Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- EXPLANATION OF PLATES
- CHAP. XIII Functions and Instincts. Cirripedes and Crinoïdeans
- CHAP. XIV Functions and Instincts. Entomostracan Condylopes
- CHAP. XV Functions and Instincts. Crustacean Condylopes
- CHAP. XVI Functions and Instincts. Myriapod Condylopes
- CHAP. XVII Motive, locomotive and prehensory organs
- CHAP. XVIII Instinct in general
- CHAP. XIX Functions and Instincts. Arachnidans, Pseudarachnidans, and Acaridan Condylopes
- CHAP. XX Functions and Instincts. Insect Condylopes
- CHAP. XXI Functions and Instincts. Fishes
- CHAP. XXII Functions and Instincts. Reptiles
- CHAP. XXIII Functions and Instincts. Birds
- CHAP. XXIV Functions and Instincts. Mammalians
- CHAP. XXV Functions and Instincts. Man
- CONCLUSION
- Index
- Plate section
CHAP. XIX - Functions and Instincts. Arachnidans, Pseudarachnidans, and Acaridan Condylopes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- EXPLANATION OF PLATES
- CHAP. XIII Functions and Instincts. Cirripedes and Crinoïdeans
- CHAP. XIV Functions and Instincts. Entomostracan Condylopes
- CHAP. XV Functions and Instincts. Crustacean Condylopes
- CHAP. XVI Functions and Instincts. Myriapod Condylopes
- CHAP. XVII Motive, locomotive and prehensory organs
- CHAP. XVIII Instinct in general
- CHAP. XIX Functions and Instincts. Arachnidans, Pseudarachnidans, and Acaridan Condylopes
- CHAP. XX Functions and Instincts. Insect Condylopes
- CHAP. XXI Functions and Instincts. Fishes
- CHAP. XXII Functions and Instincts. Reptiles
- CHAP. XXIII Functions and Instincts. Birds
- CHAP. XXIV Functions and Instincts. Mammalians
- CHAP. XXV Functions and Instincts. Man
- CONCLUSION
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Having wandered long enough, perhaps too long, in a wide and mazy field, but fertile everywhere in proofs of the Power, Wisdom, and Goodness of the Creator, it is time to return to the high road from which we diverged.
The Class of animals which led me into this digression were the Myriapods, concerning which I observed, when I commenced my account of them, that on quitting the Crustaceans, the way seemed to branch off from the long-tailed Decapods by them, and from the short-tailed ones by the Arachnidans. We are now then to give a history of the latter Class.
Latreille, in which he has been followed by most modern Arachnologists, in his work in aid of Cuvier's last edition of the Règne Animal, divides his Arachnidans into two Orders, Pulmonaries, or those that breathe by gills, and Trachearies, or those that breathe by spiracles in connection with tracheæ. In his latest work, which he did not live to finish, he added a third Order, including some parasites, infesting marine animals, such as the whale louse. These, from their having no apparent respiratory apparatus, he named, Aporobranchians.
As the pulmonary Arachnidans of Latreille differ from the Trachearies, &c., not only in having their body divided into two sections, but likewise both in their respiratory organs and those of circulation, I have always regarded them as forming a distinct Class.
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- On the Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God as Manifested in the Creation of Animals and in their History, Habits and Instincts , pp. 281 - 309Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1835