208 



THE ACEPUALA. 



^ 192. 



intestine ; and, <as with Salpa, the direction of the current is changed so 

 ulternatcly that the two terminal vessels serve in rotation as an Aorta and 

 a Vena cava/"' 



The blood not only traverses the lacunae of the intestinal sac, but also 

 penetrates the walls of the mantle, and even passes into the common sup- 

 port of the compound forms. In this last case, it circulates in ramified 

 canals, which, as prolongations of the cavity of the body, extend even into 

 this portion of the mantle.*"^* 



With the Brachiopoda, this system is quite remarkable. The branchial 

 afferent veins of the mantle do not open into a single heart, but into two 

 hearts which are situated right and left of the intestinal sac.''"*' 



These hearts, by pulsation, throw the blood into the intestinal canal, 

 which ought therefore to be considered as a common visceral sinus.'"' 



With the Lamellibranchia, the heart, situated at the posterior extremity 

 of the back, is divided, usually into three chambers, and surrounded witli 

 a large pericardium. Two lateral, triangular, thick-walled auricles receive 

 the blood from the branchiae and send it into a simple muscular ventricle 

 which is nearly always traversed by the rectum. Thence the blood passes 

 into the body by a posterior and an anterior aorta. Its return into the 

 two auricles is prevented by valves.^'"' The walls of these aortae disappear 

 after considerable ramification, and the blood passes into a system of lacu- 

 nae which extends through the whole body and forms a net-work of sinuses 

 and anastomosing canals.'"' The venous blood is received into special 



6 This change in the direction of the blood-cur- 

 rents was first noticed by Lister (Philos. Trans. 

 1834, Pt. II>p. 305, or jViegmaniVs Arch. 1835, 

 I. p. 309) with Perophora, a new genus of the 

 compound Ascidiae ; and Milne Edwards has 

 since confirmed it with Pyrosoma (Ann. des Sc. 

 Nat. XII. 1839, p. 375), and several other Ascidiae 

 both simple and compound ; see his Observ. sur 

 les Ascidies simples et composees, p. 7. 



These inter-alternating peristaltic and anti-peris- 

 taltic motions show that the heart of the Ascidiae 

 is valveless. It is therefore surprising that Delle 

 Chiaje has described it with valves ; but this is 

 not the only point in which he differs from other 

 olisorvers on this subject, for he describes the heart 

 of the Ascidiae as bifurcated into two auricles ; see 

 his Mem. &c. loc. cit. III. p. 193, Tav. XLVI. fig. 

 13, ab. {Cynthia papillata)., and Descriz. &c. III. 

 p. 29, Tav. LXXXII. fig. 11, 12 (Pha/lusia in- 

 testiiialis). 



' This circulation of the blood in the common 

 Ascidian-stocli has been observed by Lister (loc. 

 cit.). Milne Edwards has seen also the ascending 

 and descending currents in the ramified and coecal 

 prolongations of the peritoneal sac, in Botryllus, 

 Diazona, Didemnum, and Polyclinum ; see Sa- 

 vi/rny,tiltm. loc. cit. p. 47 ; Delle Chiaje, Descriz. 

 to. III. p. 34, Tav. LXXXIII. fig. 13, 15 ; and 

 Milne Edwards, Sur les Ascidies, loc. cit. p. 41, 

 PI. VII. fig. 1, lb. Ic. This last-mentioned author 

 has also observed that, with Clavelina (Ibid, p. 

 9. PI. II.), these canals terminate in caeca which 

 communicate with the cavity of the body, and are 

 extended into digitiform prolongations upon the ex- 

 tremity of the peritoneal sac, and herein the blood 

 moves alternately up and down. The ramified ca- 

 nals which abundantly traverse the mantU' oi Phal- 

 lusia, are, according to authors, real blood-vessels ; 

 see Cuvier, loc. cit. ji. lU, PI. ^11. fig. 1 ; Savi^ny, 

 loc. cit. p. 102, PI. I.\.. fig. 1, li., :ind Delle Chiaje, 



Descriz. &c. III. p. 33, Tav. LXXXIV. fig. 2. 

 According to Kolliker (L'eber das Vorkommen der 

 Holzfaser im Thierreich. loc. cit.), these multira- 

 mose vessels which come directly from the heart 

 and whose extremities are penicillated, ai)pear to be 

 continuous directly beneath the skin with other 

 vessels returning by the course of these arteries. 



** See Cuvier, Owen, and Vo^t, loc. cit. 



9 Owen was the first to notice this analogy of 

 the circulation of the Brachiopoda with the extra 

 vascular one of other Acephala ; see his Lettre sur 

 I'Appareil de la circulation chez les Mollusques de la 

 C'lasse des Brachiopodes (Ann. d. Sc. Nat. III. 1845, 

 p. 315, PI. IV., or Froriep^s neue Not. No. 793). 



Ill For the arrangement of this central part of the 

 circulatory system, see Poll, loc. cit. Tai). IX. fig. 

 12 (Uniuj; Tab, XIII. tig. 5 (Solcn); Tab. XXII. 

 fig. 10 (Spondi/lus);Tiih. XXVII. fig. 8, 12 (Pec- 

 ten); Tab. X.KIX. fig. 7,8 (Osirea) ; Tab. X.XXI. 

 fig. 8, 9 {Mytilus), and Tab. .XX.XVIII. XXXI.V. 

 (Pinna). Alao Bojanus, in the Isis, 1819, p. 42, 

 Taf. I. II. (Anodonta) ; Treviranus, Beobacht. aus 

 d. Zoot. u. Physiol, p. 44, fig. 67 09 (Mytilus and 

 Anodonta) ; and Garner, Trans, of the Zool. Soc. 

 II. p. 90, PI. XIX. fig. 4 (Pecten). 



An arrangement (luite different from this type is 

 found with Area, whose two auricles are attached 

 to the two widely-separated ventricles, and send 

 out on each side an anterior and posterior aorta, 

 which meet and join upon the dorsal median line ; 

 see Poli, loc. cit. Taf. X.XV. fig. 2, 3.* 



11 This system of lacunae forms, especially in the 

 mantle, a beautiful net-work of delicate canals 

 which, with the Naiades, are visible to the naked 

 eye. It should not, however, be confipunded with 

 another net-wnrk more difficult to be seen, and 

 which pr.ibaiily constitutes a system of aquiferous 

 canals, which is easily seen in the mantle, font and 

 other parts of the body by inflation. Delle Chi- 

 aje has called it He.te lymphatico-nasculosum. 



* [ § 192, not'' 10] See also Deshnyes, loc. cit. p. W, 64, &c., PI. VIII. fig. 1, 2, 3, and (^uatre- 

 /ages, loc. cit. p. 47, PI. 1. lig. 7 (I'eredo). — Kd. 



