238 



COMPARATIVE ANATOMY 



CHAP. 



<T 



female ducts nearly always unite in the base of a genital cloaca, which often lies 

 anteriorly on the right, on a papilla. The male and female apertures are rarely 

 separate ; when they are so, they lie close together (cf. Fig. 195 of Phyllirhoe). 

 The penis is often armed in vai'ious ways. 



The important subject of the mutual relations of the three types of genital ducts 

 in hermaphrodite Gastropoda has been much discussed, but no satisfactory con- 

 clusion has been reached. Ontogenetic research has been appealed to so far in vain. 



It is thus not at present known whether the 

 ^ single hermaphrodite duct has arisen by the 



fusing of separate male and female ducts, or 

 whether the separate ducts have come into exist- 

 /\ ence by the splitting of an originally single 



hermaphrodite duct. The difficulty is increased 

 '/ by the fact that the genetic significance of the 



f -^p hermaphrodite gland is uncertain. 



Fertilisation is mutual in hermaphrodite 



Gastropods. It is, however, certain that, in the 

 Pulmonata at least, when copulation does not 

 take place, self - fertilisation can occur. The 

 hermaphrodite duct not infrequently carries one 

 or two lateral creca or vesicul* seminales, in 

 which an animal can store up its own sperm to 

 be used in fertilising its own eggs if cross-fertil- 

 isation does not take place. The eggs and the 

 sperm are often not ripe at the same time. 



(2) Cephalopoda. Although the gonad in all 

 extant Cephalopoda is unpaired, the ducts are 

 originally paired in both sexes. In Nautilus, 

 the Oegopsidce, and the Odopoda, there is one 



FIG. 195. Genital organs of Phylli- 

 rhoe (after Souleyet). 1, Vas deferens ; 



2, penis ; 3, oviduct ; 4, male, 5, female p a i r o f ducts in the female ; but in the males a 

 genital aperture ; 6 vagina ; 7, hernia- ire( j seminal duct occurs onl in N autilus and 

 phrodite gland ; 8, hermaphrodite duct ; 



9, receptaculum seminis. Philonexis carets (Treitwctopus). In Nautilus, 



in which both sexes possess paired ducts, the 



left duct is in both cases rudimentary and no longer functions. It is the so-called 

 pear-shaped vesicle, which is attached on one side to the heart and the lower end 

 of the gonad, and on the other opens into the mantle cavity at the base of the 

 lower gills. 



Where only one duct is retained, it is, in both sexes, the one on the left, as in 

 Loliyo, Sepia, Sepiola, Rossia, Sepioteuthis, Chiroteuthis, Cirrhoteuthis, etc. 



The genital ducts rise on the wall of that part of the secondary body cavity which 

 is known as the genital cavity (peritoneal sac, genital capsule), and open into the 

 mantle cavity at the sides of the anus, between the nephridial aperture and the base 

 of the gills. 



Male ducts, seminal duct. In the more complicated form of male duct, 

 such as that of Sepia (Fig. 196), four principal divisions may be distinguished. 

 From the testicular capsule rises a vas deferens, which runs along in close coils, and 

 then widens into a vesicula seminalis, the highly developed and much folded epi- 

 thelium of which plays an important part in the formation of the spennatophores. 

 The vesicula seminalis is continued as a thin vas deferens to the last division, the 

 spennatophoral pouch (Needham's pouch), which serves as a reservoir for the 



