ENTOMOSTRACA. 435 



situation of the shell. The teguments of the body are ordinarily corneous rather than 

 calcareous, in which respect these animals approach the [nsecta and Arachnida. In 

 those which arc furnished with ordinary maxilhe, the inferior or exterior arc always 

 naked ; all the foot-jaws performing the office of legs, properly so culled, none of them 

 being applied to the mouth. The seeond maxilhe, except in the Phyllopoda, also re- 

 semble these last-named organs. By Jurine, they are sometimes called hands. 



These characters distinguish the masticating Entomostraca from the Malacostraca. 

 The other Entomostraca, or those which compose our order Puccilopoda, cannot be 

 confounded with the Malacostraca, being destitute of organs fitted for mastication, or 

 because the organs which appear to serve as maxillae are not inserted close together 

 anteriorly, and preceded by an upper lip, as in the preceding Crustacea and the man- 

 dibulated insects, but merely formed by the coxa? of the locomotive organs, which are 

 armed for this purpose with small spines. The Pcecilopoda represent, in this class, 

 those species which, amongst the Insects, are distinguished by the name of Haustellata. 

 They are almost exclusively parasitic, and appear to conduct us insensibly to the 

 Lernsese ; but the presence of eyes, the power of changing the skin, or even of under- 

 going a kind of metamorphosis*, with the capability of transporting themselves from 

 place to place by the help of the legs, appear to us to establish a positive line of de- 

 marcation between these animals and the parasitic Lerna?a?. We have consulted, in 

 respect to these transformations, various learned naturali-ts who have frequently ob- 

 served the Lerna?a?, and none of them have ever observed the change of skin. 



The antenna? of the Entomostraca vary, both in form and number, considerably ; 

 and in some species are employed as organs for swimming. The eyes are very rarely 

 fixed upon a footstalk ; and even when this is the case, the peduncle is merely a lateral 

 prolongation of the head, and is never articulated at its base. Often the eyes are 

 placed close together, and sometimes even become confluent, so as to exhibit but one 

 eye. The organs of generation are placed at the base of the tad : it is a mistaken 

 notion which has been entertained, that the antenna? in some males perform this func- 

 tion. The tail f is never terminated by a fan-shaped swimmeret, and is never furnished 

 with the false feet which are seen to exist in the Malacostraca. The eggs arc arranged 

 in a mass beneath the back [of the shell], or are exterior, contained in a common en- 

 velope, having the appearance of one or two minute bunches of grapes, situated at the 

 base of the tail. It appears that tiny arc able to remain for a great length of time in a 

 dry state, without Losing their properties. It is not until after the third moulting that 

 these animals become adult, and capable of reproduction ; and it has been observed, in 

 pect of some of them, that a single copulation i.- sutlicient to fecundate many suc- 

 ding generations. 



[By referring to pages 409 and 410, the distributions into orders, &C of the Euto- 

 mostraca, a- proposed by Latrcille, Milne Edwards, &c, will be perceived to vary 



imewhat inter se. The question as to the rank of the different groups, subsequently 

 described either as orders or minor divisions, cannot be decided until naturalists are 

 agreed as to the relative importance of the organs upon the variation- of which tl 

 different classifications have been proposed. The following is of course that "t the 



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