DFA'ELOI'MKNT. 4*7 



and thick appendage usnally bent in a sigmoid form, and can be 

 bent baclv nnder tlie mantle and thus be hidden. 



The penis is either hollow, in which ease the vas deferens pro- 

 ceeds to it as a closed canal i)assing throngh it to its extremity, 

 where it opens upon a small papilla as in Bucciiiuin, or it opens 

 simply as in Littorina, Oliva, Onchidiojjsis ; or, in other cases it 

 is a solid body upon which the vas deferens passes along in the 

 form of a ciliated furrow continued npon it as a deep groo\e to 

 its extremity, as in Triton, Dolium, Cassis, Harpa,. A'oluta, 

 Terebra, Strombus, Cyprtea, etc. This last and most common 

 form of penis presents many varieties ; in Cassis, for example, it 

 is pointed anteriorly, in Dolium it is enlarged anteriorly, in 

 certain species of Strombus it has a small appendage upon the 

 posterior side, and in Natica it presents at the end a whip-like 

 (flagelliform). in Dolium a claw-like appendage. Usually there are 

 large sack-like glands, which are placed on large pointed papillae 

 near the base of the penis ; they appear therefore as a row of 

 tubercles or processes, as in Littorina, Cassis, and Terebra, these 

 glands are placed upon special finger-like outgrowths of the 

 penis. 



Developvient. 



The eggs come in contact Avith the spermatozoa and are ferti- 

 lized in the oviduct or at the commencement of the uterus. Tlie 

 .eggs consist of a dark granular yolk ; a germinal vesicle and one 

 or more germinative dots, enveloped by a thin vitelline mem- 

 brane. How the zoosperms penetrate this membrane is unknown ; 

 but they are introduced into the female tract by an act of copula- 

 tion in the bulk of the spiral prosobranchs, which possess a penis : 

 in the Trochoidea, Scutibranchs and Cyclobranchs, however, the 

 copulatory organ is wanting, and probably the spermatozoa dis- 

 charged into the surrounding water by the male, are thence taken 

 into the uterus. Of course the attached genera like Yermetus 

 and Siliquaria, and includiug also Magilus and Khizocliilus in 

 the Pnrpurinae cannot jjossibly fertilize in any other way. 



A'erv few prosobranchiates are viviparous. The eggs are 

 usually enclosed, a number together, in tough leathery capsules, 

 within which they undergo their larval stage of development. 

 These capsules are variously aggregated, according to the genera. 



