■jg ON THE APPENDICES GENITALES (CLASPERS) IX THE SEI/ACHIANS. 



adherents, but the notion that they are real penes, i.e. organs conveying the semen, seems never to 

 have been fully superseded by it; Blainville advocates this opinion 1 ), and later we find it in Mayer 2 ), 

 in I v eydig i), St annins i|, SteenstrupS), L. Agassiz 6 ), Davy7), and (partly) Giinther 8 ); this 

 opinion, after all. is perhaps to this day the most widely spread; it is also rather obvious, and analo- 

 gies from other groups of animals present themselves, as it were, spontaneously"). This interpretation 

 of the appendages as the direct conveyers of the semen, however, meets with difficulties, which partly 

 have been correctlv seen by several authors; some of those then have adhered to the opinion that 

 they are introduced into the cloaca of the female, but only to be more indirectly subserving the copu- 

 lation. Thus Geoffroy St. Hilaire 1 ") characterizes them as clitores, and Petri 11 ) thinks their chief 



] I.e. p. 126. Blainville promises a treatise on la structure et les usages de ces appendices dans les raies et les 

 squales , in which he even thinks to have found a connection with the sexual organs proper, what he had not been able to 

 do in le S quale pelerin . 



Uber die Bedeutung der fussformigen Anhange bei Rocheu und Haven, und ihr Wiedervorkommen bei niederen 

 Thieren. Frorieps Notizen aus dem Geb. der Natur- und Ileilkunde, vol.40, 1834, p. 273. Mayer supposes that these limbs 

 by the Musculi adductores are brought to the cloaca, receive the semen into the appendix-slit, and convey it on to the terminal 

 part, the opened leaves of which wie ein Blutneukelch embrace the cloaca of the female; further he imagines that the 

 copulating animals w alirseheinlich von einander abgewendet sich befinden (Petri I.e. p. 291 renders the description by M., 

 but in more respects incorrectly). 



1 1 e. p. 86. Die sogenannten Haftorgane erinnern in ihrer gewundenen, rinnenformigen Gestalt sehr an die ausseren 

 Begattungsorgane maucher Krebse und ich glaube, dass sie ebeuso wie diese zum Uberpflanzen des Samens nach den weib- 

 liehen Geschlechtstheilen dienen, wobei danu das Sekret cler oben beschriebenen Driise eiue vielleicht die Satnenmasse ein- 

 hullende oder schiitzende Rolle spielt . 



4| Handbuch der Anatomie der Wirbelthiere, 2 Aufl., 1S54, I, p. 278, note 5. 



5] Hectocotyldannelsen hos Octopodslregterne Argonauta og Tremoctopus. Kgl. I'. Vid. Selsk. Skrifter, 1S56, p. 26. 



I think, however the analogon to be as obvious, which is found in so many males among the decapod Crustacea, in 



which a pair of the abdominal limbs are formed as more or less complete tubes, or the analogon, seen in the male Rays and 

 Sharks, where the ventrals, that is to say, active organs of motion, have one side transformed into large duets of the semen. 



111 Proceedings of the Boston Society of Nat. Hist. Vol. VI, 1856—59, p. 377. 2) Ibid. Vol. XIV, 1S71, p. 339. In 

 the first-mentioned place is only found a report of some observations by Agassiz occasioned by a lecture on the egg-devel- 

 opment in Rays; he thinks the claspers of the Rays to be real copulatory organs, supposing them to be turned forward 

 and upward, by which turning an opening in them (the larger basal opening of the appendix-slit?) is brought up to the 

 spermatic ducts; it is supposed that they may easily be introduced into the oviduct even to the shell-gland. In the later 

 communication 12) this is more particularly worked out: One ray of each posterior fin is capable of erection and rotation, 

 and is covered with erectile tissue, far too delicate to allow it to be used as a clasper around a body covered with sharp 

 rough spines. In the act these two organs are rotated inward and forward, bringing the furrows on their inner surface into 

 parallel contact, and in apposition with the testes. Being then introduced into the body of the female, their extremities 

 diverge in the two oviducts, and the glans being uncovered exposes a sharp cutting instrument, which would injure the 

 organs of the female if she resisted; the male has her, therefore, in complete subjection, and has been observed to strike and 

 wound her with this spine. What was formerly supposed to be the penis is too small, and of insufficient length to accom- 

 plish fecundation (viz. the urogenital papilla). The penis consists of the two long flexible finger-like fins, furnished with two 

 projectile spinous appendages as in vipers. (In Cliimara the surfaces of the organs are also spinous, as in snakes). The two 

 spines found in cartilaginous fishes are homologous with the os penis of mammals. In men this bony part has disappeared, 

 and we have only the soft spongy portions of the organ remaining; the quivering of the legs during connection seems the 

 echo, as it were, of the sensitiveness of the flexible posterior limbs of the skates (!). As the thought of a comparison with the 

 Snakes cannot be said to have been exactly new at that time, so it is also the case with the homology with the os penis ; it is 

 already found in Ray (Willughby: De Hist. Pise. etc. 1686, p. 77). Gartnan, 1. c. p. 199 — 200, subscribes the opinion of Agassiz. 

 Uready I.e. 1S39, p. 149; more decidedly in: Fragmentary Notes on the Generative Organs of some Cartilaginous 

 Fishes (Trans. Roy. Soc. Edinli. 1861 ; vol.22, p. 500). 



.8) Introduction etc. p. 167. Giinther also supposes that the two appendices by being put together may form one 

 canal; he thinks it to be possible that the appendix-slit leads as well the secretion of the glandular bag as the sperm. 



•1 Besides to the palps of the Araneina, the thought will easily be led to the limbs that in the Crustacea, especially 

 the Decapoda, have been developed for serving the copulation; not only I.eydig and Steenstrup, as has been shown by 

 the above quotations, but also Mayer have thought of these; several other analogies indicated by Mayer are rather distant 

 (even if they be not all so distant as those, attributed to M. by Petri: the thumb-swellings in the frogs, the spur of the 

 Ornithorhynchus — which analogies I have not at all been able to find mentioned in M.). 



",' According to Petri; I have not been able to find the essav in question. 



') '• c. p. 330. The secondary function , which Petri lin accordance with Blochi ascribes to them: to serve as an 

 111 of motion making the males more mobile than the females especially in the Rays — may surely, to say the least 

 '•! it. be characterized as problematic. 



