The common liver-fluke, which in the winter of 1879–1880 cost Great Britain the lives of no less than three million sheep, is perhaps the best known of these remarkable parasitic forms of life. Its history shows us, in one important particular, how essential it is for the creature to meet, at certain stages of its existence, with the exact host to which it is accustomed. Unless the newly-hatched embryo finds a Limnaea truncatula within about eight hours it becomes exhausted, sinks, and dies. It has been tried with all the other common pond and river Mollusca, with Limnaea peregra, palustris, auricularia, stagnalis, with Planorbis marginatus, carinatus, vortex, and spirorbis, with Physa fontinalis, Bithynia tentaculata, Paludina vivipara, as well as with Succinea putris, Limax agrestis and maximus, Arion ater and hortensis. Not one of them would it touch, except occasionally very young specimens of L. peregra, and in these its development was arrested at an early stage. But on touching a L. truncatula the embryo seems to know at once that it has got what it wants, and sets to work immediately to bore its way into the tissues of its involuntary host, making by preference for the branchial chamber; those which enter the foot or other outlying parts of the Limnaea proceed no farther.[143]

Many similar cases occur, in which littoral Mollusca, such as Littorina and Buccinum, form the intermediate host to a worm which eventually arrives within some sea-bird.

Certain Nematode worms (Rhabditis) are known to inhabit the intestine of Arion, and the salivary glands of Limax agrestis. Diptera habitually lay their eggs within the eggs of Helix and Limax. Many species of mite (Acarina) infest land Pulmonata. No adult Limax maximus is without at least one specimen of Philodromus (?) limacum, and the same, or an allied species, appears to occur on the larger of our Helices, retiring upon occasion into the pulmonary chamber.

Several of the Crustacea live associated with certain molluscs. Pinnotheres lives within the shell of Pinna, Ostrea, Astarte, Pectunculus, and others. Apparently the females alone reside within the shell of their host, while the males seize favourable opportunities to visit them there. A specimen of the great pearl-oyster (Meleagrina margaritifera) was recently observed which contained a male Pinnotheres encysted in nacre. It was suggested that he had intruded at an unfortunate time, when no female of his kind happened to be in, and that, having penetrated too far beneath the mantle in the ardour of his search, was made prisoner before he could escape.[144] Ostracotheres Tridacnae lives in the branchiae of the great Tridacna. A little brachyurous crustacean inhabits the raft of Ianthina, and assumes the brilliant blue colour of the mollusc.

Means of Defence

As a rule, among the Mollusca, the shell forms a passive mode of resistance to the attacks of enemies. Bivalves are enabled, by closing their valves, to baffle the assault of their smaller foes, and the operculum of univalves, both marine and land, serves a similar purpose. Many land Mollusca, especially Helix and Pupa, as well as a number of Auriculidae, have the inside of the aperture beset with teeth, which are sometimes so numerous and so large that it is puzzling to understand how the animal can ever come out of its shell, or, having come out, can ever draw itself back again. Several striking cases of these toothed apertures are given in Fig. [24]. Whatever may be the origin of these teeth, there can be little doubt that their extreme development must have a protective result in opposing a barrier to the entrance, predatory or simply inquisitive, of beetles and other insects. Sometimes, it will be noticed (G), the aperture itself is fairly simple, but a formidable array of obstacles is encountered a little way in. It is possible that the froth emitted by many land snails has a similar effect in involving an irritating intruder in a mass of sticky slime. The mucus of slugs and snails, on the other hand, is more probably, besides its use in facilitating locomotion, a contrivance for checking evaporation, by surrounding the exposed parts of their bodies with a viscid medium.

Fig. 24.—Illustrating the elaborate arrangement of teeth in the aperture of some land Pulmonata. A. Helix (Labyrinthus) bifurcata Desh., Equador. B. H. (Pleurodonta) picturata Ad., Jamaica. C. H. (Dentellaria) nux denticulata Chem., Demerara. D. Anostoma carinatum Pfr., Brazil; a, tube communicating with interior of shell. E. H. (Stenotrema) stenotrema Fér., Tennessee, × 3/2. F. H. (Polygyra) auriculata Say, Florida, × 3/2. G. H. (Plectopylis) refuga Gld., Tenasserim (a and b × 2).

Some species of Lima shelter themselves in a nest constructed of all kinds of marine refuse, held together by byssiferous threads. Modiola adriatica, M. barbata, and sometimes M. modiolus conceal themselves in a similar way. Gastrochaena frequently encloses itself in a sort of half cocoon of cement-like material. The singular genus Xenophora protects itself from observation by gluing stones, shells, and various débris to the upper side of its whorls (Fig. [25]). Sometimes the selection is made with remarkable care; the Challenger, for instance, obtained a specimen which had decorated its body whorl exclusively with long and pointed shells (Fig. [26]).