Not very much interest attaches to the developmental stage of the Annelida. They issue forth from ova, and the embryo so closely resemble ciliated polypes, that competent observers have mistaken them for animals belonging to a lower class; a few hours’ careful watching is sufficient to dispel a belief of the kind, when the embryonic, globular, or shapeless mass is seen to assume a form of segmentation, and soon the various internal organs become more and more developed, eye spots appear, and the young animal arrives at the adult stage of its existence.
Crustacea.
The crustaceans comprise a large assemblage of Arthropods, presenting great diversity of structure. Some of the parasitic species have become so simplified in organisation that they appear to present no relationship with the higher members of the class, yet it is certain that all the species, whether terrestrial or aquatic, belong to the same stock, and may have had origin in the same fundamental plan of structure. Essentially, the body consists of a large number of segments, to each of which is attached a pair of two-branched appendages; the external branch is termed the exopodite and the internal the endopodite. Five segments at the front end of the body unite to form a head, the appendages of the first two being situated in front of the mouth, and performing the office of feelers or antennæ, while those of the remaining three segments are transformed into jaws, the first pair of jaws being the mandibles and the following two pairs the maxillæ. The rest of the appendages are variously modified and to some are attached respiratory organs in the form of gills. Crustaceans are broadly divided from Centipedes, Millipedes, Insects, &c., by the presence of two pairs instead of one pair of antennæ, and by the possession of branchial and not tubular (tracheal) respiratory organs. Arachnida and some other species are again widely separated. The majority of the young on leaving the egg are quite unlike the parent, and only acquires their definite form after undergoing a series of changes. The earliest stage, which has been called the Nauplius, already referred to in connection with the barnacle, is a minute body showing no trace of segmentation, and provided with a single eye, and three pairs of swimming appendages, which become the two pairs of antennæ and the mandibles of the adult. This stage is by no means of invariable occurrence, but is chiefly characteristic of the lowest members, the Entomostraca, and is rare in the higher, Malacostraca. The typical crustaceans are shrimps, crayfish, &c., so familiarly described by Huxley. The zoæa stage of the crab, a minute transparent creature, which undergoes several changes, swims about flapping its long jointed abdomen, like some of the Entomostraca, and the shrimp in particular. The larva of crayfish, the so-called glass-crab, is very peculiar and interesting. The sessile-eyed series, in which the compound eyes are never mounted on a movable stalk, and to which the Isopoda belong, exhibits great diversity of structure as well as of habits and habitat. Some live in fresh water, most are marine, while others live on land and take to a parasitic life.
Fig. 382.—Male Gnathia, enlarged.
This genus contains Gnathia, in which the male and female are so dissimilar, that they are frequently referred to as members of two families. In the adult male the mandibles are powerful and prominent, and the head is large, squared, and as wide as the thorax. In the female, on the contrary, the head is curiously small and triangular, without visible mandibles, and the thorax is much dilated. The creatures are about one-sixth of an inch long, and of a greyish colour, and the destruction they bring about is due to their habit of boring into timber below water mark. [Fig. 382] represents an enlarged view of the male Gnathia. These crustaceans are vegetarians, and feed on wood. Other members of the group, known as fish lice, are much larger in size, and chiefly infest the cetacea, and bear in addition two large eyes. By means of their powerful fore feet the Cymothordæ attach themselves to both marine and fresh-water fish, showing a preference for the inside of the mouth of their host.
Fig. 383.—1. Cypris; 2. Cyclops; 3. Branchipus grubei.
The bar-footed group Copepoda are free living, and the thorax bears four or five swimming feet; the abdomen is without appendages. The best known fresh-water form is Cyclops, the structure of which serves as a type of the order. The body is, as is well known to microscopists, broad in front and tapering behind, being thus, when viewed swimming, pear-shaped in outline. The dorsal elements of the head are fused to form a carapace, which bears a single eye, from which circumstance it derives its name. The eggs are carried by the female in a couple of ova-sacs attached to the last segment of the thorax, and so prolific are these creatures that a female will produce over four thousand million young. The young when hatched is an oval Nauplius, which after two or three moults acquires the adult state. In the family of the Apodidæ we have an equally well-known crustacean, the Branchipus. In the Branchipodidæ the body is also elongated, but there are no appendages to the abdomen, which consists of nine segments, while there are eleven pairs of thoracic appendages. The head shield is not developed backwards, and the large separated eyes are supported on distinct stalks. In the male the second antennæ are converted into claspers. These crustaceans swim upside down ([Fig. 383]).
Cladocera (Daphniadæ of Dr. Baird).—The water-flea (Daphnia pulex) may be taken as the best known example of the order. The body of this little active animal is narrowed in front, and at the posterior end, where the carapace is deeply notched, is the tip of the abdomen bearing the pair of rigid barbed setæ from which the genus takes its name. At the front of the head is a large compound eye and two pairs of branched plumed appendages, antennæ. The first pair of these are small and simple. The jaws consist of the mandibles and the first pair of maxillæ, the second pair of maxillæ being obsolete in the adult. The thorax comprises five segments, each bearing a pair of leaf-like swimming limbs. The abdomen consists of three segments, and is destitute of limbs. The males are usually smaller than the females, and much rarer, being rarely met with before the end of summer.