COMPARISON OF DENTAL PLATES. 



I 2 [ 



continued along the floor and sides of the pharynx. In Khinochima^ra, on the 

 other hand, the dental plates have become thin and have developed hard cutting 

 edges, giving the mouth an almost beak-like appearance. In the plates tritoral 

 areas are reduced to thread-like elements, so delicate that thev become difficult to 



g4D 



Fig. 94.— Dental plates, and root and floor of mouth of: A, B, Harriolta raleighana. C, D, Rhinochima=ra pacifica. 



distinguish even in the hard anterior pair of "vomerine" plates; and in con- 

 nection with the obsolescence of the tritoral areas, it is now interesting to observe a 

 great reduction in the number and size of the papillae of the mouth. Thus on the 

 roof of the mouth there occur no papillae throughout the wide tract immediately 

 behind the palatine plates. 



