110 



MOLLUSCA 



The existence of two renal organs in Patella, and their 

 relation to the pericardium (a portion of the ccelom), is 



cor I 



oclm 



1. Diagram of a vertical antero-postcro median section of a Limpet, 

 ers as in figs. 28, 29, with following additions : q, intestine in transverse 



Fie. 31. 



Lettei 



section ; r, lingual sac (radular sac) ; rd, radula ; s, larnellated stomach ; 

 salivary gland ; 11, duct of same ; v, buccal cavity ; , gonad ; br.a, branchial 

 advehent vessel (artery) ; br.v, branchial efferent vessel (vein) ; bv, blood- 

 vessel ; odm, muscles and cartilage of the odontophore ; cor, heart within the 

 pericardium. (Original.) 



important. Each renal organ is a sac lined with glandular 

 epithelium (ciliated cells with concretions) communicating 



B 



Fio. 32. A. Section in a plane vertical to the surface of the neck of Patella 

 through a, the rudimentary ctenidium (Lankester's organ), and &, the ol- 

 factory epithelium (osphradium) ; c, the olfactory (osphradial) ganglion. 

 (After Spengel.) B. Surface view of a rudimentary ctenidium of Patella, 

 excised and viewed as a transparent object. (Original.) 



with the exterior by its papilla, and by a narrow passage 

 with the pericardium. The connexion with the pericar- 



Fio. 33. Vertical section in a plane running right ami left through the 

 anterior part of the visceral hump of Patella, to show the two renal organs 

 and their openings into the pericardium, a, large or external or right renal 

 organ ; ab, narrow process of the same running below the intestine and lead- 

 ing by A: into the pericardium; b, small or median renal organ; c, prr-i- 

 cardium ; d, rectum ; e, liver ; /, manyplies ; y, epithelium of the dorsal sur- 

 face ; /(., renal epithelium lining the renal sacs; i, aperture connecting \\\>- 

 small sac with the pericardium; /,-, aperture cnuni'i'ting the lar^c sac \\itli 

 the pericardium. (From an original drawing by Mr J. T. Cunningham, Fellow 

 of University College, Oxford.) 



dium of the smaller of the two renal organs was demon- 

 strated by Lankester in 1867, at a time when the fact 



that the renal organ of the Mollusca, as a rule, opens into 

 the pericardium, and is therefore a typical nephridium, 

 was not known. Subsequent investigations (27) carried on 

 under the direction of the same - , 



naturalist have shown that, the 

 larger as well as the smaller renal 

 sac is in communication with the 

 pericardium. The walls of the 

 renal sacs are deeply plaited and 

 thrown into ridges. Below the 

 surface these walls are excavated 

 with blood-vessels, so that the sac 

 is practically a series of blood-ves- 

 sels covered with renal epithelium, s 

 and forming a mesh-work within 

 a space communicating with the 

 exterior. The larger renal sac (re- 

 markably enough, that which is 

 aborted in other Anisopleura) ex- 

 tends between the liver and the 



integument of the visceral dome FIG. 34. Nervous system of Pa- 

 very widely. It also bends round 

 the liver as shown in fig. 30, and 

 forms a large sac on half of the 

 upper surface of the muscular mass 

 of the foot. Here it lies close 



niinn flip o-pnitfll bnrlv (nvarv nr tory Sg lion > connected by 



upon me genital ooay ^ovaiy or nerve to the streptoueurous 

 testis), and in such intimate rela- visceral loop. (After SpengeL) 

 tionship with it that, when ripe, the gonad bursts into the 

 renal sac, and its products are carried to the exterior by 

 the papilla on the right side of the anus (Robin, Ball). 

 This fact led Cuvier erroneously to the belief that a duct 

 existed leading from the gouad to this papilla. The 

 position of the gonad, best seen in the diagrammatic 



ce.pe 



tella ; the visceral loop is 

 lightly shaded ; the buccal 

 ganglia are omitted, ce, cere- 

 bral ganglia ; c'f,cerebral com- 

 missure ; pi, pleural ganglion ; 

 pe, pedal ganglion ; p'e, pedal 

 nerve ; s, s', nerves (right and 

 left) to the mantle ; o, olfac- 



FIG. 35. Nervous system of Haliotis ; the visceral loop is lightly shaded ; 

 the buccal ganglia are omitted, cc, cerebral ganglion ; j'/.jx 1 , thr fused pirn nil 

 and pedal ganglia ; pe t the right pedal nerve ; ce.pl, the cereliru-pleural con- 

 nective ; Cf.pe, the cerebro-pedal connective ; s, s', right and left mantle 

 nrnvs ; alt, abdominal ganglion or site of same ; o, o, right and left olfactory 

 ganglia and ospliradia receiving nerve from visceral loop. (After JSpeugel.) 



section (fig. 31), is, as in other Zygobranchia, devoid of 

 a special duct communicating with the exterior. This 

 condition, probably an archaic one, distinguishes the Zygo- 

 branchia among all Glossophorous Mollusca. 



The digestive tract of Patella offers some interesting 

 features. The odontophore is powerfully developed ; the 

 radular sac is extraordinarily long, lying coiled in a space 



