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It has already been mentioned, in dealing with the Lobster, that certain Crustacea have the power of voluntarily throwing off some of their limbs (autotomy). In many cases, as in the Lobster, this power is mainly of use in enabling the animal to discard an injured limb; but there are some Crustacea which seem to adopt it as a means of escaping from the attack of an enemy. On our own coasts the shore collector will often find, on turning over a large stone, one or more specimens of the little Porcelain Crabs (Porcellana platycheles, or P. longicornis[Fig. 41]) clinging to its under-side. If these Crabs be seized by one of the large claws, they frequently leave the claw in the captor's hand and scuttle off without it; and it cannot be doubted that, as in the case of lizards and other animals which have a similar power of self-mutilation, this habit often enables them to escape from their natural enemies.

Although the Crustacea as a whole are predominantly active animals, many examples have already been mentioned of species which are more or less sluggish and sedentary in their habits. The extreme degree of passivity is reached by the Barnacles (Cirripedia), which differ from all other Crustacea (except some parasites) in being fixed to one spot, and quite without the power of locomotion in the adult state. Most of the Barnacles met with on the shore or in shallow water belong to the division of the Sessile Barnacles or Acorn-shells (Operculata). Every visitor to the seashore has noticed the little conical shells which cover exposed rocks as if with a coat of rough-cast. On the British coasts the commonest species is Balanus balanoides ([Plate III].), though other species closely resembling it are also common. They are to be found almost up to high-water mark in situations where they are left uncovered for many hours every day; but the valves which close the opening of the shell fit so tightly that a little sea-water is enclosed, and the animal is protected from drying up even when exposed to the heat of the sun. If a stone or a chip of rock, with a few of these animals on it, be placed in a jar of sea-water, their peculiar mode of obtaining food can easily be watched. The valves will presently be seen to open a little, and the curled cirri will be protruded, opened out like the fingers of a hand, and withdrawn again with a sort of grasping motion. These movements are continued without stopping while the animal is under water. If the cirri be examined with a pocket-lens or under a microscope, it will be seen that they are fringed with stiff bristles, so that, when they are opened out, the whole forms a kind of "casting-net." As it is swept through the water, this net entangles minute floating particles of animal or vegetable matter, and carries them into the shell, so that they can be seized by the jaws and swallowed. The cirri, as we have already seen, are really the modified thoracic limbs, so that, in Huxley's words, "A Barnacle may be said to be a Crustacean fixed by its head, and kicking the food into its mouth with its legs."

A mode of obtaining food by "net-fishing," not unlike that employed by the Barnacles, is found in certain Crustacea belonging to a widely different group—the little "Porcelain Crabs" ([Fig. 41]) mentioned above. Mr. Gosse observed that the Broad-clawed Porcelain Crab (Porcellana platycheles) employed its third pair of maxillipeds, which are thickly fringed with long feathered hairs, in making alternate casting movements "exactly in the manner of the fringed hand of a Barnacle, of which both the organ and the action strongly reminded me."


[CHAPTER VI]

CRUSTACEA OF THE DEEP SEA

It has already been mentioned that the animals living on the sea-bottom in shallow water do not differ greatly in character from those that may be found between tide-marks. As we go farther out from land, however, into the deeper water, the character of the fauna gradually changes. One by one the species found near the shore become rare and disappear, and their places are taken by others characteristic of the intermediate depths. These in their turn give way to others, till in the abysses of the great oceans we find an assemblage of strange animals adapted to the conditions of life in the great depths, and differing widely in many respects from the more familiar inhabitants of the coastal waters. In this "fauna of the deep sea," which extends to the greatest depths reached by the dredge or trawl, the Crustacea occupy a prominent place. Before proceeding to discuss some of these peculiar forms, however, it is necessary to attempt to form some idea of the conditions under which they live.