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A Monograph on the Sub-class Cirripedia (Volume 2 of 2) / The Balanidæ, (or Sessile Cirripedes); the Verrucidæ, etc., etc. cover

A Monograph on the Sub-class Cirripedia (Volume 2 of 2) / The Balanidæ, (or Sessile Cirripedes); the Verrucidæ, etc., etc.

Chapter 281: PLATE 28. CEMENTING APPARATUS.
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This work presents a detailed monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia, focusing on various species of barnacles, including the Balanidæ and Verrucidæ. It includes comprehensive descriptions, classifications, and illustrations of these organisms, contributing to the understanding of their biology and taxonomy. The author examines their anatomical features, reproductive habits, and ecological roles, providing insights into their adaptation and evolution. The text serves as a significant resource for naturalists and biologists interested in crustacean studies, reflecting the author's meticulous research and dedication to the field.

PLATE 28.
CEMENTING APPARATUS.

  • Fig. a, Basal membrane, with the cementing apparatus, of Coronula balænaris; a small portion of the parietal membrane, p p p, which coats the folded shelly walls, is left adherent to the basal membrane.
  • b, the circumferential slip (shaded more darkly than the rest to catch the eye), separating the basal from the parietal membrane.
  • c′ c′, slips of basal membrane, formed at each period of growth, and overlapping each other.

  • s s s s s s, the six sutures in the walls, separating the six compartments, of which—
  • A is the basal margin of the rostrum,
  • C C that of the lateral compartments,
  • D D that of the carino-lateral compartments, and
  • E that of the carina.
  • r, r, rays or spokes of membrane, prolonged from the circumferential slip, and running under the trebly folded wall of each compartment, but here cut off; a similar ray should run under each line of suture (s). These rays, at their extremities, expand transversely; and the shape and length of the rays may be judged of from the basal outline of the folded walls given in Pl. 16, fig. 5.
  • The two cement-ducts, proceeding from each cement-gland, debouch opposite the middle folds of the lateral (C C) and carino-lateral (D D) compartments. The layers of cement have been removed. N.B. There is one considerable error in this figure, the two main trunks, connecting the cement-glands, and meeting at the centre, have been represented as forming a straight line, but in fact they form a very open angle, as is correctly shown in fig. 1 c.
  • b, Diagram, representing a vertical section through a portion of the basal and parietal membranes, with the thickness of the membrane enormously exaggerated.
  • z z z, layers of cement, which, if the section had been made in the line of the cement-ducts, would have been seen proceeding out of these ducts, as is represented at (t), where the section is supposed to have taken the above course.
  • c′ c′, the slips of basal membrane.
  • b, the circumferential slip; beneath this the coarsely dotted layer represents the cement, lately excreted, and before it has acquired its proper transparent structureless character, elsewhere represented by fine dots.
  • p, membrane externally coating the walls of the shell.
  • t, cement-ducts opening beneath the basal membrane.
  • c, The central portion of fig. 1 a, considerably magnified.
  • c′ c′, slips of the basal membrane; but the shell, when these were formed, was so young that the walls had not acquired their folded structure; in the centre the prehensile antennæ of the pupa may be obscurely seen.
  • f, the main cement-trunk, connecting the cement-glands.
  • h, a cement-gland, from which two cement-ducts proceed.
  • a a, cement-ducts (cut off), leading to opposite the middle fold of the carino-lateral compartment.
  • b b, cement-ducts (cut off), leading to opposite the middle fold of the lateral compartment.
  • a′ b′, a pair of cement-ducts, with their orifices opening on the under side of one of the slips of basal membrane (c′), at a point which once was opposite the middle of the carino-lateral and lateral compartments. The orifices of the other ducts, towards the centre, may be seen forming straight lines.

  • 2, Cement-ducts and one cement-gland of Chelonobia patula, represented without the basal membrane, to which they adhere: f, f, main cement-trunk; g, enlarged portion; h, gland; a, b, the two ducts proceeding from this gland, and bifurcating several times before debouching on the under side of the basal membrane. Several other cement-ducts, proceeding from other glands, are represented just as they appeared under the microscope.
  • 3, Cement-ducts and glands of Tubicinella trachealis, represented without the basal membrane to which they adhered: (f) (f), main cement-trunk, connecting the several glands; h, cement-gland; a, cement-duct, with a singular loop (a′) having two projections or rudimentary branches; b, spur or rudiment of a second cement-duct; c, third cement-duct.
  • a, Chain of cement-glands of Balanus tintinnabulum, with all the ducts removed, excepting those proceeding from the last formed gland, which latter correspond in age with the last-formed zone of the shelly basis; the whole of the basis having been removed by acid.
  • f, main cement-trunk connecting the glands.
  • gh, last-formed cement-gland.
  • k, t, two cement-ducts, proceeding from a great common duct; one of these bifurcates at (t), and one branch joins at (t′) the corresponding branch from the corresponding gland.
  • i i i, circumferential duct, into which the ducts k, k, t, t, t′ all enter.
  • i′ i′, branches proceeding from the circumferential duct, which branch and sub-branch till they form a sheet (z z) of cement-tissue on the outside of the basis of the shell.
  • b, two cement-glands of Bal. tintinnabulum (this figure, to match with 4 a, ought to have stood upside down), taken from near the centre of the basis, greatly enlarged; (f f), main trunk; (g), enlarged portion of the trunk; (h), gland; k, t, two cement-ducts proceeding from a common point, one of them (t) bifurcates, and gives off a rudimentary branch, t′; m, a spur, or rudimentary duct. The gland, h, has been pushed on one side, it ought to lie over the enlarged portion (g). There is a considerable difference between these two glands and that (gh) represented in fig. 4 a; the neck of the gland in the latter being elongated into a great common duct, and the spur or rudimentary duct (m) being absent.