24 
THE YOYAGE OF H.M.S. CH ALLEN GEE. 
animals, and I then became certain that Darwin’s description was not correct in one 
very important point. The sack is not closed at the bottom, but gives entrance to the 
body-cavity of the animal. 
For want of material I have been obliged to limit my researches to the pedunculated 
Cirripedia ; in the sessile Cirripedia, however, there cannot be the slightest doubt that the 
apparatus will prove to have about the same structure ; the orifices are here never pro- 
duced nor tubular. 1 I got by far the best preparations from specimens of Scalpellum 
vulgare, Leach, which I received from the Zoological Station at Naples. The figures on 
PI. V ., as well as the description, are based upon preparations of these specimens. 
Fig. 1 of PI. Y. shows a complete transverse section through the thorax of 
Scalpellum vulgare a little below the first cirrus. The large cavities (A) separated in the 
figure from one another by the band of connective tissue (B) represent parts of the body- 
cavity. An epithelial clothing (a true coelomic epithelium) cannot everywhere be made 
out distinctly ; yet I think its presence may be safely concluded from the cellular 
remains which here and there adhere to the connective tissue, in the shape of elongate 
and rather flat nuclei. The section passes longitudinally through the long and flattened 
tube which belongs to the right outer maxilla ; the duct on the interior is clothed by a 
thin chitinous tunic, with a chitinogenous epithelium everywhere beneath it ; both the 
chitinous tunic and its matrix are the continuation of the outer body-wall, and are no 
doubt true epiblastic products. Fig. 3 of PI. V. represents a longitudinal section of 
one of the segmental organs. From the outer wall of the flattened tube thin transverse 
fibres of connective tissue run towards the wall of the duct. Having passed longitu- 
dinally through the tube, the duct may be traced for a short distance beneath the surface 
of the body; it then passes over into a very narrow channel which passes through a 
compact mass of cells. The whole mass of cells has the shape of a bell ; the limits of 
the different cells are not very distinct, but the different nuclei are. They are oval and 
their longest diameter is about 0'005 mm. (fig. 2, Pl. Y.) The surface of the cells 
bordering the narrow channel is markedly protuberant, so as almost to meet that of the 
opposed cells ; in very favourable sections only can the presence of the channel be made 
out. To judge from the great number of nuclei, the cell-mass, at least on one side, is 
formed of more than a single layer. Whereas the cells of the duct have their nuclei with 
their longer axis parallel to the surface of the wall of the duct, those of the bell-shaped 
cell-mass are rather perpendicular to the surface of the very narrow channel. Moreover, the 
latter are very characteristic on account of their staining much more intensely than do those 
of the chitinogenous cells or of the surrounding connective tissue. Towards the interior 
of the body-cavity the thick cell-coating of the narrow channel slopes and soon terminates ; 
from the body-cavity the entrance of the narrow channel is distinctly funnel-shaped. The 
chitinous membrane which clothes the interior of the duct is not present at the surface of 
1 Darwin, Balanidae, 1854, p. 97. 
