Fig. 10.—Trigonia pectinata Lam., Sydney, N.S.W.
The great family of the Unionidae is regarded by Neumayr[22] as derived from Trigonia, the points of similarity being the development of a nacreous shell, the presence of a strong epidermis, and the arrangement of the muscular scars. It is remarkable, too, that on many Uniones of Pliocene times there is found shell ornamentation of such a type as occurs elsewhere among the Pelecypoda only on Trigonia.
The genera of fresh-water Pelecypoda are comparatively few in number, and their origin is far more clearly discernible than that of any other group. This is perhaps due to the fact that the essential changes of structure required to convert a marine into a fresh-water bivalve are but slight. Both animals “breathe water,” and both obtain their nutriment from matter contained in water. Similar remarks apply to fresh-water operculate Gasteropoda. But the passage from a marine to an aerial life involves much profounder changes of environment, which have to be met by correspondingly important changes in the organism. This may be in part the reason why the ancestry of all Pulmonata, whether land or fresh-water, is so difficult to trace.
Fig. 11.—A, Cominella, a marine genus, which lives between tide marks, and from which is probably derived B, Clea, a genus occurring only in fresh water.
Fig. 12.—A, Cerithium columna Sowb. (marine). B, Potamides microptera Kien. (brackish water). C, Io spinosa Lea, one of the Pleuroceridae (fresh water).
(b) Gasteropoda.—(1) Operculate. Canidia and Clea are closely allied, with but little modification, to the marine Cominella[23] (Fig. [11]), as is also Nassodonta to Nassa. They occur (in fresh water) in the rivers of India, Indo-China, Java, and Borneo, associated with essentially fresh-water species. Potamides, with its various sub-genera (Telescopium, Pyrazus, Pirenella, Cerithidea, etc.), all of which inhabit swamps and mud-flats just above high-water mark in all warm countries, are derived from Cerithium (Fig. [12]); Assiminea, Hydrobia, and perhaps Truncatella, from Rissoa. It is a remarkable fact that in Geomelania (with its sub-genera Chittya and Blandiella) we have a form of Truncatella which has entirely deserted the neighbourhood of the sea, and lives in woody mountainous localities in certain of the West Indies. Cremnoconchus, a remarkable shell occurring only on wet cliffs in the ghâts of southern India, is a modified Littorina. Neritina and Nerita form a very interesting case in illustration of the whole process. Nerita is a purely marine genus, occurring on rocks in the littoral zone; one species, however, (N. lineata, Chem.) ascends rivers as far as 25 miles from their mouth, and others haunt marshes of brackish water. Neritina is the fresh-water form, some species of which are found in brackish swamps or even creeping on wet mud between tide marks, while the great majority are fluviatile, one group (Neritodryas) actually occurring in the Philippines on trees of some height, at a distance of a quarter of a mile from any water. Navicella is a still further modified form of Neritina, occurring only on wet rocks, branches, etc., in non-tidal streams (Fig. [13]).