CHAPTER VII. MISCELLANEOUS OBJECTIONS TO THE THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION.
1. LONGEVITY. (continued)
With respect to these organs, Mr. Mivart, as on so many previous occasions,
asks: "What would be the utility of the FIRST RUDIMENTARY BEGINNINGS of
such structures, and how could such insipient buddings have ever preserved
the life of a single Echinus?" He adds, "not even the SUDDEN development
of the snapping action would have been beneficial without the freely
movable stalk, nor could the latter have been efficient without the
snapping jaws, yet no minute, nearly indefinite variations could
simultaneously evolve these complex co-ordinations of structure; to deny
this seems to do no less than to affirm a startling paradox." Paradoxical
as this may appear to Mr. Mivart, tridactyle forcepses, immovably fixed at
the base, but capable of a snapping action, certainly exist on some star-
fishes; and this is intelligible if they serve, at least in part, as a
means of defence. Mr. Agassiz, to whose great kindness I am indebted for
much information on the subject, informs me that there are other star-
fishes, in which one of the three arms of the forceps is reduced to a
support for the other two; and again, other genera in which the third arm
is completely lost. In Echinoneus, the shell is described by M. Perrier as
bearing two kinds of pedicellariae, one resembling those of Echinus, and
the other those of Spatangus; and such cases are always interesting as
affording the means of apparently sudden transitions, through the abortion
of one of the two states of an organ.
With respect to the steps by which these curious organs have been evolved,
Mr. Agassiz infers from his own researches and those of Mr. Muller, that
both in star-fishes and sea-urchins the pedicellariae must undoubtedly be
looked at as modified spines. This may be inferred from their manner of
development in the individual, as well as from a long and perfect series of
gradations in different species and genera, from simple granules to
ordinary spines, to perfect tridactyle pedicellariae. The gradation
extends even to the manner in which ordinary spines and the pedicellariae,
with their supporting calcareous rods, are articulated to the shell. In
certain genera of star-fishes, "the very combinations needed to show that
the pedicellariae are only modified branching spines" may be found. Thus
we have fixed spines, with three equi-distant, serrated, movable branches,
articulated to near their bases; and higher up, on the same spine, three
other movable branches. Now when the latter arise from the summit of a
spine they form, in fact, a rude tridactyle pedicellariae, and such may be
seen on the same spine together with the three lower branches. In this
case the identity in nature between the arms of the pedicellariae and the
movable branches of a spine, is unmistakable. It is generally admitted
that the ordinary spines serve as a protection; and if so, there can be no
reason to doubt that those furnished with serrated and movable branches
likewise serve for the same purpose; and they would thus serve still more
effectively as soon as by meeting together they acted as a prehensile or
snapping apparatus. Thus every gradation, from an ordinary fixed spine to
a fixed pedicellariae, would be of service.
|