CHAPTER VII. MISCELLANEOUS OBJECTIONS TO THE THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION.
1. LONGEVITY. (continued)
The development of the mammary glands would have been of no service, and
could not have been affected through natural selection, unless the young at
the same time were able to partake of the secretion. There is no greater
difficulty in understanding how young mammals have instinctively learned to
suck the breast, than in understanding how unhatched chickens have learned
to break the egg-shell by tapping against it with their specially adapted
beaks; or how a few hours after leaving the shell they have learned to pick
up grains of food. In such cases the most probable solution seems to be,
that the habit was at first acquired by practice at a more advanced age,
and afterwards transmitted to the offspring at an earlier age. But the
young kangaroo is said not to suck, only to cling to the nipple of its
mother, who has the power of injecting milk into the mouth of her helpless,
half-formed offspring. On this head Mr. Mivart remarks: "Did no special
provision exist, the young one must infallibly be choked by the intrusion
of the milk into the wind-pipe. But there IS a special provision. The
larynx is so elongated that it rises up into the posterior end of the nasal
passage, and is thus enabled to give free entrance to the air for the
lungs, while the milk passes harmlessly on each side of this elongated
larynx, and so safely attains the gullet behind it." Mr. Mivart then asks
how did natural selection remove in the adult kangaroo (and in most other
mammals, on the assumption that they are descended from a marsupial form),
"this at least perfectly innocent and harmless structure?" It may be
suggested in answer that the voice, which is certainly of high importance
to many animals, could hardly have been used with full force as long as the
larynx entered the nasal passage; and Professor Flower has suggested to me
that this structure would have greatly interfered with an animal swallowing
solid food.
We will now turn for a short space to the lower divisions of the animal
kingdom. The Echinodermata (star-fishes, sea-urchins, etc.) are furnished
with remarkable organs, called pedicellariae, which consist, when well
developed, of a tridactyle forceps--that is, of one formed of three
serrated arms, neatly fitting together and placed on the summit of a
flexible stem, moved by muscles. These forceps can seize firmly hold of
any object; and Alexander Agassiz has seen an Echinus or sea-urchin rapidly
passing particles of excrement from forceps to forceps down certain lines
of its body, in order that its shell should not be fouled. But there is no
doubt that besides removing dirt of all kinds, they subserve other
functions; and one of these apparently is defence.
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