CIRCULATION IN MOLLUSCA. 217 



of bloodvessels. In the Bryozoa or Polyzoa, the initiatory 

 class to the mollusca, there exist neither heart, arteries, nor 

 veins, and the nutrient fluid is contained in the great visceral 

 cavity in which the organs of digestion are suspended. In 

 the molluscoid Tunicata there is a heart and a system of 

 bloodvessels in the branchial portion of the body, but there 

 are neither arteries nor veins in the visceral or abdominal 

 portion, in which the circulation is through mazes and 

 lacuna; of uncertain direction, and without any definable 

 walls. In the bivalved mollusks the foot is cU\dded into 

 numerous small lacunae or inter\^sceral interstices for the 

 reception of the inflowing venous blood. On pushing a 

 coloured injection into these intermuscular lacunas, the fluid 

 passes even into the vessels of the branchiae and into the 

 venous canals of the mantle. But in the mantle, as well as 

 in the foot, there do not appear to be any veins properly so 

 called, viz. tubes with distinct parietes to carry the blood 

 from the tissues which this blood is to nourish to the heart 

 or towards the appropriated organs of respiration. It is a 

 system of lacunae only which performs the functions of the 

 network formed by the capillary vessels in the vertebrate 

 animals ; and these lacuna?, of almost microscopic size, open 

 into other passages, which, from their disposition, much 

 resemble veins properly so called, but are not so, for they 

 have no walls independent of the adjacent parts. In the 

 typical Gasteropods further progress is made towards a 

 more perfect circulation, for now there are veins as well as 

 arteries, but the former are still partially defective, and are 

 represented, sometimes in the muscular system, and always 

 in the space intervening between the principal viscera and 

 the respiratory organ, by simple lacunae or by the large 

 visceral reservoir, into which the centripetal current flows 

 by open orifices, and whence again it is carried by appro- 

 priate vessels to the branchiae. For example : in the Snail 

 the blood is distributed from the centre throughout every 

 part of the body by the branching arterial system ; and it is 

 returned, partly by proper veins, and partly by mere lacunae 

 or gutters, to the large visceral cavity, into which it is 

 emptied. The blood nmst consequently be here in contact 



cunes comprises entre Ics diverses parties solides de I'organization ; d'autres 

 fois encore, Tapparcil dc la circulation se perfectionne davantagc, car il 

 existe des veines aussi bien que des arteres dans unc portion jdus ou moins 

 grande du corps ; mais ces veines no suffisent jamais pour completer le 

 cercle que le fluide nourricier doit parcourir, et la cavite abdominale ou 

 peritone'ale joue toujours le role d'un reservoir sanguin, aussi bien que 

 d'une cbambrc viscerale." — MiLNE-EnwARos in Annales des Sciences Na- 

 turelles, ser. 3, iii. 280 (1845). 



