In this manner lobsters give lodgings in the midst of their eggs to a worm, which we at first took for a Serpula, and which, after a complete examination, turns out to be one of the Hirudinidæ: we have given it the name of Histriobdella. It is as singular in its movements as in its conformation, and its manner of living approaches that of the Pontobdellæ of the rays, of which we shall speak subsequently. We announced this discovery a few years ago in the following terms:—
It is known that lobsters, as well as crabs and the greater part of the crustacea, carry their eggs under the abdomen, and that these eggs remain suspended there till the embryos are hatched. In the midst of them lives an animal of extreme agility, which is perhaps the most extraordinary being which has been subjected to the eyes of a zoologist. It may be said, without exaggeration, that it is a biped, or even quadruped, worm. Let us imagine a clown from the circus, with his limbs as far dislocated as possible, we might even say entirely deprived of bones, displaying tricks of strength and activity on a heap of monster cannon balls, which he struggles to surmount; placing one foot formed like an air-bladder on one ball, the other foot on another, alternately balancing and extending his body, folding his limbs on each other, or bending his body upwards like a caterpillar of the geometridæ, and we shall then have but an imperfect idea of all the attitudes which it assumes, and which it varies incessantly.
Its rank and its affinities would have given rise to long discussions if we had not made known at the same time its evolution and anatomical structure.
It is neither a parasite nor a messmate; it does not live at the expense of the lobster, but on one of the productions of these crustaceans, much in the same manner as do the Caligi and the Arguli. The lobster gives him a berth, and the passenger feeds himself at the expense of the cargo; that is to say, he eats the eggs and the embryos which die, and the decomposition of which might be fatal to his host and his progeny. These Histriobdellæ have the same duty to perform as vultures and jackals, which clear the plains of carcases. That which causes us to suppose that such is their appropriate office, is that they have an apparatus for the purpose of sucking eggs, and that we have not found in their digestive canal any remains which resemble any true organism. We find the feces, rolled up as balls, placed after each other in their intestines.
The crustaceans also feed other Hirudinidæ. Mons. Leydig has noticed a Myzobdella on the Lupa diacantha. The fresh-water crab, common in all the rivers of Europe, nourishes two, the Astacobdella rœselii, which lives under the abdomen, or about the eyes, and the Astacobdella Abildgardi which especially frequents the branchiæ. Two astacobdellæ on the same crab doubtless play different parts. We should almost venture to assert, à priori, that the species in the gills lives as a parasite on the blood of its host, whilst the other, lodged under the abdomen, plays the same part as the histriobdella of the lobster.
We often find among the eggs of the ordinary crab of
our coasts (Cancer mœnas) a nemertian which probably performs the same office. He is lodged while young in a kind of firm sheath attached to the abdominal processes. We have been able easily to study the first phases of its evolution. We have given it the name of Polia involuta.
This nemertian had been observed at Messina, and described before by Kölliker under the name of Nemertes carcinophilus, and it has just been described and figured anew by Mr. M’Intosh, in a monograph of British annelids published by the Ray Society.
The sturgeon seems to give lodging in its eggs to a polyp which plays the same part. In fact, Mons. Owsjannikoff, at the congress of Russian naturalists at Kiew, described an animal, Accipenser ruthenus, which lives in the eggs of the sterlet. Some eggs placed in water for a few hours at first show tentacles on the outside, then a whole colony, and each part consists of four individuals, which have a common digestive cavity, resembling somewhat a hydra divided longitudinally in four. Each has six tentacles, two of which are terminated by transparent corpuscles, perhaps nematocysts; the digestive cavity extends into the arms, as in the hydra; the mouth is not between the tentacles, but at the opposite pole. They are not all lodged within the eggs; some are found outside, according to the observations of Mons. Koch. Does not this animal fulfil in the egg of the sterlet, the same office as the histriobdella in the egg of the lobster?
The eggs of some insects are attacked by very little ichneumons, the Proctotrupidæ; they empty them, and then instal themselves in the shell. Mons. Fabre has