MOLLUSCS

BY

REV. A. H. COOKE, M.A.

Fellow and Tutor of King’s College, Cambridge

CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION—POSITION OF MOLLUSCA IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM—CLASSIFICATION—ORIGIN OF LAND AND FRESH-WATER MOLLUSCA

It is the generally accepted opinion among men of science that all life originated in the sea. Not that all parts of the sea are equally favourable to the development of forms of life. The ocean surface, with its entire absence of shelter or resting-place, and the deep sea, whose abysses are always dark and cold and changeless, offer little encouragement to plant or animal life, as an original starting-point. True, both the surface and the depths of the sea have become colonised by myriads of forms, Mollusca amongst them, but these quarters are in the truest sense colonised, for the ancestors of those who inhabit them in all probability migrated from elsewhere.

It was no doubt the littoral region and the shallow waters immediately below it, a region of changeable currents, of light and shade, of variation, within definite limits, of temperature and tide effects, which became the scene of the original development of plant life, in other words, of the food-supply which rendered possible its colonisation by higher animals. But the littoral region, besides the advantages of tenancy which it offers to animal life, has also its drawbacks. The violence of the surf may beat its inhabitants in pieces, the retreat of the tide exposes them, not merely to innumerable enemies in the shape of predatory birds and beasts, but also to a change in the atmospheric medium by which they are surrounded. Hence, in all probability, have arisen the various forms of adaptation which are calculated to bring about the ‘survival of the fittest’; hence, to narrow our point of view to the Mollusca, the development of hard shells, or exoskeletons, hence the sand-burrowing, rock-boring, rock-clinging instincts of various genera and species.[1]

What was the primitive form of molluscan life is little likely to be ever positively known, although, on grounds of comparative anatomy, something approaching to the archi-mollusc is often constructed, with more or less probability, by careful observers. From one of the oldest known geological strata, the Cambrian, nearly four hundred species of Mollusca are known, which include representatives of nearly all the great Orders as they exist at the present day, and without the slightest sign of approximation to one another. With regard to the origin of the land and fresh-water Mollusca some definite conclusions can be arrived at, which will be given in their proper place.

Scarcely any portion of the coast-line of the world is destitute of molluscan life, except in regions where extreme cold forbids its existence. Thus along the shores of Northern Asia there is no proper littoral fauna, the constant influence of travelling ice sweeping it all away; animal life begins at about three fathoms. But in every coast region not positively hostile to existence Mollusca make their home. Each description of habitat has its own peculiar species, which there flourish best, and exist precariously, if at all, elsewhere. Thus the sandy waste of estuaries, the loose and shingly beaches, the slimy mud-flats beset with mangroves, the low stretches of jagged rock, and even the precipitous cliffs, from whose base the sea never recedes, have all their own special inhabitants. The same is true of the deep sea, and of the ocean surface. And when we come to examine the land and fresh-water Mollusca, it is found not merely that some Mollusca are terrestrial and others fluviatile, but that certain species haunt the hills and others the valleys, some the recesses of woods and others the open meadow sides, some prefer the limestone rocks, others the sandy or clayey districts, some live only in still or gently moving waters, while others are never found except where the current is rapid and powerful.

It is within the tropics that the Mollusca become most numerous, and assume their finest and quaintest forms. A tropical beach, especially where there is a good tide-fall and considerable variety of station, abounds in molluscan life to an extent which must literally be seen to be believed. The beach at Panama, to select an instance familiar to the present writer, is astonishingly rich in species, which probably amount in all to several hundreds. This is due to the immense variety of habitat. On the rocks at high-water mark, and even above them, occur Truncatella, Melampus, Littorina, and Siphonaria; where a mangrove-swamp replaces the rock, on the branches overhead are huge Littorina, while three species of Cerithidea crawl on the mud, and Cyrena and Arca burrow into it. Lower down, in the rock pools at half-tide mark are Cerithium, Purpura, Omphalius, Anachis (2 sp.), Nassa, and several Crepidula. At low-water mark of ordinary tides, under stones half buried in clean sand, are Coecum and Vitrinella; under the blocks which rest on solid rock are Cypraea (4 or 5 sp.), Cantharus, more Anachis, Columbella (3 sp. including the graceful C. harpiformis), and Nitidella. Where the blocks of rock are rather muddy, Conus lurks, and with it Turritella and Latirus. Where the rocks form a flat-topped platform 2 or 3 feet high, with here and there a deep crack, huge Chitons 3 inches long conceal themselves, with two species of Turbo, Purpura, and Clavella. At extreme low-water mark of spring tides, on the isolated rocks are Monoceros, Leucozonia, and Vermetus, in them are Pholas and a burrowing Mytilus, under them are more Conus, Dolium, and huge frilled Murices. Patches of clean gravelly sand here produce Strombus; on the operculum of the great Str. galea is sure to be a Crepidula, exactly fitting its breadth. On the liquid mud-flats to the north glide about Marginella, Nassa, and Truncaria, in the clean sandstretch to the west Olivella ploughs about by hundreds with several species of Natica, and Tellina and Donax bury themselves deep, while farther down are Artemis, Chione, and, where mud begins to mix with the sand, Mytilus and more Arca. Each of these species has its own habitat, often circumscribed to a few square feet at the most, and it would be utterly useless to seek for it anywhere except in its own special domain.