146 THE CRAYFISH. 



a. The pleurobranchiae and arthrobranehise resemble 



bottle-brushes, each consisting of a series of delicate 

 branchial filaments arranged upon a central stem, 

 which is traversed by afferent and efferent blood- 

 vessels. It is in the branchial filaments that 

 respiration is effected, diffusion taking place 

 through the thin cuticle covering them. 



b. A podobranchia is more complicated, and consists of 



(i.) a basal plate arising from the outer surface of 

 the coxopodite, and covered with finely plumose 

 set89 ; (ii.) a stem arising from the dorsal border 

 of the basal plate close to its apex ; (iii.) a lamina, 

 which is a corrugated plate borne on the distal 

 end of the stem, doubled longitudinally upon itself, 

 and beset with small hooked setae ; and (iv.) a 

 plume, which arises from the apex of the stem 

 and resembles an arthrobranchia. The plume 

 and the outer face of the stem are covered with 

 branchial filaments. 



E. Demonstration of the Respiratory Current of water 

 through the gill-chamber. 



Place a living crayfish in a shallow dish of water ; and, 

 when the animal is at rest, run into the dish close to thebases 

 of the hinder legs, by means of a pipette, a few drops of water 

 coloured with suspended carmine or other pigment. Watch the 

 currents entering under the edges of the branchiostegites behind, 

 and issuing in front from the mouths of the cervical canals. 



Open the cervical canal of one side by making two cuts, 

 one immediately behind the cervical groove, the other parallel 

 to it and a quarter of an inch further back ; and removing the 

 strip between the tioo cuts. Lay the animal on its side in the 

 ivaier, and observe the sculling movements of the scapho- 

 gnathite, driving the loater forwards out of the cervical canal. 



