16 THE VOYAGE OF II.M.S. CHALLENGER. 



vesicula seminaJia is no doubt only a dilatation of the vas deferens at the. place where it 

 corresponds with the testis. The vesicula seniinalis in all the larger specimens was filled 

 with a dense mass of v* try small spermatozoids ; they have the shape of threads, each 

 having a length of about 0'02 mm., and each furnished at the extremity with a very 

 small vesicle (PI. I. fig. 6). Between the spermatozoids in the vesicula seniinalis small 

 empty vesicles are seen, as also others which quite resemble the very small cells of the 

 contents of the testis, probably each one of them contains a spermatozoid. 



The length of the canal acting as a vas deferens is not very considerable ; it passes 

 freely through the connective tissue for about - 25 mm. and then enters into that part 

 of the body which represents the thorax of the Cirripcd. Figs. 10 and 11 on PI. III. show 

 sections of the duct before it reaches the thorax, but in the figs. 5 to 8 of PI. III. the 

 same canal is represented in the middle of each transverse section of the thorax. In 

 fig. 9 the form of the section of the thorax is nearly quadrangular ; this is its shape near 

 the place where the vas deferens enters it ; in the sections, however, which more approach 

 the other extremity of the canal the thorax is exactly cylindrical, and then its wall is 

 parallel to the wall of the genital canal. The diameter of the thorax itself is about 

 O'OS mm.; the canal which runs through it longitudinally has a width of 0'03 mm. 

 Whether it be preferable to designate the cylindrical terminal portion of the thorax as 

 " penis" is, 1 think, difficult to say ; morphologically it is hardly to be distinguished from 

 the appendix of that name in the hermaphrodite Cirriped, which is called by some authors 

 a penis, by others an abdomen. 



The nuclei of the cells which surround this canal (PI. 1. fig. 5) are slightly larger 

 than those of the connective tissue placed between the canal and the chitinous wall of 

 the thorax ; as far as I could distinguish in any of the sections, these cells of the wall of 

 the canal have no distinct shape and do not compose a true epithelium. From the place 

 where it enters into the thoracic part of the body the vas deferens is seen in all the 

 sections which pass transversely through the thorax; it may be traced for about half a 

 millimetre; it then ends abruptly; probably, though this could not be distinctly 

 observed, it now opens into the cavity (PL III. fig. 4 ca) lined by the connective tissue, 

 which has an outward opening at the capitular pole of the body. The communication 

 with this cavity must be about at the height of the supracesophageal ganglion. The 

 whole thoracic pari of the body can he stretched forward in a direction towards the 

 capitular pole ; though I do not believe that the opening of the vas deferens ever reaches 

 the opening at the surface of the body, this stretching forward of the thorax is no doubt 

 brought about in order to approach the opening of the vas deferens as much as possible 

 to the slit at the extremity of the body. Well-developed musculi retractores serve for the 

 retraction of the thorax within the body of the male. 1 have figured one of them on 

 PI. I. fig. 1, mr. In the transverse section figured on PI. III. fig. 10 these muscles are 

 also represented. 



