planes perpendicular to that surface. So here the section is marked out into irregular areas representing small portions of the bent lamine. In any two such contiguous areas the directions of the fibres are at right angles to each other. Further, since the lamine are very thin, several are superposed in the thickness of the section, and in any one such area, by focussing, a system of parallel lines crossing each other at nearly a right angle may be easily seen.

The structure of the shell is greatly complicated by the sculpturing at the margin. Once the formation of the definitive ribs and grooves has been initiated, the deposi- tion of successive laminz proceeds upon the surface so laid down, and so at the edge of the shell the surface of a lamina is a very irregular one. Further back fromm the margin, as one observes in a vertical section tangential to the edge, the laminz are very regularly crumpled, the contour of a single lamina being concentric with that of the internal surface of the shell at its extreme margin. It is obvious that this arrangement causes great irregu- larity in the appearance presented by a vertical section made with the intention of passing perpendicular to the shell edge, for it is difficult or impossible to make the section pass exactly through a rib or hollow without cut- ting, in some part, the margin of the rib where the planes of the laminze are approximately perpendicular to the surface and margin of the shell. This causes the coarse pseudo-prismatic appearance observed in a vertical section

42

perpendicular to the margin (fig. 29). These apparent prisms are, of course, the obliquely cut edges of the laminee.

The shell is everywhere penetrated by very fine tubes and irregular channels. These are more apparent in the vertical section taken perpendicular to the shell margin, where they seem to be cut, for the most part, transversely. In a section at right angles to this they are by no means so obvious. It is evident from this that the black appear- ance of these cavities is due not so much to pigment, as Ehrenbaum supposes, as to the air included in the process of preparation of the section. They are very. regular, following the planes of deposition of the shell lamine.

The perlostracum (Hpic., fig. 29) appears in section, not

as a regular layer on the external surface, but rather in irregular fragments and patches.

GENERAL ORGANISATION, MANTLE AND Foot.

In the ordinary cockle not preserved by any special method, the animal is completely retracted within the shell. The shell margins fit together very closely except at the posterior extremity where, in the relaxed condition, the siphons protrude. Hven here on account of the con- traction of the siphonal tubes, the mantle cavity is completely closed. In this condition it is difficult or impossible to open the shell without injury to the soft parts, and, when this is done, the animal is so much distorted owing to muscular contraction that the true relations of the parts are not evident. The animal is best prepared for dissection either by gradually adding a 4% solution of cocaine to the water in which the expanded animal lies, or by placing it at once in a 1% solution, and allowing it to extend, which generally happens in the course of an hour. The irritability of the siphons and

48

mantle edge is first lost; the foot never becomes quite insensitive. The animal is then killed in a 20% solution of formol, a small piece of wood having been previously placed between the edges of the valves to prevent the slow contraction of the adductor muscles which occurs after death. Only a slight amount of contraction takes place in the formol, the siphons and foot being generally moder- ately extended. If it is desired to prepare the animal for sectioning, both valves are removed by placing it in a 10% solution of nitric acid in 70% spirit; if for dissection, it 1s propped up on a couple of glass slides in a dish with the shell margin horizontal, and the acid solution poured in so as to cover one valve. Hither of the two valves can be dissolved off in this way, the other being left to fix the animal in the dissecting dish. A great inconvenience is caused by the accumulation of carbon dioxide, resulting from the decomposition of the shell, within the cavities of the body. If the specimen is being prepared for section- ing, it is best to remove this gas by allowing it to remain for some days in 70% spirit containing a little ammonia.

Except at the margin, and for a reddish strip at the dorsal surface which is the pallial portion of Keber’s organ, the mantle lobe is thin and transparent. Removal of this by cutting along the line Mn’. seen in fig. 2, exposes the gills and labial palps. The gills pass obliquely backwards from the dorsal surface of the body beneath the umbo at an angle of about 30° to the vertical axis of the viscero-pedal mass.

The labial palps are triangular in shape. Their shorter or anterior sides are attached to the body-wall, and their most anterior extremities pass into the upper and lower lips respectively. The dorsal margins are thin, smooth, and slightly uneven. The internal surface of the outer, and the external surface of the inner palps are marked

44

with deep grooves parallel to the anterior margins, and are ciliated. The other surfaces are smooth and non-ciliated. Cilia are present on all surfaces of the grooves and ridges. Each ridge is roughly quadrangular in section (fig. 24). The outer faces and the faces turned towards the apices of the palps are covered with long columnar cells bearing long cilia, and having abundant eosinophilous cells. The rest of the surface of the ridges and furrows is covered with cubical cells, carrying shorter cilia. The smooth surfaces of the palps have an epidermis of flat, almost squamous cells. Within the palp there is a very loose connective tissue, rather denser in the interior of the ridges and containing blood corpuscles in its interspaces.

The mantle lobe of each side :(Mn., fig. 4, Pl TE)ae inserted into the extreme dorsal margin of the body, and round the lower margin of each adductor; anteriorly the right and left lobes fuse together at the dorsal surface of the anterior adductor. Posteriorly there are two fusions ; dorsal to the posterior adductor the mantle roofs in a portion of the mantle cavity which passes upwards over the adductor (Mc.1, figs. 83 and 6), and in which the terminal portion of the rectum and the anus he. The first fusion forms the septum between the dorsal and ventral siphons. It is prolonged inwards from the mantle edge forming a horizontal shelf (Mn.1, fig. 3), which separates the cavity of the dorsal siphon (Mc.2, figs. 3 and 6) from the general mantle cavity (Mc.3, figs. 83 and 6). The second fusion forms the lower wall of the ventral siphon. Between the posterior margin of the mantle and fusion one, and between the first and second fusions, the mantle edges are prolonged outwards to form the siphons. In the full grown animal these have a maximum length, when extended, of about 1 cm. In the young cockle their length is relatively much greater.

45

The siphons differ slightly in structure; the dorsal, or exhalent one (Si?.d., figs. 2 and 3), is the shorter of the two. Its free edge is quite even and a small portion of the wall of the tip is exceedingly thin. This thin tip is contractile, and is generally closed forming a little cone at the end of the siphon. The tentacles, which are rather over 1 mm. in length when fully extended, are situated in an irregular ring at the base of this cone. Other and larger tentacles are borne on the wall behind this ring. At intervals the conical tip of the siphon opens and water and fecal matter are suddenly expelled. The ventral or inhalent siphon (S?.v., figs. 2 and 8) remains permanently open. The free edge bears a great number of very delicate tentacles, smaller and thinner than those borne on the outer wall and differing slightly in structure. Behind this, as in the upper siphon, is a ring of tentacles with others scattered irregularly upon the wall. At the tip of both upper and lower siphons are a number of brown pig- ment spots which are the openings of little pigmented crypts or glands.

The mantle edge (fig. 23) is thrown into longitudinal folds extending along its entire length. There is an inner strong fold projecting into the mantle cavity, a smaller median fold, and an outer fold which dips into the grooves on the shell margin. On the surface applied to the shell, the epidermis consists of rather irregular cubical cells, except towards the extreme edge, where the cells become spindle shaped and are crowded with brownish pigment granules. Over the rest of the mantle edge (ventral and internal surfaces), there is an epidermis consisting of a very regular layer of cubical cells with very distinct nuclei and a strong cuticle. On the inner of the three folds mentioned above, and in the deep groove separating this from the small median fold, the cuticle

46

becomes very strongly developed. From it a cuticular structureless membrane passes off over the free edge of the shell forming the epicuticula or periostracum (Epic.). When the shell is dissolved off in acid, this cuticular investment is seen to be really continuous with the mantle edge, so that the latter is firmly attached to the outer surface of the shell.

On the inner surface is a ciliated zone which begins a little way back from the free edge of the inner fold, and ceases or begins to die out opposite to the line of attach- ment of the pallial muscles to the shell. Coincident with the distribution of the cilia is that of a zone of mucous slands opening on to this ciliated surface on the mantle margin. These glands are very similar to those which will be described as present on the ciliated tip of the foot (p. 17), but are, as a rule, unicellular, the body and conducting stalk being formed from a single cell. Occa- sionally several cohere together forming a structure of the same nature as those found on the foot, but they are very generally much smaller individually. Their stalks passing out through the epidermis give the latter an irregular appearance. The tips of these stalks project out among the cilia as prominent little knobs.

The pallial muscles (Ret.m., fig. 23) have a narrow zone of attachment to the shell (Ret.m'., fig. 10). Here the epidermic cells disappear completely from the mantle surface. The muscle bundles, passing ventrally, parallel to the surface, are attached to the shell at a very acute angle. The bundles run along the outer surface for a short distance, then divide into two series. One of these continues to run along the outer surface, and terminates in the connective tissue in the outer and median folds, the other series, consisting of stronger bundles, crosses over to the inner surface and breaks up into smaller bundles,

47

and isolated fibres which terminate in the inner mantle fold.

Within the mantle there is, at the margin, a filling tissue composed of fine connective tissue fibres, in which run the muscle bundles and the trunks and finer branches of the pallial nerve plexus; passing inwards, this begins to include large irregular communicating spaces, and is soon reduced to a mere lining to the epidermal surfaces from which trabecule pass inward, forming a very coarse net- work. The trabecule consist of rather dense fibrous tissue with scattered nuclei. Far back from the edge this becomes reduced to little more than a layer of small nuclei and a few fine fibres. Delicate bridges of fibrous tissue unite the two epidermes, so that the whole cavity in the interior of the mantle lobe is divided into a system of inter-communicating spaces which are generally empty in sections, but are most probably blood sinuses. The inner epidermis is composed of flat squamous cells. Near the point of attachment of the mantle lobe to the body- wall the former becomes much thicker, and the spongy tissue in its interior attains a greater development.

If now, the mantle lobe being removed, the labial palps be cut away along their attached borders, and the gills be carefully removed by cutting close to their bases, the portion of the body lying between the adductors is laid bare. The base of the ctenidium (B7’., fig. 3) extends downwards obliquely from the region of the body extend- ing up into the umbones, to the lower horizontal level of the posterior adductor. Here the bases of the right and left ctenidia become free from the body-wall, and continue to pass ventrally and posteriorly till their posterior extrem- ities fuse with each other in the middle line, and with the horizontal shelf, referred to above, as formed by the extension inwards of the first fusion of the mautle lobes

48

between the siphons. At this point of concrescence of the two ctenidia, a peculiar little semicircular flap of mem- branous tissue projects downwards and forwards into the general mantle cavity.

This horizontal shelf is further prolonged anteriorly by the inner lamelle of the internal branchize. Part of these inner lamelle (Br.J.2, figs. 3 and 4) have the ordinary filamentar structure and are connected to the outer lamelle of the same branchie by the inter-lamellar junctions. But the remainder of the inner lamelle are simply mem- branous, and fuse with each other across the middle line of the body, and thus form the floor of the ventral supra- branchial chamber (M.c.4, fig. 4), which continues forward the cavity of the dorsal siphon. The outer reflected lamellae of the external branchiz, on the other hand, fuse with the body-wall just beneath the origin of the mantle lobes. It is evident from a consideration of fig. 4 that the inner and outer lamelle of each external branchia must enclose a cavity, which is also continuous with the cavity of the dorsal siphon ; this is the dorsal suprabran- chial chamber (M.c.5, fig. 4). The ventral suprabranchial chamber is single and median. There are paired, right and left, dorsal suprabranchial chambers.

Since the inner lamell of the internal branchie do not fuse with the body-wall but with each other, the ventral suprabranchial chamber is incomplete anteriorly; the dorsal chambers end blindly i in front. Evidently water entering the general mantle cavity by the ventral siphon or through the ventral opening of the shell has three courses open to it. It may pass forward between the labial palps into the mouth and so reach the dorsal siphon per anwm ; it may enter the ventral suprabranchial chamber through the space included between the posterior surface of the foot and the anterior margin of the fused inner lamellg of the

«£ ; is 4

49

inner branchie ; or, finally, it may pass through the inter- filamentar gaps in the branchial lamelle into either dorsal or ventral suprabranchial chambers and so into the dorsal siphon.

Two regions of the body can be distinguished (figs. 2 and 3, Pl. 1.), the viscero-pedal mass (Ped.1J and Ped.2) and the portion of the body lying behind this and in front of the posterior adductor. This latter portion contains the peri- cardium (Pe7.) and heart, and the renal organ (Ren.) with the terminal portion of the rectum. The viscero-pedal mass contains, besides the muscular foot, the greater part of the alimentary canal, the digestive gland, and the gonads. It is sharply marked off from the posterior region by the differentiation of a sub-epidermal muscular sheath, but the same epidermal layer covers both portions of the body.

The pericardium is situated dorsally, occupying the whole dorsal area between the viscero-pedal mass and the posterior adductor, beneath it is the renal organ, the ventral wall of which forms the roof of the ventral supra- branchial chamber.

The viscero-pedal mass is defined by the continuous muscular sheath (¢f., fig. 11) extending ventrally from the dorsal body-wall. In horizontal section it is elliptical. It consists of a proximal or vertical, and a distal or horizontal limb which, both in the contracted and relaxed condition, form an angle of about 90° with each other. The distal limb is directed forward, it is very much flattened laterally and has a deep groove, the pedal groove, (By'., fig. 3) running along its ventral edge from near the tip to a point beneath the axis of the vertical amb. About

a third of the length of the distal limb, from the tip pos-

teriorly, has an epidermis composed of short columnar ciliated cells which also form the lining to the pedal

50

groove. The rest of the epidermis of the viscero-pedal mass consists of short columnar, non-ciliated cells, with a continuous thick cuticle.

As on the internal surface of the mantle edge, this ciliated portion of the foot is also an area provided with unicellular mucus-secreting glands. These form a con- tinuous dense layer beneath the ciliated epidermis, and are imbedded in the loose muscular sheath of this part of the foot. Each of these glands (figs. 21 and 22, Pl. IV.) consists of either a single cell or a group of from 2 to 6 cells aggre- gated together. Single-celled glands are uncommon, and are only found near the posterior limit of the glandular area. Towards the tip of the foot they are more complex; the largest groups measure about 0°3 mm., the stalks being about half that length. Such a complex gland con- sists of a group of cells forming a bulb with a long stalk. The limits of the separate cells are not always clearly distinguishable. The cell bodies consist of a reticulum, some of the bars of which are rather coarse; these are, however, continuous with a very fine meshwork, which apparently makes up the cell substance. This reticulum is continuous from cell to cell. Nuclei are not evident, but in every cell there is a nodal point at the intersection of several of the coarser bars of the reticulum; reticulum and nodal points, and the finest ground substance, stain an intense blue with haematoxylin. The stalk is non-tubular, has the same structure as the bulb, and breaks up at its free end into a small number of branches which penetrate between the epidermal cells and form little knobs among the cilia on the surface of the foot. The structure and staining reaction of these bodies, coupled with the habit which the very young cockle has of pulling itself along a smooth surface by causing the tip of its foot to adhere to

is

4

the surface, indicate their probable nature—that of a simple mucus-secreting apparatus.

The pedal groove itself is not a glandular structure, nor do the glands above described open on to its surface- Passing backwards from the tip of the foot the cilia dis- appear, and the groove is lined with an epidermis consist- ing of simple columnar cells. The groove becomes deeper, and may be thrown into longitudinal folds. Finally, it passes into a duct which runs upwards and backwards into the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass, and terminates in a swollen bulbous head, which lies on the right side of the caecal prolongation of the straight intes- tine (By.g., fig. 3). A single delicate hyaline fibre may sometimes be seen projecting from the opening of this duct, and indicates, what the histological character of the gland in fact demonstrates, that the apparatus is a byssus secret- ing structure. Sections of the duct show only an epithelium consisting of short columnar, ciliated cells. Further up, the duct expands into a wide cavity (fig. 19) from which lateral diverticula are given off; these may branch again. Their lumina are always restricted. Hach of these secreting alveoli (fig. 20) is lined with a epithelium of rather club-shaped cells which do not seem to bear cilia,» but from between which a number of fine threads pass out into the lumen where they become agglutinated together, forming a filament. The filaments from the various alveoli unite together in the duct to form the single byssus thread.

That Cardiwm possesses a true byssus was demonstrated by Gosse,* who shewed that in the young C. aculeatum this was actually functional. Carrieret and Barrois{ have

* Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. Ser. II., vol. XVIII., pp. 257—8. + Arb. Zool.-Zoot. Institut, Wurtzburg. Bd. V., pp. 56—92, 1882 $ Comptes Rendus Acad, Sci, T. C., pp. 188—190, 1885,

.

52

ce

also shown that in Cardium ‘‘oblongum,’’ C. echinatum, and C. rusticum a rudimentary byssus gland, corresponding in all respects to the structure above described, is present. Finally, Gwyn Jeffreys* mentions a case of C. edule itself in possession of a functional byssus.

Of the apertures of the body, the mouth (M,, fig. 8) is a wide slit lying between the viscero-pedal mass and the anterior adductor; the anus (A7.) lies on the dorsal surface of the posterior adductor. The apertures of the gonad and renal organ are rather difficult to observe. They may be seen by folding back the internal branchia (see fig. 3). The ureter (Ren’., fig. 4) is a mere slit in the wall of the renal vestibule, and lies on the lateral wall of the renal organ just dorsal to the origin of the posterior retractor muscles of the foot. The external opening of the gonad lies in nearly the same position, but on the lateral and posterior wall of the viscero-pedal mass; it is slightly elongated and sometimes has tumid lips.

THE MUSCULATURE.

The muscles may be conveniently arranged into four eroups: (1) the adductor muscles of the shell; (2) the extrinsic muscles of the foot; (3) the intrinsic muscles of the foot ; and (4) the pallial muscles. The extrinsic and intrinsic pedal musculature form really one system. The pallial muscles may be divided into the pallial muscles proper and the muscles of the siphons.

(1) There are two adductor muscles of the shell (Add.a. and Add.p., fig. 3), anterior and posterior. Each is a strong bundle inserted on the dorsal oblique surface of the shell near the margin, and running across in an exact trans- verse direction from valve to valve. Owing to the curve of the shell the scars of attachment (Add.a'. and Add.p'.,

* British Conchology, val. II., p. 208,

53

fig. 10) are much larger than the areas of transverse sections of the muscles. The posterior muscle forms a thicker bundle than the anterior. In the extended condi- tion of the animal, the structure of the muscle bundle is rather loose, being penetrated by blood spaces usually filled with corpuscles.

The force of contraction of the adductor muscles is very great. Plateau* has measured this in terms of the weight required to force open the valves. ‘T'wo hooks were inserted under the ventral edges of the valves. ‘The hook sustaining the upper valve was fixed to a support. The other, which was carried by the lower valve, supported a scale pan. Weights were placed in the scale pan till the valves were separated to the extent of lmm. As the mean of eight such experiments it was found that the weight required was 1134 grms. And taking the transverse area of both adductors into account, this gives the force necessary to overcome the contraction per sq. cm. of the sectional area of the adductor muscles of Cardiwm as equal to the weight of 2856 grms. Plateau also made the converse experiment. An animal in a completely relaxed condition, with the shell gaping, was supported with the lower valve resting on a firm support. A loop was passed round the upper valve, from the lower end of which was suspended a scale pan. The mean weight required to overcome the elasticity of the hinge hgament was found to be 106 grms.

(2) The extrinsic muscles of the foot take their origin from the superficial muscular sheath of the viscero-pedal mass. ‘I'he posterior retractors of the foot (Ret.p., figs. 3 and 11) originate in the posterior margin of the proximal limb of the latter, and run backward as a short apparently single median bundle (Ret.p., fig. 4), this bifurcates into

* Bull. Acad. Roy. Sci. de Belgique. Ser. III., t. VI., pp- 226—259, 1883.

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the right and left muscle bundles, which are inserted, one into each valve, at the dorsal margin of the posterior adductor scar (Ret.p’., fig. 10). There is a well-marked decussation of the fibres forming each muscle. That is» the fibres forming the left retractor originate in a flattened band, lying on the right side of the middle line, on the inside of the muscular posterior wall of the viscero-pedal mass, and vice versa. This crossing of the fibres is effected -by two or three smaller inter-digitating bundles from each side, and is complete, none of the fibres remaining uncrossed. The band from which these muscles take the origin (Ret.p., fig. 11) can be traced round the bend of foot into the ventral and lateral walls of the distal limb, after which its further course becomes very complex.

The anterior retractors of the foot lie through almost all their course in the interior of the viscero-pedal mass. Together they form a flattened band of fibres on the inside of the anterior wall (Ret.a., fig. 11). At the upper Jevel of the anterior adductor they come to the surface as two paired bundles which are inserted into the shell on the dorsal margin of the anterior adductor scar (Ret.a’., fig. 10). As in the case of the posterior retractors, a certain amount of crossing takes place, though this is not so evident as in the case of the other. Below the bend of the foot the further internal course of the fibres is difficult to make out.

The protractor muscles of the foot form right and left short bundles, which are inserted into the shell near the scars of attachment of the anterior retractors. Internally the fibres spread out in a fan-shaped sheet on the lateral dorsal walls of the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass, but there are no obviously distinct bundles, as in the case of the retractor muscles. Many of the fibres seem to pass

55

round and meet on the posterior margin, and the bundles may be regarded as being constituted by a break in the continuity of the circular muscular sheath of the proximal limb, the free ends being gathered up into two short bundles and attached to the shell. Judging from the direction of the fibres, the only effect of the contraction of these muscles will be to slightly rotate the whole viscero- pedal mass about its dorsal attachment on the shell, so that the term ‘‘ protractor ’’ is rather a misnomer.

The superior retractors of the foot (elevatores pedis, Pelseneer) form two paired muscle bundles, which are inserted one into each valve in the most dorsal part of the umbo. The scars cannot be easily seen without breaking the shell. Each bundle consists of fibres gathered up from the transverse and oblique musculature of the dorsal body-wall.

(3) The intrinsic muscles of the foot include all the pedal muscles, which are not inserted into the shell, but have their attachments within the viscero-pedal mass itself. There is a thick hypodermal muscular sheath (fig. 25) in which typically four muscle layers can be distinguished. Beneath the epidermis is a thin layer of fibrous connective tissue within which is a layer of muscle fibres running trans- versely round the foot. This is succeeded by a thick layer of obliquely running fibres, which passes into another layer of transverse fibres, and internal to all is an irregular sheath of longitudinal fibres. The precise arrangement 1s variable at different levels, and all the layers may not be present. The oblique and circular layers are always represented. Here and there in a transverse section through the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass, strong muscle bundles (M.p.v., fig. 11) may be seen passing across between the lateral walls in a transverse direction. In the extended condition the structure of these is rather

56

loose, but the ends of each bundle are gathered up into a tendinous root, which penetrates the muscular layers of the body-wall, and has its attachment in the fibrous connective tissue which is present among the muscle fibres. These straight transverse bundles occupy the greater portion of the cavity of the proximal limb. Towards the axial portion they separate, leaving a space in which the convoluted and straight portions of the intestine are lodged. Between them penetrate the tubules of the gonads.

(4) The pallial muscles consist of the retractor muscles of the mantle edge and siphons and the intrinsic muscula- ture of the siphons. The former (Ret.m., fig. 38) form a radial series which extend round the mantle edge from adductor to adductor. ‘They are inserted into the shell along the pallial line (Ret.m’.; Ret.s'.; fig. 10), and extend into the folds in the mantle edge where their distribution has already been described. Their length im the extended specimen is about 0°5 cm. ‘Towards the posterior margin of the shell they become very much stronger in correlation with the development of the siphons, for the retraction of which they serve. In the walls of the siphons they form a dense longitudinal sheath which extends outwards to the tips. This sheath hes principally on the inner portion of the wall. Special circular and radial intrinsic fibres are present in the siphonal walls. The former are distributed in bundles lying just beneath the outer wall, and less evident bundles situated midway between outer and inner walls. The radial fibres pass across from inner to outer epidermis. The outer zone of the siphonal wall consists of connective tissue with included blood spaces.

57

THE ALIMENTARY CANAL.

By far the greater portion of the alimentary canal lies entirely within the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass, and may be easily dissected in a specimen hardened with formol by removing the muscular body-wall of one side, cutting through the attachment of the transverse muscle bundles as close to the integument as possible. The attachments of these to the opposite wall are then cut through beneath the intestine and the bundles removed, the digestive gland and the gonad are picked away, and the stomach and intestine le exposed to view.

The mouth (M., fig. 8, Pl. I.) is at first a wide slit extending across the body between the anterior body-wall and the anterior adductor. It is bounded dorsally and ventrally by the prominent upper and lower lips, the outer extremities of which are produced laterally to form the dorsal and ventral labial palps respectively. The opening soon contracts, so that the perforation in the muscular body leading into the cesophagus is oval in form. ‘The latter (Al.c.1) is a short tube passing backwards and slightly upwards towards the posterior and dorsal part of the viscero-pedal mass, where it expands into the stomach (Al.c.2), which forms a capacious sac, increasing in diameter from before backwards. The stomach is sur- rounded on all sides by the dark-green mass of the digestive gland (D.g.). This is really paired, and forms a thick lobe on each side. Each lateral lobe, however, expands over the dorsal anterior and posterior sides of the stomach, so that it seems to nearly envelope the latter. If the digestive gland is carefully picked away prior to laying bare the stomach, two ducts may be seen opening into the latter. One is small, and opens on the posterior and dorsal margin; the other is much larger, and opens into the stomach at its junction with the cesophagus; it

K

58

passes at first forwards and downwards, then comes round into the mass of the gland. A great number of smaller lateral ductules open into these principal ducts, and on them are arranged in clusters the secreting alveoli of the gland.

The epithelium of the stomach passes gradually into that of the ductules of the gland. The tricuspid body disappears ; the long spindle cells become shorter, and a corresponding decrease in length of the cilia takes place. But the epithelium of the ductules (fig. 17, Pl. IIL.) always consists of spindle cells carrying cilia, and their walls are thrown into slight longitudinal folds; at the passage of the lumen of the ductule into that of a secreting alveolus

EAL IEMA SVS OE Bike man

et

5)

¥

a rapid transition from this ciliated epithelium into that

characteristic of the alveoli takes place (fig. 15, Pl. IIL). The fixation and subsequent treatment of the digestive

gland, so as to exhibit the nature of the secretory epithe- lium, is difficult, but good results are to be obtained by

McMunn’s method. A very small piece of the gland is

rapidly removed from the living animal, and at once put into a 20% solution of commercial formaldehyde in water. The tissue is allowed to remain in this for about 24 hours, and is then transferred to 70% spirit and dehydrated, embedded and cut in the ordinary way. The sections are stained with Mayer’s glychaemalum and eosin, or with Heiden-— hain’s iron haematoxylin. With fixing reagents of less penetrative power the epithelium breaks up in the process.

The lumen of the alveolus is always a very restricted one,

and is usually cruciform in transverse section. The spindle cells becomes cubical and the cilia disappear (fig. 15, Pl. III.). Then the cubical epithelium becomes replaced by

four groups of large club-shaped cells (fig. 16, Pl. III.). In

tangential sections of the alveolus these cells, which are

then cut transversely, have very definite polygonal out-—

ol

ate >'- rns

og

lines. Their cell substance is coarsely granular, with many round clear spaces; the nuclei are placed at their lower extremities. Only four to six cells are found in each group. The groups are delimited by the arms of the eross-shaped lumen, which extend nearly to the walls of the tubule, and here at the thinnest portion of the wall the cells composing it are small and irregular, and have relatively large nuclei. If the section has been stained with Heidenhain’s haematoxylin a very distinct basement membrane, staining dense black, can be seen investing each alveolus. The whole mass of the gland is bound together by fibrous connective tissue, in the interspaces of which are crowded corpuscles of various kinds.

The lining epithelium at the animal’s mouth consists of elongated columnar cells bearing cilia, and supported on a rather distinct basement membrane. Passing inwards this epithelium is thrown into a close series of longitudinal folds, and the height of the cells diminishes. The cells have distinct striated free borders, the nuclei are situated about their middle, the lower ends are rather loose and seem separated from each other; rounded faintly granular eosinophilous cells are found here and there wedged in between the columnar cells.

As the cesophagus widens out to form the stomach these cells gradually elongate to form the epithelium lining the cavity of the latter. This gastric epithelium (fig. 18, Pl. II.) is of variable thickness, but the cells are always longer than in the cesophagus. A _ gelatinous looking substance —the ‘‘fleche tricuspide” (fF. ¢trv., fig. 18)—lines a large portion of the stomach-wall, and underneath this the epithelium becomes much thicker, consisting of long spindle-shaped cells, the long oval nuclei of which occupy any position within a rather wide zone about their middle. The lower ends of these cells are

60

very distinctly rounded off, forming an uneven lower margin, which rests on a fibrous sheath consisting of several layers, and which passes into the loose connective tissue surrounding the digestive gland tubules.

The thickness and extent of the tricuspid body is variable, some portions of the stomach-wall being bare; the latter is thrown into folds and pads, into which the substance of the tricuspid body dips. In most parts this substance is closely adherent to the gastric epithelium, in other parts it is distinctly separated; where it les in close contact with the epithelium the striated free border of the latter is very evident. Where it is separated the epithelium is seen to bear cilia which, at other places, must be embedded in its substance. It stains slightly with eosin. No obvious structure can be discerned in it except that in favourable preparations, delicate stric, parallel to the surface of the epithelium, and other striz perpendicular to the surface may be seen, which seem to indicate that it has been deposited round the cilia and in lamine, perpendicular to the surface of the epithelium. Where the tricuspid body is wanting the gastric epithelium is composed of much shorter spindle cells than are found elsewhere. The average length of the cells beneath the tricuspid body is 0°08 mm., on the rest of the stomach- wall 0°04 mm.

The whole posterior part of the stomach contracts to form the straight portion of the intestine (Al.c.3, fig. 3). This extends downwards nearly in the axial line of the proxinal limb of the viscero-pedal mass. It is slightly curved, the concavity being anterior. The diameter, the average value is 1°25 mm., decreases from above down- wards. At the lower end and on the anterior side, the spiral portion of the intestine takes origin, below this there is a short anteriorly directed caecum.

vel ORS ware” ic

61

As the stomach contracts to form this division of the intestine, two folds of its wall (fig. 11, Pl. III.), which are anterior and posterior, are formed, and are continued down the straight intestine dividing the lumen of the latter into two longitudinal cavities, both of which com- municate with the stomach by wide openings and with each other by a long wide shit. Of the two communicating semi-tubes so formed, the left (Al.c.3') is the larger, and is exactly circular in transverse section; it lodges the crystalline style. The right semi-tube (Al.c.3") is irre- gular in section, and forms the channel along which the ingested food travels. Morphologically, this is the portion of the intestine immediately following the stomach. The left semi-tube is a diverticulum of the stomach cavity— the pyloric caecum* (sac of the crystalline style). Pyloric caecum and intestine are separate in some Lamellibranchs (Pholas, Donax), but in Cardiwm and others have fused together, the anterior and posterior folds being the remains of the primitively adjacent walls. At the tip of the straight intestine, in the short caecum already referred to, is a vestige of the originally separate condition of the two channels.

Three very distinct kinds of epithelium are present in the straight portion of the intestine. On the wall of the sac of the crystalline style there 1s a single layer of spindle- Shaped cells (Hp.J.1, fig. 12, Pl. IIL.), having an average height of about 0:03 mm. These bear a very close set series of long and stiff cilia, having an average length of 3 that of the cells carrying them. The cell bodies are finely granular, with rather highly refractive free borders, the nuclei are situated at their lower extremities ; the cells fit together very closely, except at their lower extremities,

* Purdie, A. Studies in Biology for New Zealand Students. No, 3. Anatomy of the common Mussels. Wellington, 1887,

62

where large clear spaces are seen, which are either inter- cellular spaces or cell vacuoles, probably both. The epithelium in the intestinal division (Hp.I.3) is made up of much shorter cells, which bear short cilia. The free extremities of these cells fit closely together, but the lower ends are rather loose. Scattered abundantly throughout the epithelium are large, round, oily masses, staining faintly with eosin, and quite homogeneous in structure. Similar bodies can be seen in the tissue lying outside the epithelium. Here they are seen to be true cells, with the nucleus compressed against one portion of the cell wall and the greater part of the cell space filled up with an oily globule. In many the cell contents are very coarsely granular, and stain strongly with eosin. Others are finely granular, and all transition stages between the coarsely granular condition and the homogeneous appear- ance, which the bodies in the epithelium present, can be found. Similar oily globules can be found projecting into the lumen of the intestine, or even lying free in the cavity. Nuclei are not evident in these structures in the latter positions. The nuclei of the ordinary cells are found near their bases. Above each nucleus is a large clear cell vacuole, the occurrence and position of which seem to be fairly constant.

In the sac of the crystalline style and near the anterior fold is a very remarkable strip of epithelium (Hp.I.2), which extends all the way from the opening of the sac into the stomach to the point from which the spiral division of the intestine takes origin. This appears in transverse section as a crescentic area of the wall made up entirely of very long spindle cells. On the left side these long cells pass gradually into the epithelium lining the sac of the crystalline style. On the right side they are very sharply demarcated from the short cells lining the

63

intestinal division of the straight intestine. Their maxi- mum length is about 0°2 mm. They are finely granular, with the nucleus at any level from near the free extremity to near the bottom of the cell. They bear a covering of very short cilia. Sometimes, at the middle of the free surface, there is a little groove in which the cilia are matted together. This is not constantly present, and it is probably due to the action of reagents.

The epithelium, of the intestinal portion especially, rests on a layer of dense connective tissue, which fills up the spaces between the epithelia forming the anterior and posterior folds, and is found in patches all round the intestine. This presents no very obvious structure. It seems to be largely fibrous, with nuclei scattered through it. It stains densely with haematoxylin. It includes large irregular spaces, evidently blood channels; in its substance are seen corpuscles of various kinds, blood corpuscles and corpuscles containing a greenish substance.

The crystalline style (Sé., fig. 12, Pl. III.) completely fills the lumen of the left division of the straight portion of the gut. In sections made from hardened specimens, the style is usually seen to be retracted away from the wall of the sheath. But since, in such preparations, it may be observed that the superficial layer of the ciliated epithelium is in some parts torn away and adherent to the substance of the style, it is evident that this contracted condition is due to the process of embedding; and the same cause most probably gives rise to cavities sometimes observed in its marginal part. In hand sections of the animal, simply killed with formol and examined under a low magnification, the style appears perfectly homogen- eous, and completely fills the sac.

No obvious structure is to be observed in the style except a very delicate concentric lamination, It 1s per-

64

fectly transparent, and seen singly, colourless ; in mass the substance is very slightly yellowish. The length, when taken from full-grown specimens, varies from 20 to 26 mm. The diameter decreases from above downwards, and may be taken as about 1 mm. The proximal extremity always projects into the cavity of the stomach, and is opaque and slightly frayed; the distal extremity does not fill the lumen of the ventral portion of the sheath, but remains adherent to one portion of the wall. It is firm, somewhat elastic, but breaks easily.

Barrois,* in an exhaustive memoir on the Morpho- logy and Physiology of the Lamellibranch Style, gives an account of the chemical composition and reactions of the substance of which it is composed, which may be briefly summarized here. Barrois made his analysis and experi- ments on the crystalline styles of Cardiuwm edule. The style has an average weight of 0'026 grm. It is a colloidal substance. A number placed together coalesce to form a transparent jelly, which takes the form of the vessel in

nr aaa

which it is contained. Dried at a temperature of 120°, the |

mass contracts considerably in volume, but still remains perfectly transparent and somewhat moist. On ignition a small amount of inorganic ash remains. The fres” style is rapidly soluble in concentrated hydrochloric acid to a bluish solution; it is slowly soluble in water, forming a slightly opaque and viscous solution. Millon’s reagent gives a red colouration in the warm. Treated with copper sulphate solution and caustic potash, a fine blue colouration is obtained. These reactions indicate the presence of an albuminoid substance.

When the solid styles are boiled with dilute sulphuric acid, and the acid solution neutralized and precipitated with alcohol, a solution in the latter solvent is obtained.

* Revue Biologique du Nord de la France, T. I. and IL., 1889—90,

65

This solution is filtered off from the floceulent precipitate, formed by the addition of the alcohol. It is evaporated nearly to dryness, and the dissolved matter again taken up by water; the aqueous solution so obtained reduces Fehling’s solution. This series of reactions is charac- teristic of mucine and chondrine, since glycogen or other carbohydrates capable of yielding sugar on treatment with, dilute acid, and consequently reducing Fehling’s solution, are absent.

Further the addition of crystals of magnesium sulphate in excess to the aqueous solution of the styles, gives an abundant precipitate which contains practically all the proteid matter present in the solution. This behaviour with magnesium sulphate, which agrees with that of a globulin, and the reaction with dilute acid, indicate the nature of the substance. It is allied to, but apparently not identical with mucine.

Leaving out of account the older views concerning the function of the crystalline style, such as that of von Heide, that it was an accessory genital organ, or that it was a skeletal structure (Carus and Garner), or the representative of the radula of the Glossophora, and consequently a masticatory organ (Meckel), only two hyputheses as to its nature seem to survive modern , investigation. Hazay* as the result of a series of observa- tions and experiments, concluded that it represented a store of reserve food material, resulting from the meta- morphosed excess of food matters taken in during the warm season, and lodged in the pyloric caecum to be utilized by the animal during periods of hibernation. Practically the same conclusion was arrived at by Haselofft from a series

* Die Mollusken-Fauna von Budapest II. Biologischen Theil. Cassel, 1881

+ Ueber den Krystallstiel der Muscheln nach Untersuchungen verschiedener Arten der Kieler Bucht. Osterode, 1888,

66

of experiments carried out on Mytilus, from which it appears that not only is the style absorbed during the starvation of the animal by keeping it in filtered sea-water, but it is formed anew on abundant food being supplied. Haseloff inferred that the style ‘‘is the product of the chemical transformation of the excess of food material taken in by the animal, the change being effected by the agency of the digestive ferments.’”’ More lately, Woodward* working on the same mollusc, was able to confirm Haseloff’s. experiments.

Barrois rejects the conclusion of Hazay and Haseloff, basing his objections chiefly on the chemical composition of the style which is very different from that of most reserve food materials, and on the unusual form in which the substance is stored up. In both these points it differs. notably from all undoubted physiological reserves. In Helix pomatia, which undergoes a true hibernation, abun- dant reserve food material is stored up in the liver in the form of glycogen. This substance undergoes a gradual change into sugar in the course of the hibernation period, and ultimately disappears completely. Moreover, ueither in Mytilus nor in Cardiwm taken during all times in the. year was he able to observe any change in the volume of the style. Specimens of Cardiwm were placed in filtered sea-water and starved for eleven days. Only after the eighth day was any diminution in volume observed, and in general complete disappearance only occurred on the death and partial decomposition of the animal. The disappear- ance of the style during this experiment Barrois regards as due, not only to the solution of its substance in the stomach which goes on, as under normal conditions, but ° also to the profound bodily disturbance brought about by

* On the Anatomy of Pterocera, with some notes on the crystalline style. Proc. Malacological Soc., London. Vol. IL, pt. 4. 1894,

67

the experiment. At the same time, the secretion of the substance from the walls of the sac ceases, and the remains of the style are pushed into the stomach by the action of the cilia.

Barrois’ own view, based chiefly on the chemical composition of the style, is that it is a cuticular structure secreted by the wall of the sac, which acts as a lubricating material and invests sharp particles of sand, &c., with a viscous coating which prevents damage to the intestinal wall. As it is formed it is moved forward into the cavity of the stomach, where its free extremity is continually being worn away by the attrition of the food particles and the solvent action of the digestive fluids. The viscous fluid so formed also unites the food matter into a coherent bolus which easily traverses the intestine.

The view that the style is a cuticular structure secreted by the wall of the pyloric caecum seems rather difficult to reconcile with the appearance of that epithelium, for, with the possible exception of the longitudinal strip of elongated cells in the caecum, the wall of the latter does not present the appearance usually associated with a secretory surface. The compact layer of columnar cells, the refractile free border, and the dense layer of long stiff cilia contrast strikingly with the wall of the right division of the lumen of the straight portion of the gut, where secretion into the cavity of the intestine is most probably taking place, and is far more suggestive of a surface performing a mechanical function than of an actively secreting epithelium. And it seems unnecessary to locate the mucus-secreting epithelium in the wall of the crystalline style sac. All along the course of the intestine there is abundant evidence of some substance being poured out into the lumen, in the rounded homo- geneous bodies found in the wall or projecting from the

68

wall into the cavity, or even free in the cavity of the intestine itself. Many of these are possibly migrating cells taking up food matters and again passing back» through the intestine into the blood stream, but there can be little doubt that many are the products of secretion of cells in the intestinal wall itself or in the tissue lying round that wall. Masses of a dense tissue staining with haematoxylin in the same manner as the mucus-secreting cells in the foot and mantle are to be found along the: whole length of the intestine. |

The fecal matter is expelled from the intestine in the form of coherent strings, frequently of great length, in which the particles are certainly bound together by some viscous material. On Barrois’ view this fecal matter ought to contain a substance chemically identical with the substance of the style, otherwise, transformation of the latter goes on in the intestine, and the substance of the style must function otherwise than as a simple lubricant. | On the whole it would seem as if the presence of the style were associated with the ingestion of a large quantity of foreign matter, such as mud and sand, and the separation, to some extent, of the nutrient material therefrom. The substance of the style need not be regarded as physiolo-: gically a store of reserve material, but as a first separation out of some constituents of the food which are continuously lodged in a portion of the stomach by the action of the ciliated wall of the latter, and as continuously dissolved, away.

A narrow slit on the anterior surface of the stiolel portion of the gut leads into the next division—the spiral portion of the intestine. This lies nearly in the axis of the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass, and anterior to the latter. It is twisted into a close spiral of five or six turns (Al.c.4,. figs. 3 and 11) the planes of which are

69

nearly horizontal. At its upper extremity the coiling becomes rather irregular, and the tube passes into the succeeding coiled portion of the intestine near the axis of the latter. The crystalline style passes the opening of the spiral intestine, and its narrowed end is lodged in the short caecum already referred to. The anterior fold in the straight intestine continues on into the spiral portion, and passes into a thick pad, nearly filling up the lumen of the latter (Ty., fig. 18, Pl. III.). This pad or typhlosole is formed by the same tissue which fills up the space in the anterior and posterior folds which divide the straight eut into right and left divisions. Owing to the presence of this typhlosole the spiral gut appears externally as a round tube, although in section the lumen is contracted and crescentric in form; the tissue filling the typhlosole is continuous with a narrow layer surrounding the gut and with the general connective tissue of the viscero-pedal mass.

After making about six turns the typhlosole disappears, and the intestinal tube passes into a loose coil of four or five turns, which may be described as the coiled portion of the intestine (Al.c.5, figs. 3 and 11), and which lies anterior to the spiral gut. The average diameter of this coil is from 0°6 to 1 cm. Its most anterior turn joins the spiral intestine ; its most posterior one passes off into the rectum, which passes to the right side of the straight intestine, and runs up along the posterior part of the viscero-pedal mass (Al.c.6, figs. 8 and 11) to near the dorsal portion of the latter, where it pierces the muscular body-wall and enters the pericardium. After passing through the ventricle of the heart, the rectum runs along in the dorsal body-wall over the posterior adductor, and terminates in the anus (Az., fig. 3).

The histological character of the epithelium of the intes-

70

tine behind the typhlosolar portion resembles that described as present in the right division of the straight intestine. The wall may be smooth or thrown into three or four longitudinal ridges. The whole surface is ciliated. The oily eosinophilous globules already referred to are particu- larly abundant in the coiled intestine, and many may be found lying freely in the cavity. The average diameter of this portion of the intestine is about 0°5 mm.

Towards the anus the epithelium becomes arranged in a very peculiar manner (fig. 14, Pl. III.). Passing over the posterior adductor the wall becomes thrown into longi- tudinal folds, which, towards the anus, become more complex, secondary foldings being developed, and the bases being narrowed till some folds have, in transverse section, an almost dendritic appearance. Within they are filled up by the dense tissue already noted. A continuous sheet of connective tissue with a few muscle fibres surrounds the gut, but does not enter into the folds. Near the anus this dense filling tissue becomes restricted to the dorsal half of the intestinal tube, where it forms a crescentic pad lying on the epithelium beneath. This epithelium differs completely from that forming the ventral half. While the latter is thrown into complex foldings and bears long cilia which, on account of the proximity of the folds to each other, become matted together in the lumen, the upper epithelium is smooth, is non-ciliated, and consists of long clear spindle cells, with nuclei lying at their lower extremities, which form a sharp contrast with the cubical epithelium of the lower half. The transition from upper to lower epithelium is quite a sharp one. The tissue forming the pad lying on the upper half of the tube differs somewhat from the dense tissue lying outside the intestinal tube in its more anterior parts. Here it seems to consist of a dense mass ~

rel

of cells, the bodies of which stain with haematoxylin, so that nuclei and cell bodies are not clearly distinguish- able.

THE VASCULAR SYSTEM.

The pericardium (Per., figs. 3 and 4) is a spacious sac which occupies the whole dorsal surface of the body between the posterior wall of the viscero-pedal mass and the posterior adductor. Its anterior wall is closely applied to the former. Its ventral wall rests on the upper surface of the renal organ. LDorsally and laterally the pericardial wall is also the body wall, and is thin and delicate, except in the median dorsal line where it is produced upwards into a strong ridge, and also on the lateral dorsal borders where the mantle lobes take origin. It is widest in front and contracts as it approaches the posterior adductor. It is nearly filled by the heart consisting of the median ventricle and the two auricles.

In the animal which has been killed after treatment with cocaine, the ventricle is usually fixed in the condition of diastole and then, together with the two auricles, fills almost the whole pericardial cavity. The ventricle (Ven., figs. 3 and 4) is constricted medially, forming two rather well-marked lateral lobes. The walls are muscular but rather thin. Abundant muscular trabecule run across the cavity in all directions. The rectum passes through its cavity, suspending the ventricle in the centre of the peri- eardium. ‘The auricles (Awr., figs. 38 and 4) are triangular in shape, the apices being attached to the ventricle, the bases to the bases of the ctenidia. Their walls are very thin, except at the apical portions, where they are thickened and composed of dense fibrous tissue; these portions pro- ject into the ventricle; the openings are horizontal slits bounded by the thickened tissue which forms a pair af

72

valves preventing the reflux of the blood into the auri- cles during the ventricular systole. On the floor of the pericardium, beneath the ventricle, are the openings of the reno-pericardial canals. On the anterior part of the floor are several openings which are the terminal portions of systems of tubules forming the paired pericardial glands. The tubules are lined with cells containing brownish-red concretions, and are distributed over a wedge-shaped area of - the mantle extending, ventrally, from the most dorsal portion.* The ventricle is prolonged backwards into a short narrow neck which still contains the rectum. A transverse membranous partition, beginning at the dorsal surface of this neck, extends backwards and downwards across its cavity, embracing the rectum, and ends so that its free edge lies near the ventral surface. This must form a valve preventing the reflux of blood into the ventricle from the posterior part of the body. Behind this valve the tube expands forming a ‘‘bulbus arteriosus”’ (B.a., fig. 30) with thin muscular walls. This terminates in two lateral branches, the right and left posterior pallial arteries which diverge from each other and pass backwards beneath the posterior adductor. Here their walls become very ill- defined and communicate freely with a system of lacune between the bundles of the muscle. The arteries, which | are now difficult to trace, reach the mantle margin and terminate in the sinuses there and in the walls of the siphons.

Anteriorly the ventricle passes into a single median vessel with well defined walls, the anterior aorta (Ao., fig. 30); this pierces the posterior wall of the viscero-pedal mass, and travels along in the dorsal region of the latter, giving off, in its course, small vessels to the digestive gland. Near

* Grobben, Dr. C. Die Pericardialdriise der Lamellibranchiaten. Arbeit. Zool. Inst. Wien. Bd. VII. 1888.

73

the anterior margin of the viscero-pedal mass the aorta bifurcates; one vessel runs straight forward over the anterior adductor to the mantle lobes, forming the anterior pallial artery (A7rt.p.a.), the other passes straight down- wards as the viscero-pedal artery. In its course this gives off a vessel from its anterior side which soon bifurcates, forming the right and left labial arteries (A.lab.). Still further down a large vessel is given off from the posterior side, the visceral artery (Art.v.), this runs back horizon- tally until it meets the straight portion of the intestine ; branches are given off which supply blood to the rest of the gut. The main vessel is continued beyond this branch to the ventral surface of the foot as the pedal artery (Art.p.).

Only the above described vessels, constituting the arterial portion of the vascular system, have definite walls. The further course of the circulation les in irregular lacune between the various organs, between muscle bundles, and in cavities in the connective tissues. The first focus of this system of venous channels is the renal sinus (Sin ren., figs. 4 and 30), an irregular blood space surrounding the tubules of the renal organ. Anteriorly this begins as a pair of blood spaces lying underneath the pericardium on each side of the middle line of the body (“‘vene cave’). These unite into a large median cavity in the middle of the renal organ, from which the blood filters outwards round the system of tubules constituting that organ. Blood enters the renal sinus dorsally from the mantle lobes, and anteriorly from a vertical sinus in the posterior part of the viscero-pedal mass (Sin.p., figs. 11 and 30). This communicates with the renal sinus through an opening in the muscular wall of the former, where the posterior retractor muscles of the foot take origin from: the muscular body-wall. Here the arrange-

74

ment of the muscles is such as to constitute a valve regulating the flow of venous blood outwards from the viscero-pedal mass.

From the renal sinus the blood reaches the heart by passing through the gills. The precise path taken will be considered in connection with the structure of those organs and of the kidney.

THE RENAL ORGAN.

The renal organ is a single median structure. As seen from the ventral side it forms a crescentic mass with the convexity facing posteriorly, and the two horns, which are anterior, embracing the posterior retractor pedis (fig. 31, Pl. VI.). It forms part of the lateral and the whole ventral wall of that portion of the body lying between the viscero- pedal mass and the posterior adductor. Its posterior wall hes against the adductor. Its dorsal wall is applied to the ventral wall of the pericardium.

In front the renal organ consists of a single wide sac with a few secretory tubules opening into it along each side, but the diverging retractor muscles of the foot passing upwards through it on their way to their insertions in the shell, break up the posterior portion of this sac into three separate cecal divisions (Ren., fig. 7, Pl. II.). The median posterior division passes backwards between the diverging muscles, the right and left posterior divisions pass to the outside of the right and left muscles respec- tively. Each of these three divisions branches out behind the muscles into a great number of irregular secreting tubules, owing to which the mass of the organ is greatest at its most posterior part, that is, at the convex margin of the crescent.

It is, of course, not the actual renal sac, but the outer body-wall that is seen from the outside: between the renal

75

sac and the outer wall is the blood sinus surrounding the secretory tubules. The renal sinus communicates with the pedal sinus by perforations in the muscular wall of the viscero-pedal mass, as the pedal retractors originate from the latter. The muscles lie actually in the blood sinus. In front of them the sinus is a wide central cavity lying beneath the flattened renal sac, with renal tubules dipping into it on all sides except dorsally. The body-wall is gathered up into a pair of lateral folds, which take part in the formation of the bases of the ctenidia, and the blood from the central cavity filters through the spaces between the tubules into these lateral folds, and so into the gills.

The reno-pericardial canals (Ren.per., fig. 4, Pl. II.) are a pair of large tubules which take origin on the lateral internal walls of the lateral posterior divisions of the renal sac. In sections they may be found on the part of the wall lying on the outside of each retractor muscle. They open into the renal sac by wide fimbriated mouths. Their walls near these openings are often peculiarly modified, and are produced out into several small diverticula, resembling the renal tubules. The canals pass down- wards and forwards along the ventral wall of the renal sac, and come to open into the pericardium on the floor of the latter underneath the ventricle, by a pair of prominent sts. All along their course the tubules carry a lining of long cilia, and on the openings of the canals into the peri- eardium these are very prominent, especially in young specimens (0°5 to 1 cm.), where they sometimes form a ciliated fringe projecting into the latter.

The form and course of the renal tubules are very irregular, and in sections through the posterior margin of the renal organ it is at first sight difficult to distinguish between the tubules themselves and the blood sinus. This

76

can be done, however, by the character of the wall; the internal surface of the renal tubule (fig. 9) is formed by an irregular epithelium composed of large non-ciliated cubical cells with clear or very faintly granular contents. The cell walls are very definite; the nuclei he at the bases on the lateral walls. The epithelium is supported on a sharply defined basement membrane, from which bridges of delicate fibrous tissue stretch across the blood spaces. The wall of the renal sac, other than that lining the tubule, has the same characters, except that the cells are smaller and more irregular.

THE BRANCHIZA.

The general arrangement of the branchie (ctenidia) with respect to the other parts of the body, has already been described above. There is a single ctenidium on each side. Hach of these organs consists of two branchial plates lying side by side in the mantle cavity, attached to a base containing blood vessels. Each branchial plate or branchia is again folded on itself so that it consists of two lamellae. The lamelle of the same branchia are bound together, but there is no connection between the two branchiz except at the base of the ctenidium from which both take origin.

The base of the ctenidium (B7’,, fig. 3, Pl. L.) is a ridge of the body-wall containing the blood vessels—the common afferent and efferent branchial vessels. The afferent vessel carries blood to both branchial plates, while the efferent vessel carries away the blood oxidised by contact with the water flowing through the mantle cavity. A flat band of muscle fibres runs along the ctenidial base from the posterior to the anterior extremities. The branchial nerve terminates in the posterior portion of the base.

The ctenidium of the left side is shown in fig. 2. The

vit

inner branchia (Br.I.), which is the larger of the two, is narrowest behind where it fuses with the corresponding structure of the right side, and increases gradually in width towards its anterior margin which is attached to the body-wall, and is slightly overlapped by the labial palps. The outer branchia (Br.Z.) is narrower than the inner, and is broadest at about midway between its two extremities. The two branchie of each side fuse together behind the viscero-pedal mass at their posterior extrem- ities. bash

Each branchia consists of a large number of hollow filaments connected together at intervals. The direction of these filaments is at right angles to the ctenidial base. At the free ventral margin, where each branchia is folded on itself forming the two lamelle, the filaments of the inher pass over with some modification in structure into those of the outer lamella. The whole ctenidium is cut obliquely to the base in fig. 4, and each of the two branchie is seen to be made up of a direct and a reflected lamella. For the greater part, these two lamelle are intimately bound together: the precise nature of the connections is not, however, shown in the figure. In the inner branchia the external lamella (Br.I.L) which is inserted into the base of the ctenidium; is the direct one, and the internal lamella (Br.I.2) is the reflected one. Conversely in the outer branchia, the internal lamella (Br.E 1) is the direct one, and the external lamella (Br. £.2)is the reflected one. This difference in the disposition of the two branchia will be noticed, the inner lamelle of right and left internal branchie fuse together in the middle line, and here the lamelle (B7.J.3) are simply mem- branous plates, showing no sign of filamentar structure. These membranous portions of the inner lamellze are continuous at the posterior extremities of the ctenidia

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with the horizontal septum, which continues forward the fusion of the mantle edge between the two siphons, and consequently they form the floor of the ventral supra- branchial chamber which is a continuation forward of the cavity of the dorsal siphon. This ventral suprabranchial chamber is continuous with a series of cavities between the two lamelle of the right and left inner branchie. The reflected lamelle of the outer branchiz, on the other hand, are filamentar in structure through all their width, and extend dorsally beyond the ctenidial base to be inserted into the body-wall in the angle formed by the latter and the mantle lobes. This dorsal extension of the reflected lamelle of the outer branchiz is common to a number of Eulamellibranchs, of which Cardiuwm forms the type, and is the ‘‘appendice”’ of Pelseneer, which is regarded by him as the beginning of a third lamella of the outer branchia.* The branchie of Cardiwm are of the “fluted or com- pound type,” that is, each is thrown into a number of deep furrows and ridges, the direction of which is perpendicular to the base of the ctenidium. ‘T'wo such ridges, with a furrow between, are represented in fig. 26—where the branchia is cut in a plane at right angles to the filaments. Each ridge consists of a group of from 20 to 30 filaments. One or two filaments may occupy the summit of the ridge, the bottom of the furrow is constituted by two filaments which have opened out and fused by their edges forming a membranous plate. In each branchia these ridges and furrows are symmetrically opposed to each other, ridge. against ridge, and furrow against furrow. The supra- branchial cavity extends into the interior of each ridge. Morphologically the branchia consists only of this

* Bull. Sci. de la France et de la Belgique. Ser. TII., t. XX., pp. 27—52 1889,

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double series of hollow filaments which were primitively vascular channels, the wall of the filament itself serving as the membrane through which the gaseous interchange between the blood and the surrounding water is effected. This simple arrangement is complicated here by the process of folding, which is described above, and further by a partial coherence of the filaments, which with the development of other vascular tissues, form two series of junctions within the branchia:—l1st, a series of inter- filamentar junctions (Bry.1, figs. 26 and 28, Pl. V.) joining the separate filaments in each lamella, and 2nd, a series of inter-lamellar junctions (Br7.2, fig. 26) joining the two lamelle of the same branchia. It will appear from a consideration of figs. 26 and 28 that this conjunctive tissue 1s not formed simply by the branchial filaments themselves, but also by vascular tissue developed from the base of the ctenidium. The whole of an inter-lamellar junction is constituted by this vascular tissue, the inter- filamentar junction, on the other hand, is formed both by the union of the adjacent walls of the filaments and by a separate vascular tissue. Wherever such an inter- filamentar junction occurs, the filaments taking part in it have split (fig. 28) and the adjacent edges of separate filaments have united. But underneath this place of union the vascular channel is completed by a sheet of connective tissue continuous with the tissue of the efferent or afferent vessels, as the case may be. If the whole lamella could be flattened out, it would appear as a trellis work of which the vertical bars would be formed by the filaments, the horizontal bars by the vascular inter-fila- mentar junctions. At intervals of every 40 or 50 filaments, vertical afferent and efferent vessels occur alternately, and between these vessels the blood circulates in the horizontal inter-filamentar junctions, But there must also be a

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limited circulation of the blood through the filaments themselves.

There is a very regular segmental or repetitional structure in each branchia, which is due to the fluting and to the regular occurrence of the afferent and efferent vessels. At the base of each furrow is a vessel, the external wall of which is formed by the two flattened- out filaments already referred to. The rest of the vessel is formed from extra-filamentar tissue. Afferent and efferent vessels so formed alternate with complete regu- larity along the whole length of the branchia. There is this difference between the two series :—the afferent series (Br.aff’.) consists of a number of hollow plates extending uninterruptedly from the base to the ventral edge of each branchia, and also stretching across from external to internal lamelle; each afferent vessel is thus common to the two lamelle of the branchia; the efferent series consists of a number of nearly cylindrical vessels (Br.eff’.), one of which is present at the base of every alternate furrow. They must necessarily be double the number of the afferent vessels. The afferent vessels form. the. inter- lamellar junctions. It also follows from this arrangement that the suprabranchial cavity in the inter-lamellar space is divided up into a series of separate cavities having no connection with each other except at the base of the: branchia. : |

Fig. 26 represents such a double segment in the internal branchia of one ctenidium. There are from 50 to 60 such segments in the length of the organ.

The separate filament (fig. 27) is in transverse section. ellipsoidal in shape, the broader end is external, the more pointed end is internal. The outer surface is composed of large cubical cells, the inner surface of smaller cells. Within is an elongated cavity across which bridges of

|

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delicate fibrous tissue pass from wall to wall, and which contains blood corpuscles. There are no skeletal

structures.

In any section of the wall four cells are very obvious.

_ Two of these are very large, one being situated on each

s

lateral wall. Their nuclei are prominent but stain lightly. There is a very evident striated free border, and the cell bears a number of long and coarse cilia. The two other cells lie nearer the broad end of the filament, and resemble those described. The nuclei are, however, very large and stain intensely, so that they are very evident even under a low magnifying power. Between these two cells the outer wall of the filament is composed of cubical cells bearing short cilia. The inner surface consists of small cubical or even flattened cells.

Both the vertical afferent and efferent vessels and the inter-filamentar vessels have very thin walls composed of a flattened epithelium. Only a few fine trabecule cross the cavities of these vessels. It is obvious from a comparison of the area presented by this vascular tissue with the area of the filaments themselves, and from a comparison of the nature of the epithelia in each case that by far the ereater part of the gaseous exchange in respiration must be effected through the wall of the vascular tissue proper and not through that of the filaments. The latter, in fact, form a mechanical tissue supporting the series of vascular channels, and by the action of their ciliated epithelium,

causing the current of water from without to flow through

the bars of the trellis work of each lamella into the supra- branchial cavities.

THE COURSE OF THE CIRCULATION.

The heart is a systemic one. Blood, with the waste products eliminated in the renal organ, and having under-

82 gone oxidation in the gills, is. distributed through the body by two series of vessels; posteriorly it leaves the heart by the right and left posterior pallial arteries (Art.pp., Art.pp’ fig. 30, Pl. V.), and reaches the siphons and the posterior mantle margin ; anteriorly it traverses the aorta (Ao.), which soon bifurcates; one branch, the anterior

pallial artery (Art.pa.), passes over the anterior adductor

and reaches the anterior mantle margin; the other branch

descends the anterior part of the viscero-pedal mass as the viscero-pedal artery (Art.vp.). In its course this supplies blood to the labial palps through the right and left labial arteries (A.lab.), and again bifurcates, one branch, the visceral artery (A7t.v.), penetrates the visceral mass and, passing first to the straight portion of the intestine, sup- plies the whole length of the latter, the other continues on to the bend of the foot.

Further than this, it is impossible to trace the afferent blood channels. Both in the mantle margin and in the viscero-pedal mass the arteries become lost in an irregular system of lacune, lying principally in the interspaces between the muscle bundles. This lacunar system re- presents the capillary and venous portions of the vascular system of a more highly organised animal, and it is here that the interchange between blood stream and tissues, in the metabolism of the latter, is effected. Two foci exist ‘towards which the blood circulating in this lacunar system ‘converges. From the anterior and posterior margins of the ‘mantle lobes it flows in the ventral mantle edge towards ‘the centre, then dorsally through the spaces in the interior of the thin mantle lobes towards the umbonal parts of the latter. Here there is a direct communication between the intrapallial lacune and the renal sinfis, but the greater portion of the blood, after bathing the tubules of the peri- ‘cardial gland, reaches the anterior corners of the auricles,

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The second focus of the venous blood is the renal sinus, towards which all the blood circulating in the viscero- pedal mass converges. There are two large sinuses in the latter, an irregular sinus lying on the anterior margin. and a posterior pedal sinus (Sin.p.) lying beneath the internal part of the posterior retractor muscles of the foot. As the latter are gathered up into the two compact muscle bundles which run upwards through the renal organ, they leave an opening in the muscular wall of the foot which leads into the two short longitudinal trunks, these, finally, open into the large central sinus in the middle of the renal organ (Sin.ren., figs. 7 and 30).

From this central space the venous blood flows outwards, bathing the renal secretory tubules in its course, and enters two longitudinal vessels which run along the bases of the ctenidia. These are the common afferent branchial vessels (Br.aff., fig. 830). From them a series of vessels, running perpendicularly to the bases of the ctenidia, enters each branchia—the afferent branchial vessels (Br.aff",, figs. 26 and 30). These communicate through the interfila- mentar branchial junctions with a series of similarly disposed vessels—the efferent branchial vessels (Br.eff’., figs. 26 and 30), which fall into a pair of common efferent ‘branchial vessels (Br.eff.), and these finally open into the auricles. From the auricles the blood enters the ventricle through the openings at the apices of the former, reflux being prevented by the action of the valves guarding these openings.

Menégaux* bases a theory accounting for the protrusion of the foot, siphons, and mantle edges, on the anatomical relationships indicated above, 7.e., the presence of a valve

* Recherches Sur le Circulation des Lamellibranches Marins. 296 pp.,

Besancon, 1890. Also Comptes Rendus de ]’Acad. Sci., Paris. T, CVIIL., pp. 361364, 1889.

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behind the ventricle and at the opéning of the posterior pedal into the renal sinus. Since it has been proved that there is no entrance of water from without, either into the blood stream or into a closed water vascular system, the mechanism of the erection of the foot and siphon must be sought for in the intrinsic muscula- ture of those parts or in arrangements whereby the blood pressure in localised regions of the animal’s body can be varied at will. Since there appears to be no arrangement of muscles which can possibly bring about the protrusion of the siphons, the only other evident cause of this must be their distension with blood which is forced in from the heart through the posterior pallial arteries. The condition of ‘‘turgescence”’ in the siphons 1s probably initiated by the simultaneous relaxation of the constrictor muscle fibres at their bases, and of the retractor muscles. The lacunar spaces are thus enlarged and become distended with blood. The radial muscles and, to a certain extent, the constrictor muscles must function in preventing lateral expansion so that the blood pressure is distri- buted towards the tips of the siphons and is directed largely towards increasing their length. The valve behind the ventricle prevents the reflux of blood back into the heart. Retraction is abundantly provided for by the con- strictor fibres of the siphonal walls and by the retractor muscle bundles.

Similarly the turgescence of the foot is initiated by the relaxation of the posterior and anterior retractores pedis. The entrance of the posterior pedal sinus into the renal organ is guarded by an arrangement of muscle fibres which is in effect a valve, and the closure of this is most probably the first effect of the relaxation of the posterior retractor of the foot, since in sections through this region, in an extended specimen, the opening is difficult to find.

85

Blood which is forced into the viscero-pedal mass by the increased action of the heart, is now retained there since there is no other exit than that into the renal sinus, and, as in the case of the siphons, an area of increased pressure is established. This, of itself, must tend to straighten out the two limbs of the foot, and this is in fact observed in cases of extreme distension. But the action of the in- trinsic circular and transverse fibres also aids in the protrusion of the foot, since by their correlated contraction both diameters can be reduced and the increased pressure distributed towards the tip. Within the distal limb the courses of the intrinsic fibres are so various that no reliable deduction as to the result of their contraction can be made.

Retraction of the foot is provided for by the contraction of the posterior retractor pedis. This, first of all, opens the passage leading into the renal sinus and allows the blood in the foot to enter the latter space. Then both anterior and posterior retractors operate by their contrac- tion in reducing the length of the proximal limb, and waves of contraction passing upwards from the tip chase the blood in the whole foot into the renal sinus. It does not appear from the disposition of the muscle, regarded here as the homologue of the “‘ protractor pedis”’ in other Lamellibranchs, that its contraction can have any appre- ciable effect in the protrusion of any part of the viscero- pedal mass.

It follows from the above that in the condition of turgescence, the large blood spaces in parts of the body, other than the viscero-pedal mass, are relatively emptied of blood; and that conversely, in the contracted condition, those spaces are gorged. In sections made from the tur- gescent animal the empty condition of the renal sinus in particular is evident. In the contracted condition, blood

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accumulates in the more dorsal intrapallial lacunze and in the spaces round the adductors. The lacune in the contracted foot itself are only potential, and the circulation there must be largely confined to that taking place in the visceral artery and in the venous lacune round the intes- tine. This explanation of the condition of turgescence assumes that the quantity of blood contained in the body is sufficient to produce the distension of the parts in question. Fleischman has shown that this is the case for Anodonta, and the assumption may not unreasonably be made that it is the case also in Cardiwn.

Tur NERVOUS SYSTEM.

The central nervous system in Cardiwm is constituted by the two separate, paired, cerebral ganglia, each of which represents the fusion of originally distinct cerebral and pleural ganglia; the single median pedal ganglion, formed

by the fusion of originally lateral and paired pedal ganglia,

and the single median parieto-splanchnic ganglion also formed from originally separate, right and left, ganglionic masses. There are two pairs of connectives, the cerebro- visceral connectives joining the cerebral and _ parieto- splanchnic gangla, and the cerebro-pedal which connect the cerebral and pedal centres. The whole nervous system is bilaterally symmetrical.

The cerebral ganglion of each side (fig. 3, Pl. I., Ga.c.) lies quite superficially in the loose connective tissue between the bases of the labial palps, the anterior dorsal wall of the viscero-pedal mass, and the anterior adductor ; and is easily exposed by removing the palps close to their attachments, and parting slightly the adductor from the adjoining body-wall. It is oval in shape and unpigmented. The right and left ganglia are joined together by the long cerebral commissure (Com.) which runs in the base of

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the dorsal palp; four conspicuous nerves leave the ganglion on each side, and are easily observed.

The cerebro - visceral connectives (Con.cv.) run back- wards and upwards in the loose tissue surrounding the ganglion; they pierce the muscular body-wall, and pass through the upper portion of the viscero-pedal mass embedded in the substance of the digestive gland. Leaving the latter they again pierce the posterior muscular body- wall near the external openings of the gonads, and slightly above the origin of the retractor muscles of the foot. Then they pass along the lower wall of the renal sinus to join the parieto-splanchnic ganglion.

The pedal connective of each side (con.cp.) runs down- wards in the loose tissue round the ganglion for a short distance, then pierces the anterior muscular wall of the viscero-pedal mass, and passes vertically downwards on the internal surface of the latter to the pedal ganglion. The connectives are quite distinct, but lie close together in the middle line of the body; about half-way down in the course of each, a nerve is given off which passes backwards into the visceral mass.

A large nerve, the anterior common pallial nerve (N.pa.), leaves the anterior surface of each ganglion, and passes along the lower surface of the anterior adductor, and outwards from this on to the most anterior and dorsal corner of the mantle lobe. Just before leaving the adductor each pallial trunk bifurcates.

A very small nerve, the anterior adductor nerve (N.add.), leaves the ganglion near the origin of the anterior pallial nerve, and plunges into the posterior surface of the anterior adductor muscle.

Lastly, there is the strong cerebral commissure running over the dorsal wall of the mouth.

These are all the nerves that can be observed in the

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course of dissection. In addition to these, several smaller twigs can be seen in sections, passing off from the ganglion into the surrounding tissue, some of these most probably innervate the labial palps.

The parieto-splanchnic ganglion (Ga.sp., fig. 31, Pl. VL.) is best dissected by placing the animal (removed from the shell), ventral surface uppermost, and cutting through the wall of the lower siphon, the fused inner lamelle of the internal branchie, and the horizontal shelf formed by the concrescence of the two ctenidia and the septum between dorsal and ventral siphons. These parts are then folded back and the ganglion and its nerves are fully exposed.

This is the largest of the ganglionic centres, it is nearly square in shape. Indications of its origin from paired and lateral ganglia are seen in the two little anterior lobes, from which the connectives take origin. It is covered only by a single layered epithelium, and lies in a cavity; three nerves leave it on each side.

The cerebro-visceral connectives are the most delicate of the nerves leaving the ganglion. Each connective originates in one of the anterior lobes already referred to, and at once plunges into the renal sinus and _ passes through the latter, lymg apparently free in the blood space. The further course has been described above.

The branchial nerves (N.br.) leave the ganglion from the anterior corners, and pass along in the wall of the afferent branchial vessels to the bases of the ctenidia. Where the latter become free from the body-wall the nerves bend round at a right angle, and pass backwards to the tip. Following Duvernoy and Drost* I have termed these the ‘‘ branchial nerves,” though I have been

* Drost, K. Uber das Nervensystem u.d. Sinnesepithelien der Herzmuschel

(Cardiwm edule), &e. Morphologisches Jahrbuch. Bd. XII., pp. 164—201; Taf x., 1886—7.

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unable to demonstrate their actual endings in the tissues of the ctenidia.

The posterior common pallial nerves (N .pp., fig. 31), are the stoutest of the nerves proceeding from the visceral ganglion. They leave the latter from its most posterior corners, and pass over the ventral surface of the adductor, reaching the mantle at the most lateral and posterior corners of the former. As they leave the muscle each nerve bifurcates; and the external branch, which is the largest, runs along the mantle edge as the external pallial nerve (N.p.1); the internal branch again divides, the outer of the two nerves so formed also runs in the muscular tissue of the mantle margin as the median pallial nerve (N.p.2); the inner one has its whole course in the thin tissue of the mantle within the line of insertion of the retractor muscles. This internal pallial nerve (N.p.3) is by much the most delicate of the three.

As each common pallial nerve passes over the adductor, two branches are given off from its external surface. These enter the wall of the dorsal siphon. Three other nerves leave the trunk after the branch forming the median and internal pallial nerves is given off. These enter the wall of the ventral siphon. Thus the two siphons are innervated by five nerves on each side, of which two enter the dorsal, three the ventral siphon. Anastomoses between the first three of these siphonal nerves are common, and gangliform enlargements may be observed at their points of origin from the mantle nerve or further out on their course.

The pedal ganglion (fig. 3, Pl. I., and fig. 33, Pl. VI.) is best exposed by removing the viscero-pedal mass, with the bases of the labial palps, and, therefore, the cerebral ganglia attached, and pinning it down in a dish with the anterior margin uppermost; the muscular body-wall is

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then cut through in the middle line, and the two sides reflected outwards from below upwards, the attachments of the transverse muscle bundles being cut through as close to the body-wall as possible. The whole course of each cerebro-pedal connective is then exposed from the point where it perforates the muscular body-wall to its ending in the ganghon. The latter, with its nerves, is further exposed by picking away the transverse muscle fibres and the tubules of the gonad.

The ganglion (Ga.p.) is elongated in a transverse direc- tion, and is rather oblong in shape. The cerebro-pedal connectives (Con. cp.) leave its upper and external borders. Half-way between the pedal and cerebral ganglia each connective gives off a small branch from its internal surface, which enters into the viscero-pedal mass.

Exclusive of the connectives four pairs of nerves radiate out from the ganghon. These enter into the surrounding tissue. One nerve, however, which is very thick, and which leaves the lower border of the ganglion, can be traced as far as the tip of the foot.

The pallial plexus is formed by the three pallial nerves described above. The anterior common pallial nerve, it has been stated, bifurcates on leaving the anterior adduc- tor muscle; the inner of the two branches so formed gives off a very fine nerve on its internal side, and thus three pallial nerves, as in the case of the posterior common palhal trunk, are formed. These three nerves are, of course, identical with the three formed from the posterior trunk, and so each pallial nerve has a double origin, one extremity proceeding from the cerebral ganglion, the other from the visceral. At about the centre of the mantle margin, the middle and external nerves, which have hitherto kept widely apart from each other, come together and separate again, and at this point of contact a gangli-

i PLR OND Ona

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form enlargement is formed. The external nerve gives off an abundant series of branches which pass outwards to the extreme mantle edge; between external and median, and to a less extent between median and internal nerves, there are numerous anastomosing branches. These anas- tomoses are particularly abundant in the neighbourhood of the branching of the common pallial trunks.

SENSE ORGANS.

The sensory structures in Cardium are :—(1) Sensory epithelial cells (Flemming’s cells) in the integument ; (2) visual organs borne by the siphonal tentacles; (3) a pair of otocysts in the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass.

(1) The sensory epithelial cells are found over the general body surface, but are more abundant on the mantle edge and on the siphons. On the latter they are present in groups in the depressions at the free extremities of the tentacles borne by the outer wall.* They are either spindle- shaped cells with the nucleus at the middle and a bundle of long hairs on the free extremity, or elongated cells with the nucleus at the base and the free end swollen out into a disk, which bears short hairs. Probably they act both as tactile and as olfactory organs, the latter function being subserved more especially by the cells on the mantle edge and siphons.

(2) The structures generally regarded as visual organs (fig. 36, Pl. VI.) are found on the summits of the tentacles borne by the outer walls of both siphons. At the free end of each tentacle there is a small depression. The lp of this depression which faces the siphon is gently rounded,

*Flemming. Untersuch. u.d. Sinnesepithelien der Mollusken. Archiv f. Mikr. Anat. Bd. VI., pp. 489—471, 1870.

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and bears a somewhat crescentic patch of pigmented epi- thelium (E£p.op.); the other lip, which is turned away from the wall of the siphon, is sharp, and is raised up to form a screen. The nerve branch entering the tentacle from the posterior pallial plexus runs in the axial part, and at the summit swells out into a nearly globular ganglion (Ga.op.) consisting of large, clear, oval cells and a network of fibres. On the siphonal side of the tentacle this ganglion lies close _ to the wall. It is invested on all sides except towards the tip and the outer wall by a capsule of fibrous tissue, which stains deeply and homogeneously with staining reagents, has no nuclei, and shows little indication of cellular nature. On the tip of the tentacle the hair cells, referred to above, can be traced into the tissue of the ganglion. Nerve fibres from the latter probably spread round the edge of the © incomplete fibrous capsule, not through its tissue.

The cells covering the tentacle generally are cubical in form with a continuous cuticle. Towards the tip, how- ever, they become higher and columnar in shape, and the cuticle becomes less evident. On the pigmented spot the outer two-thirds of each of these columnar cells is filled up with brownish pigment, which takes the form of a dense mass of spherical granules lying perfectly free from each other. The nucleus is in contact with the lower layers of this mass of granules, but is usually quite free. The cell body seem to be composed of clear cell substance, in which are embedded the round pigment granules. Beneath the nucleus it is faintly fibrillar, the direction of the fibrille being that of the long axis of the cell. A narrow space separates this epithelium from the capsule surrounding the ganglion, and this space is filled by fine fibrous tissue. It is very probable that nerve fibres from the ganglion, passing round the edge of the capsule, form part of this layer, and some at least terminate in or among the cells

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on the pigment patch, though the existence of such is difficult to demonstrate.

There can be little doubt that the structure so described functions as a very simple eye, capable only of distinguish- ing differences in the intensity of the incident light. Thus, if a shadow be rapidly thrown on a cockle lying in a shallow dish, with the siphons fully extended, retraction of the latter generally follows, and it seems reasonable to locate the sensitive parts in the structures on the tips of the tentacles. Very similar organs are found in other species of Cardiwm, and in C. muticum, Kishinouye* has described organs on the tip of the siphonal tentacles which have all the characters of an eye—a multicellular lens composed of flattened cells, beneath which is a retinal layer of elongated cells, and beneath this again a pigment layer. ‘The only other conjecture as to the nature of the structures described in the common cockle has been made by Brock,t who supposes them to be luminous organs ; but it does not appear that there are any observations in support of this suggestion.

(3) A pair of otocysts (fig. 84, Pl. VI.) are present in the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass. They are very small—0:07 mm. in longest diaineter, and can only be ob- served in sections taken in the neighbourhood of the pedal ganglion. They are situated a little way above the latter, right and left of the middle line and internal to the cerebro-pedal connectives. They are probably innervated from the latter. They are oval in form, the longest dia- meters lying parallel to the transverse axis of the foot. A

*Note on the Eyes of Cardium muticum, Reeve. Journal Roy. Coll. of Science, Imp. University, Tokyo. Vol. VI., pt. 4, pp. 279—285, Pl. IX., 1894.

+ Uber die sogenannten Augen von Tridacna, &c. Zeitsch. f. wissensch. Zool. Bd, LXVL., pp. 270—88, Pl. XXI. (English translation in Ann. Mag, Nat. Hist., 1888, pp. 485—52), :

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prominent otolith, marked with concentric and radiating lines, exactly spherical in form, and about 0°02 mm. in diameter, is present. The wall of the otocyst is composed of a single, rather irregular, layer of cells; at the extremities of the long diameter are two single, nucleated cells, the cell bodies of which stain deeply, and on either side of each of these are several clear, apparently non-nucleated, spindle cells. The remainder of the wall is composed of irregular cubical cells. Hairs or cilia are not clearly shown. The nerves seem to enter at the internal poles of the organs. Each otocyst is surrounded by a loose investment of fibrous connective tissue, and but for this, les freely among the transverse muscles of the foot.

THE REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS.

The gonad is paired and consists of a branching tubular cland. The external opening (see fig. 3, Pl. I.) is situated on the lateral and posterior body-wall, near the origin of the posterior retractor muscle of the foot. This leads into a very short terminal duct which immediately branches into three main divisions (fig. 3). One of these runs dorsally along the posterior margin of the viscero-pedal mass, the second downwards along the body-wall, the third duct runs obliquely forwards and downwards towards the bend of the foot. Branches are given off laterally from all these ducts on which are borne botryoidal clusters of secreting alveoli (fig. 87, Pl. VI.). These lateral branches penetrate among the transverse muscle bundles, between the convolutions of the intestine and between the lobes of the digestive gland. They lie principally in the peripheral zone of the proximal limb of the viscero- ‘pedal mass. There is no extension at any time into the distal limb of the latter, nor into the mantle lobes.

In Cardium edule the sexes are separate, In at least

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one other species of Cardium—C. serratum (—C. nor- vegicum), investigated by Lacaze-Duthiers,* the animal is hermaphrodite; on the same branch duct alveoli are present, some of which are filled with ova, some with spermatozoa; and both genital products may be found even in the same alveolus. In the edible cockle there is little difference between the gonads of different sexes apart from their contents. The male gonad is less voluminous and more opaque.

In the animal taken during the spring or early summer the gonad is nearly filled with ova or spermatozoa, as the case may be. In a transverse section through an alveolus of the male gland (fig. 39, Pl. VI.) there is a peripheral zone of small, dense cells lying close to, and obscuring the wall. Where the latter can be observed it is seen to consist of a single layer of small, rounded cells supported on a delicate basement membrane. Within this is the zone of cells referred to, which results from the pro- liferation of the germinal epithelium forming the wall. Towards the centre of the alveolus these become smaller and denser as they become transformed into the mature spermatozoa. The elongated head pieces of the latter are arranged in radial streaks converging towards a portion of the wall, which does not consist of germinal epithelium, and where there is generally a slight space. The long tail pieces are directed towards this space and alternate with the rows of heads. In the alveoli this part of the wall, towards which the streaks of spermatozoa converge, is thin and presents no particular structure. In the larger ducts, however, it consists of a strip of cated epithelium where the cells are irregular and have clear cell contents. In

*Recherches sur les organes genitaux des acephales Lamellibranches ‘Ainales des Sciences Nat. Ser. VI., t. II., Zool., pp, 153—248, Pl. V,— IX., 1854,

96

the duct, as in the alveolus, this only forms a small strip of the wall, the rest being composed of germinal epithelium,

In the female gonad (fig. 38), at a corresponding stage, the cavities of the ducts and alveoli are filled with eggs in various stages of development. As in the male gland there is a strip of the wall which in the alveolus is thin and membranous, and in the ducts is composed of a ciliated epithelium; the remainder of the duct consists of germinal epithelium which, in some parts, is composed of small, deeply staining cells with conspicuous nuclei. Many of these are enlarged and project out from the wall into the lumen; the largest eggs which are attached have a narrow, short stalk which forms part of the wall. The eggs lying freely in the cavity are flattened against each other by their mutual pressure, and are usually polygonal in section. Their true shape is oval (fig. 35, Pl. VI.). A very thick vitelline membrane (M.vit.), secreted apparently from the surface during the later stages of development, surrounds each. The cell contents are coarsely granular. The nucleus is a large, oval body, with a very sharp outline, faintly granular in texture, and with no apparent signs of chromatic material. A single, large, rounded, very distinct nucleolus is always present, the contents of which sometimes show a very regular vacuolation; within the ovary the eggs are frequently adherent together by their membranes,

The eggs and spermatozoa are shed in the early part of the year (March), and spawning apparently lasts till July or August. Fertilisation and development take place at large in the surrounding water, resulting in the formation of a typical veliger larva. After a short free-swimming stage, the velum is absorbed, the shell is formed, and the

long vermiform foot is developed. The young cockle, |

then still less than 1 mm. long, settles down in the sand for the remainder of its existence,

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97

APPENDIX.

Tur ECONOMY OF THE COCKLE WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE

TO THE LANCASHIRE SEA-FISHERIES DISTRICT.

THE cockle derives its economic importance from the fact that it is a suitable article of food, and that it is sufficiently abundant, at the same time, on large portions of the coast to give employment to a large number of people in gather- ing it for the markets. To a less extent, it is economically valuable in that it provides an abundant supply of food to some of the more important flat fishes.

THE LANCASHIRE COCKLE FISHERIES.

A glance at the map of the Lancashire Sea-Fisheries District, reproduced in this Report, and which has been reduced from Mr. R. A. Dawson’s sketch chart of the dis- trict, will show the great area covered by the cockle beds. Owing to the nature of the coast, where almost every- where there are great stretches of clean sandy shore swept twice a day by the tides, there are very few places where the cockle may not be found. It is not, however, the mere occurrence of the animal that is considered in the chart, but its occurrence in sufficient quantities to render an area a sufficiently profitable fishing ground. The red coloured areas on the chart indicate approximately the position and extent of such profitable fishing grounds, and it is evident that these are numerous enough and of suf- ficient extent to render Cardiwm an animal of some importance to Lancashire fishermen, and to justify the egulation, to some extent, of the fishery.

98

The cockle beds in the whole district may be conven- iently grouped into three principal divisions. At the most northern limit is the estuary of the Duddon, practically the whole of which is occupied by cockle beds. Then comes Morecambe Bay, the whole northern part of which is scattered over with cockle beds. On the western side of the Bay are the important Baicliff and Bardsea beds, and towards the eastward side are the Bolton-le-Sands beds. Between these, and reaching southward as far as Yeoman Wharf is a large stretch of sands over the whole of which cockle beds are found and regularly fished. The chart shows some coloured areas on the southern side of the Bay, but there the cockle fishery is very irregular. The Morecambe Bay and Duddon beds together form the Northern Division.

Between Rossall Point and Blackpool the coast is too exposed to admit of the formation of profitable cockle beds, but from Southshore to Southport is the estuary of the Ribble, containing some very important beds. The most northern of these, the Crusader Bank, is of little value, but the Salthouse and Horse Banks, lying further south, are very valuable, as a glance at Table I. will show. Those banks form the Central Division.

From Southport to below Formby Point is the second barren portion of the coast. Here cockles are to be found, but not in such quantities as to render the beds of any commercial value. South of Formby Point is a narrow strip of from two to three miles in length—Formby Bank— where cockles are very abundant. There are several im- portant beds on the Cheshire Coast. The Formby, Lea- sowe, Hoylake, and West Hoyle beds are referred to hereafter as forming the Southern Division. There are also a number of areas containing cockle beds in the

oh

99

estuary of the Dee, but these are not included in the Lancashire Sea-Fisheries district.

I estimate the area covered by cockle beds at 69 square miles in the Northern Division, 19 square miles in the Central Division, and 17 square miles in the Southern Division. Altogether there are not less than 105 square

miles of cockle bearing sands in the whole district.

It must not be supposed that each of the coloured areas on the map represents a bank, or portion of a bank, over the whole of which cockles are abundant, and are con- tinually being fished for. At any one time the fishing is practically restricted to one or more comparatively small portions of the bank, and as this becomes exhausted, or as the cockles become so small as to be under the legal size, the fishing shifts to some other part. The whole of a bank may become exhausted temporarily; this was the case in 1899 for the Formby Bank, though in 1897 it was a very profitable cockle fishing ground, as much as 180 cwts. being removed daily during the winter and spring. At present (1899) the cockles on this bank are, as a rule, under legal size; they are, however, exceedingly numerous, and a season similar to that of 1897 may be expected in 1900. Each coloured area on the map represents, in fact, a tract over which cockle beds are distributed. The precise posi- tion of the beds is continually shifting to some extent, old beds being exhausted by fishing, or being sanded up with the shifting of the sand banks. New beds are being formed, the position and extent of these being dependent on the deposition of the spat. The newly-hatched cockle leads, for a time, a free-swimming life, and with the acquirement of its shell, settles down for the remainder of its life in the sand. Obviously the conditions which determine the place on which the spat ultimately settles, and the consequent formation of a bed, are complex.

100

THe YIELD OF THE CocKLE Babs.

In seeking for figures on which to base an estimate of the productiveness of the Lancashire cockle fisheries, one turns naturally to the published statistics of the Board of Trade which relate to fisheries. Here, how- ever, there is little available information, for statistics are only collected at the most important ports, and although the collectors discriminate between the various animals landed, crustacea (crabs, lobsters and shrimps), and mollusca (oysters, mussels and cockles) are included in the figures relating to ‘‘shell-fish.” Owing to this latter cause, comparisons between the amounts of cockles landed at the same port during different years is im- possible, and from the fact also that no account is taken of the produce landed at many important cockling centres, even an approximate estimate of the value of the Lan- cashire cockle beds cannot be made.

In the absence of any published data, an estimate of the value of the fishery has been attempted by finding approximately the number of cocklers employed on the various beds, and the amount gathered daily by each during the time of the year when the fishing is most active. Obviously, only an approximation to the true output of the beds can be made by this method, and it has been regarded as preferable to under-estimate rather than over-estimate the produce of the fishery. The totals given in Table IV. then represent, at the least, the value of the Lancashire cockle fishery. The figures, as to the number of cocklers, &c., have been given for the most part by the officers of the Lancashire Sea-Fisheries Committee. Those for the Northern Division are given by Mr. J. Wright, chief fishery officer at Piel, and the corresponding statement for the Southern Division by Mr. G. Eccles, chief officer at New Brigbton. Mr. R. L. Ascroft has

i

101

supplied the information relating to the Central Division. This consists of an accurate statement of the amount of cockles landed, month by month, during the year June, 1898—May, 1899, at Lytham. This does not represent all the fishing in the Ribble estuary, and the amount of cockles taken in the Central Division and landed elsewhere than at Lytham is taken as approximately one and a half times the total shown in Mr. Ascroft’s table.

TaBLE I.—AmountT of CocKLES landed at LyTHam during the year June, 1898—May, 1899 :—

Amount in cwrs. | Relative values.

| (=R) June, 1898 __... wae ses an 65 2 July ae ast sat Be 114 3°5 August oe a ae mA 151 4:5 September f. an ohe rep 1250 87°5 October 1 = ste real 3983) 5S 100 November... Bec se oF 3254 ( 5033 100 December pa sae 2 we 2586 ( & || 100 January, 1899... 3412) & 100 February 2278 69 March 1547 46°5 April | 1316 40 May | 1165 35

|

| Total amount landed at Lytham 21121 Amount taken in Central Division |

and landed elsewhere ... a 30000 Total amount taken from Central Division... 3 oe Bae aya

The figures in the third column show the relative values of the monthly takes expressed as percentages of the average take (3309) for the four months October—January.

In the construction of tables referring to the Northern and Southern Divisions it may be assumed, without serious error, that during the four months, October—January, the yield of the beds is practically constant. For the other

102

months it is further assumed that the amounts taken vary in a similar manner to those represented in the above table, since causes similar to those operating in the Central Division affect the monthly yield in the Northern and Southern Divisions. If, then, the amount taken in those districts in October be known, it becomes possible to con- struct a table showing the yearly take. The following table, compiled from information supplied by the fishery officers, shows approximately the amount taken in that month from the beds in the districts referred to.

TasLE II.—Showing the number of CockLERs and the

Amount of CocKLEs taken in October, 1899, in the NORTHERN and SOUTHERN DIVISIONS :—

WO er Amount | Total aie C ra pk gathered by | taken during oekrets- leach per day.| the month of 25 days. Duddon _... 20 14 ewt. 625 cwt. Northern | Baicliff and Bardsea 50 ly aes 2344 Division. | Flookburgh Sands.. 100 24S; 6250 ,, Bolton-le-Sands .. 15 Den OB fags Total take in October for Northern Division _... ... | 10156 ewt. (=M) , | West Hoyle ie 20 3? cwts. 1875 ewts. Sete eA Eloylakeer os 10 2) 625, * | Leasowe ... ... | Average daily take=7} 4 cwt. Wey os

Total take for October in Southern Division gereal past 2687 cwt. and Formby)... as (=M')

No account is taken in the above table of the small amount of fishing which goes on on the southern side of Morecambe Bay. It has been stated above that the cockling here is very irregular. Mr. Ascroft informs me that in 1861 and 1862 as many as twenty carts, with four cocklers to each, from Bolton-le-Sands, fished regularly on

ee ee ee a

Bite ——

103

Pilling Sands. At present, however, the fishing there is of little importance.

From this table, showing the extent of the fishing during the best time of the year, and the relative monthly values of the cockles taken, which is exhibited in Table I., an estimate of the amount taken throughout the whole district can now be made. This is given in Table III.; it is there assumed that the fishing is constant during the four months October—January. The values for the other months are calculated; they vary with respect to the value for October—January as the values R in Table I.

TABLE IIJ.—Total YIELD in Cwrs. of the beds in the whole District during the year June, 1898—May, 1899.

Northern Southern Division. Central Division. 1k Division. ey Rese ean M) (Gm ) June, 1898 aa oe icc 203 65 53 July aa Pe a 355 114 94 August sof Sor oe 457 151- 120 September ore sac soe 3808 1250 1007 October ee 50% - 10156 3983 2687 November aw ed i 10156 3254 2687 December : ac ae 10156 2586 2687 January, 1899 . dot ce 10156 3412 2687 February sa FE aR 7007 2278 1854 March se Joe ade 4722 1547 1249 April oF om Sac 4062 1316 1074 May cs eas eee 3554 1165 940 Total amount landed at Lytham ... bac 21121 17139 Amount landed in Central Division else- where than at Lytham .. 30000 Total yield of Formby and | Crosby beds | during the year ... 3: a5 650 Totals aE oe 64792 51121 17789

The money value of the cockles taken from the beds will depend on whether the price paid to the fishermen or

104

the price paid by the consumer is taken as the basis of calculation. Probably 2/- per cwt. represents the average

value to the fisherman; this may possibly be too low, since _ a certain proportion of the cockles landed are hawked in the ~

neighbourhood of the beds by the fishermen themselves. On the other hand, supposing the greater portion to be sent directly by rail to the markets, and adding the cost of freight and intermediate profits, 6/- per cwt. will represent fairly the price paid by the consumer.

TABLE IV.—MOoNnEY VALUE of the COCKLE BEDS in the |

whole District during the year June, 1898—May, 1899.

Weight of Cockles} Money value at | Money value at

in TONS. £2 per TON. £6 per TON. Northern Division... 3240 £6480 £19440 Central Division ... 2556 5112 15336 Southern Division... 889 1778 5334 The whole District ... 6685 £13370 £40110

The striking variation in the monthly yield of the beds

will be noticed. In the table relating to the Central

Division the maximum amount is taken in October, and

the monthly yield then decreases until, in the June follow-

ing, only 2 per cent. of the amount taken in the previous October is landed. This variation in the fishing seems to

be general in all parts of the district, and is apparently due

to the difficulties encountered in sending the cockles to

the markets, and in keeping them in the retail shops in a |

fresh condition during the relatively hot weather of June, July, and August. Other causes operate; in some parts of the district the cocklers leave the fishing for employ-

ment in the harvests, or in working pleasure boats at tourist.

resorts.

105

REGULATIONS AND METHODS OF FISHING.

The Bye-laws of the Lancashire Sea-Fisheries Com- mittee are directed towards the regulation of the cockle fishery in accordance with local conditions in various parts of the district, and the methods of fishing vary, to some extent, in the three principal divisions. Over all the district the ‘“‘craam’’ may be used, but it is employed chiefly in the Duddon and Morecambe Bay areas. The “craam’”’ is a metal three-pronged fork, fixed on a handle of about 18 inches in length. The prongs are about six inches in length, and about two inches of the extremity of each is bent downwards at a right angle. The cockler pushes a fish basket along the sand in his left hand, and scoops the cockles, one by one, out of the sand into the basket, with the ‘“‘craam.’’ Often the tuft of Alge on the shell of the cockle indicates its presence in the sand, but, as a rule, they are so abundant that the into the sand brings up a cockle. Over the whole district the ‘‘Jumbo” may be used, but only from November to February, both months included. Fishing by means of the ‘‘ Jumbo” is an extension of the method of treading on the sand with heavy boots, in which process the cockles

‘craam”’ plunged

are forced up to the surface and are then gathered. The “Jumbo”’ is a wooden frame, with a base consisting of a board, the maximum dimensions of which are 43 feet in length, 14 inches in width, and 1 inch thick. The frame, with this base-board resting on the sand, is rocked back- wards and forwards, with the result that the cockles are forced out of the sand on to the surface, and are then gathered up.

Special regulations apply to the central and southern parts of the district: in the part of the Central Division lying between Formby Point and the Gut Channel in the Ribble, the use of a spade is permitted. The spade is

106

used to remove the upper layer of sand to the depth of | about an inch and half. The cockles occupy this layer and are thus exposed. The use of a spade is not permitted in the other parts of the district. Southward of “‘ Rossall Landmark,” near Fleetwood, that is, over the whole of the Central and Southern Divisions, the use of the cockle rake is permissible; the cockle rake does not differ greatly from the ordinary garden rake, but may not exceed 12 inches in length. Thus, in the Northern Divi- sion the craam and the limited use of the Jumbo are permitted; in the Central Division the craam, Jumbo, rake, and spade; in the Southern Division the craam, Jumbo, and rake. Practically all the fishing in the © Southern Division is done by the rake.

A minimum size, below which a cockle is not legally saleable, is fixed by the Committee’s Bye-law, and extends to all parts of the district. This minimum size is that of a cockle which will exactly fit into a rectangular opening in the gauge”’ carried by the fishery officer. This opening is two inches in length, and three-quarters of an inch in breadth; the ratio of length to lateral breadth in the cockle is, of course, variable within certain limits, and the smallest legal-sized cockle may be defined as the cockle whose lateral breadth, from valve to valve, when the shell is closed, is just over three-quarters of an inch. This standard of size is, of course, a purely arbi- trary one, and has no definite relation to any particular phase in the life-history of the animal: the cockle becomes sexually mature before it has attained this size, and pro- bably has spawned once. It most probably represents the size of the animal which is over two and less than three years of age. But the rate of growth of the cockle certainly differs, probably to a considerable extent, on various parts of the Lancashire and Cheshire coasts. On

107

the Baicliff and Bardsea beds the average cockle picked out of the fisherman’s basket shows, at most, only three of the lines of growth on the shell, which are referred to at the beginning of this Memoir; in the Southern Division, on the Cheshire coast, four or five are generally present in the average specimen. Growth is most rapid in the sum- mer months; on the Baicliff beds, according to the fisher- men, the cockles in part of a bed, which are under gauge size in April, may be of legal size in June or July; in that period the shell has increased in girth by as much as half an inch.

The legal size is convenient and most probably eminently useful. On the principle that a marine food animal ought to be allowed the chance of spawning at least once before it is captured for the market, the Bye-law must be regarded as operating for the preservation of the cockle fishery. The present condition of the Crosby and Formby cockle beds is a case in point; here the difference in the output of the beds (180 cwts. daily in the winter of 1897—8, and 12} cwts. weekly during the year 1898—9) points to the over-fishing of the beds, which was, of necessity, followed by their temporary exhaustion. But since the cockles then became, on the average, so small as to fall under the gauge size, the fishing of the beds practically stopped for a time. During this period spawning of the remain- ing cockles went on, the beds being, to a large extent, undisturbed, and it is to be expected, from their present condition, that the fishing will again become abundant.

No close time, as in the case of the common mussel, is enforced. It will be seen from a consideration of the monthly output of the Ribble beds, exhibited in Table L., that natural causes lead to the suspension (to a great extent) of the fishing during the summer months. A certain amount of spawning goes on during May, June,

108

and July, so that, as in the case of the mussel, the animal is protected for at least a portion of its yearly spawning period.

No recent data exist on which to base an opinion as to whether the supply of cockles from the beds in the whole district is increasing or decreasing ; but in 1879 Buckland and Walpole, in the course of an examination into the state of the Sea-Fisheries of England and Wales,* made a special investigation into the cockle fishery in Morecambe Bay, and obtained data which enable a comparison to be made between the output of the beds at the beginning and end of a period of 21 years.

The Commissioners estimated the value of the pro- duce of the Morecambe Bay cockle beds for the year 1877 at over 3,943 tons in weight, and at £20,000 in money value. Cockles were taken by them as worth £53 per ton. These figures agree fairly well with those given in this Memoir. For the year 1898—99 the amount landed is estimated at 3,240 tons, and their money value at £19,440. Here, however, £6 per ton is taken as representing the retail price. It is not certain from the Commissioners’ Report whether they regarded £54 per ton as the price received by the fishermen, or as the price paid by the consumer. It was also stated in evidence to the Com- missioners that 100 carts, with six or seven people to the cart, were employed cockling in Morecambe Bay. This is far in excess of the number estimated as at present em- ployed in the same area.

A more exact means of forming a comparison 1s ; furnished by the return from the Furness Railway Com- | pany, which is published in the Report for 1879. I am indebted to the courtesy of Mr. Aslett, the present

» Report of the Commissioners for Sea Fisheries on the Sea Fisheries of England and Wales. 1879, pp. 21—23.

109

manager of the Furness Railway Company, for a similar statement for the year 1898, which is here reproduced.

TABLE V.—WEIGHT OF CocKLES, IN Tons, forwarded from ten stations on the Furness Ratuway for the two years 1877 and 1898 :—

Stations. 1877. 1898. Barrow ie cs Soe 10 0 Piel bg ree :* 70 0 Dalton Bue ee ee 80 0 Askam oe es Ri 220 72 Millom ae ts ir 343 0 Ulverston ... ae Ae 290 841 Cark... ~ aee oe 1160 1696 Kent’s Bank ze i 25 154 Arnside Jee aes ie 5 0 Silverdale ... A Mes 50 0

Total ee Seis 2253 2263

The above Table shews that the amount of cockles for- warded by the Furness Railway Company in 1877 from ten of their stations does not differ by so much as a half per cent. from the amount sent by them in 1898 from the same stations. These figures represent the greater portion of cockles sent from Morecambe Bay and Duddon. To complete the comparison the amount taken from the southern side of the Bay has to be estimated. The Com- missioners valued this as worth £5,000, that is, about 940 tons were taken from the Bolton-le-Sands and Pilling Sands beds in 1877. Since these areas are served by the London and North-Western Railway Co., the amount stated does not appear in the Table. From the data obtainable in the course of the present inquiry, it appears that the amount of cockles taken from the same areas does not exceed 300 tons, and the falling off in the produce of these beds accounts for the apparent decrease in the

110

interval between 1877 and 1899; that is, in 1877 the

weight of cockles taken from the whole Bay was

approximately 3,940 tons, in the year 1898—99, considered |

in this Report, it was 3,240, the difference being approxi- |

mately equal to the decrease in the produce of the beds

on the southern side of the Bay. But the irregular nature of the fishing here has been already commented

on, and it is fair to conclude that the decrease is only a

temporary one. In this comparison the change in the conditions of the fishery must be borne in mind. In 1877 the fishing was

not regulated in any way, and cockles of any size might

be sent into the markets, but at the present time, only . Ree . cockles having the minimum breadth of three-quarter _

inch are allowed to be landed and consequently sent over rail, so that on the areas compared, cockles must now be more abundant than in 1877.

On the whole, it does not appear that there has been 7 any permanent decrease in the cockle fishery of More-

cambe Bay proper. Fluctuations from year to year have

been experienced, and it may be gleaned from the Board of Trade Statistical Tables that though there have been some lean years, such as 1895—96, others—such as 1897 5 —have been correspondingly fat, and that, on the whole,

the fishing has been, if anything, improving. It has not

been possible to investigate the rest of the District to the q

same extent, but it may be safely assumed that there also,

the yield of the beds has been, on the whole, maintained.

The Commissioners of 1879, as the result of their in-

quiries, stated that they had ‘“‘ been unable to trace any ~ decrease in the fishery.’ So far as the data obtained in

the course of the present investigation go, that statement may be safely repeated.

:

lll

EXPLANATION OF PLATES.

Reference Letters.

Al.c.1. cesophagus. Al.c.2. stomach.

Al.c.3. straight division of the

intestine.

Al.c.5'. sac of crystalline style.

Al.c.3". digestive division of the straight intestine.

Al.c.4. spiral division of the intestine.

Al.c.5, coiled division of the in- testine.

Al.c.6. rectum.

An, anus.

Add.a. ant. adductor muscle.

Add.a'. ant. adductor impres- sion,

Add.p. post. adductor muscle.

Add.p'. post. adductor impres- sion.

Art.pa. anterior pallial artery.

Art.pp. right posterior pallial artery.

Art.pp'. left post. pallial artery.

Art.vp. viscero-pedal artery.

Art.v. visceral artery.

Art.p. pedal artery.

A.lab. right and left labial arteries.

Ao. aorta.

Aur, auricle.

Ba. bulbus arteriosus.

Br'. base of right ctenidium.

Br.E. external branchia,

Br.I, internal branchia. Br.E.1. inner lamella, external

branchia. Br.H.2. outer _,, i Bri. 3 », internal ,, Br.t2. inners, 9 Beare 5

membranous portion.

Br.aff. com. afferent branchial vessel.

Br.eff. com. efferent branchial vessel.

Br.eff'. efferent branch. vessel.

Br.aff'. afferent branch. vessel.

Brj.1. inter-filamentar junct.

Br.j.2. inter-lamellar junction.

By.g. byssus gland.

By'. pedal groove.

By. byssus thread.

Com. cerebral commissure.

Con.cv. cerebro -visceral con- nective.

Con.cp. cerebro-pedal connec- tive.

Dg. digestive gland.

Ep.I.1. epithelium of wall of crystalline style sac.

Ep.I.2. elongated cells in wall

of crystalline style sac.

Ep.J.3. epithelium of intestinal div. of straight intest.

Ep.op. pigment cells of an eye.

Ep.p. epidermis of the foot,

112

Epic. epicuticula (periostracum)

F tri. tricuspid body.

Go. right gonad.

Ga.c. right cerebral ganglion.

Ga.sp. parieto-splanchnic gang-

lion.

Ga.p. pedal ganglion.

Ga.op. optic ganglion.

Ing. hinge ligament.

Lith. otolith.

M. mouth.

Mn. mantle lobe.

Mn'. cut edge of mantle lobe.

Mn.1. anterior prolon gation of intersiphonal partition.

M.c.1. anal division of mantle

cavity.

M.c.2. cavity of dorsal siphon.

M.c.8.

M.c.4.

general mantle cavity. ventral suprabranchial cavity.

dorsal suprabranchial cavity.

vitelline membrane.

M.c.5.

M.vit. M.p.1. straight transverse pedal muscles.

M.p.c. M.p.o. M.p.l. long. pedal muscles.

circular pedal muscles. oblique pedal muscles,

N.add. nerve supplying ant. adductor.

N.br. branchial nerve.

N.pa. ant. com, pallial nerve.

N.pp. post. com. pallial nerve.

N.p.1. external pallial nerve.

N.p.2. median pallial nerve.

N.p.3. internal pallial nerve. N.t. tentacular nerve. Pro. protractor pedis. Pro'. protractor muscle - pression. Pa.d. dorsal labial palp. Pa.v. ventral labial palp. Ped.1. proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass. Ped.2. distal limb ,, " Per. pericardium. Ret.a. anterior retractor pedis. Ret.a'. scar of attachment of

im-

anterior retractor. 4 Ret.p. posterior retractor pedis, Ret.p'. posterior retractor pedis

impression.

Ret.m. retractor muscles of the mantle edge.

Ret.m'. impression of retrac- tors of mantle edge. Ret.s. retractor muscles of the

siphons. Ret.s’. impression of retractors

of the siphons. Ren. renal organ. Ren'. external opening of renal organ (ureter). ; Ren.per. reno-pericardial canal. Sz.d. dorsal or exhalent siphon. Sz.v. ventral or inhalent siphon. Sh.e. outer shell layer. Sh.t. inner shell layer. Sin.p. posterior pedal sinus. Sin.ren, renal sinus. St. crystalline style,

113

Ty. typhlosole. V ventral.

Ven. ventricle. E external.

A anterior. I internal.

P posterior. R right.

D dorsal. L left. PEATE i.

Fig. 1. Cockle with the foot and siphons moderately extended, seen from the right side. Nat. size. Fig. 2. External anatomy; the left valve and part of the left mantle lobe have been removed. Nat.

size.

Fig. 3. General anatomy; the right valve and mantle lobe have been removed, and the right wall of the viscero-pedal mass cut away to expose the intestine ; the right wall of the pericardium is cut away; the right branchie are removed. Magnified 2} diameters. The figure is slightly diagrammatic; the convolutions of the intes- tine are represented as pulled apart, and for clearness, as being less in diameter than the magnification of the figure warrants. Their exact relations are seen in the section repre- sented in fig. 11.

Prave- IT.

Fig. 4. Section passing through the ureters transver- sely to the long axis of the shell, and cutting the branchie obliquely. X 8 diam.

Fig. 5. Transverse section through the bases of the siphons. X 4 diam.

Fig. 6. ‘Transverse section through the posterior adduc- tor muscle. X 4 diam.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig. Fig. Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

ig. 10.

dA;

i yy

13.

14.

15.

LG:

Li

18.

114

Section through part of the body passing through _ the anterior part of the renal organ parallel to the branchial filaments. X 12 diam.

Blood corpuscles from one of the branchial vessels. Zeiss apo. 1'5, compens. oc. 4.

Transverse section through a renal tubule. 500 diam. ime

The left valve of the shell, seen from the inside. Nat. size.

PratEe IIT.

Section through the middle part of the proximal - limb of the viscero-pedal mass, transverse to _ the axis of the latter, and in the horizontal plane of the body. X 7 diam.

Transverse section through the straight portion | of the intestine. X about 50 diam.

Transverse section through the spiral portion of the intestine. X 50 diam.

Transverse section of the rectum near the anus. | ra:

Section through part of the digestive gland, showing the transition from ciliated to glandu- Jar epithelium. X 50 diam.

Transverse section of a secreting alveolus from the digestive gland. Zeiss apo. 1°5, compens. oc. 4.

Transverse section of part of a bile duct. xX 500 diam. |

Vertical section through part of the stomach - wall. Xx 280 diam.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig. Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

Fig.

9).

20.

21.

22.

23.

24.

25.

26.

27.

ig. 28.

115

PuatTeE IY.

Transverse section of the secreting portion of the byssus gland. The section is cut trans- versely to the long axis of the foot. x 60 diam.

Longitudinal section through a single alveolus of the byssus gland. X 570 diam.

Vertical section through part of the body-wall of the distal limb of the viscero-pedal mass, showing a mucous gland cell opening through the epidermis on to the surface of the foot. Zeiss apo. 1°5 mm., compens. oc. 12.

An isolated mucous gland from the distal limb of the viscero-pedal mass. Zeiss apo. 1°5 mm., compens. oc. 12.

A radial vertical section of the mantle edge. xX 30 diam.

A section through the internal labial palp, pas- sing parallel to the longest border. X 80 diam.

Vertical section through the muscular body-wall of the proximal limb of the viscero-pedal mass. x 120 diam.

PLATE V.

Part of a section through a branchia, transverse to the branchial filaments, and including two eroups of filaments. xX 80 diam.

Transverse section of a single branchial filament. Zeiss apo. 1°5 mm., compens. oc. 4.

Transverse section through two adjacent bran- chial filaments, showing the interfilamentar junction. X about 600 diam. .

Fig. 29.

Fig. 30.

Fig. 31.

Fig. 32.

Fig. 33.

Fig. 34.

Fig. 35.

116

Part of a section through the shell, passing vertically to the shell surface and perpendicu- 4 lar to a line of growth. X about 25. G

A schematic representation of the course of the principal blood vessels and channels as seen : from the right side.

Prate Vi.

Dissection of a cockle from the ventral side, to ; show the visceral ganglion and nerves. Only ' the portion of the body behind the viscero-pedal massis shown. The fused portion of the inner lamelle of the two internal branchie is cut— through in the middle line, and the septum | between the siphons and the horizontal shelf continuing this forward are cut likewise. Xx about 2 diam.

Dissection to show the right cerebral ganglion and surrounding parts. The extremity of the anterior adductor has been cut away and the muscle separated slightly from the anterior wall of the viscero-pedal mass. The right labial palps are mostly removed. X 4 diam.

Dissection of the proximal limb of the viscero- pedal mass from its anterior margin to show 4 the pedal ganglion and nerves. The anterior body-wall and the underlying muscles and geni- tal gland tubules have been removed.- X 3.

The otocyst of the right side in longitudinal section, Zeiss apo. 1°5 mm., compens. oc. 4. -

Section through an ovarian egg. X about 200—

diam.

Fig. 36.

Fig. 37.

Fig. 38.

Fig. 39.

117

Transverse section through the tip of a siphonal tentacle passing through an “eye.”’ apo. 1°5 mm., compens. oc. 4.

Zeiss

A group of secreting alveoli from the nearly ripe ovary. X 25 diam.

Transverse section through two contiguous alveoli from a nearly ripe ovary, showing the germinal epithelium and the eggs lying freely in the lumina of the alveol. X 90 diam.

Transverse section through three alveoli from a nearly ripe testis. xX 90 diam.

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