1. Spiracles. 2. Integument of one half of the body turned back. 3. Branchial organs. 4. Cells or pouches in which they are lodged. a. One of the respiratory organs removed and magnified, showing its resemblance to the branchial leaflets, and presenting the pectinated appearance described in the text.
Fig. CXXXII.—Apparatus of Respiration in the Frog.
1. Trachea. 2. Vesicular lungs. 3. Stomach.
353. The next advancement in the ascending scale is, by a step which obviously connects this higher class with the classes below and above it. It consists of distinct cells, termed pulmonic cavities (fig. [CXXXI]. 4), which communicate externally by spiracula (fig. [CXXXI]. 1), like tracheæ ([351]), but which are lined internally by a soft and delicate membrane plaited into folds, disposed like the teeth of a comb (pectinated) (fig. [CXXXI]. a), presenting a striking analogy to the structure of gills ([345]), and therefore called by the French writers pneumo-branchiæ. These cavities have the internal form of an aquatic organ, but they perform the function of air-breathing sacs. In scorpions (fig. [CXXXI]. 1) and spiders, this form of the apparatus is seen in its simplest condition; in the slug and snail it is more highly developed: for in these latter animals a rounded aperture, placed near the head, and guarded by a sphincter muscle, that alternately dilates and contracts, leads to a single cavity, which is lined with a membrane delicately folded, and overspread with a beautiful net-work of pulmonary blood-vessels.
354. Passing from this to the lowest order of the air-breathing vertebrata (fig. [CXXXII].), the apparatus is perfectly analogous, but more developed. In the reptile, this air-breathing sac, which now constitutes a true and proper lung, instead of being simple and undivided, is formed by numerous septa, which traverse each other in all directions, into vesicles or cells (fig. [CXXXII]. 2), which proportionally enlarge the surface for the distribution of blood-vessels. In the Batrachian reptile, as the frog, salamander, newt, &c. (fig. [CXXXII]. ), the vesicles, comparatively few in number, are of large size, and as thin and delicate as soap-bubbles. In the ophidian reptile, as the serpent, the sac is large and elongated, but divided only in the upper and back part into vesicles; while in the Saurian reptiles, as the crocodile, lizard, chamelion, &c., the sac is comparatively small, but subdivided into very minute vesicles, bearing a close analogy to the more perfectly organized lung of the higher animals.
Fig. CXXXIII.—Respiratory Apparatus of the Bird, as seen in the Swan.
1. The Trachea. 2. The lungs. 3. Apertures through which air passes into, 4. Air cells of the body. 5. A bristle passed from one of the air cells of the body, to the cavity containing the lungs. 6. A bristle passed from the cavity of the thigh-bone into another air cell of the body.