MUCIFEROUS CANALS OF FISH. 183 



muciferous canal, Schultze has suggested * that it is a 

 sense-organ adapted to receive vibrations of the water 

 with wave-lengths too great to be perceived as ordinary 

 sounds. Beard also leans to this same view. However 

 this may be, it is remarkably developed in many deep- 

 sea fish. 



In some cases peculiar eye-like bodies are developed 

 in connection (though not exclusively so) with the 

 muciferous canal. Leuckart,t by whom they were 

 discovered, at first considered them to be accessory 

 eyes, but subsequent researches led him to modify 

 this opinion, and to regard them as luminous organs. 

 UssowJ has more recently maintained that they are 

 eyes, and Ley dig considers them as organs which 

 approach very nearly to true eyes (" welche wirblichen 

 sehorganen sehr nahe stehen "). Whatever doubt there 

 may be whether they have any power of sight, there is 

 no longer any question but that they are luminous, 

 and they are especially developed in the fishes of the 

 deep sea. 



These are very peculiar. The abysses of the ocean 

 are quite still, and black darkness reigns. The 

 pressure of the water is also very great. 



Hence the deep seas have a peculiar fauna of their 

 own. Surface species could not generally bear the 

 enormous pressure, and do not descend to any great 

 depth. The true deep-sea forms are, however, as yet 

 little known. They are but seldom seen, and when 



* "Ueber die Sinnesorgane der Seitenlinie bei Fischen und 

 Amphibien," Arch, fiir Mic. Anat., 1870. 



t " Ueber muthmassliche Nebenaugen bei einem Fische." Bericht 

 uber die 39 Vers., Deutscher Naturforscher, Giessen, 1864. 



X " Ueber den Bau der sog. angenahnlichen Flecken eiuiger 

 Knochenfische," Bull. Soc. Imp. MoscotOt 1879. 



