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Darwin Correspondence Project

From Charles Moore   15 May 1879

Cambridge Place. Bath

May 15th. 1879

Ammonites, Aptychi, Balani?

My dear Sir

I have sent you a fragment of an ammonite from the Upper Lias attached to which are some Barnacle-like bodies—1 In the midst of your other scientific work I would not have troubled you but that they are part of a very interesting study not yet exhausted, some particulars of which I think you may like to know— Some of these little bodies are slightly larger, others still smaller. They do not appear to have the true shell structure of Balanus and in every instance the opercular valves are ancylosed and without a slit— Possibly they are young forms, but, although I have had 40 years experience of these beds I have never found them in a more advanced condition.2

In the Upper Lias there is a wonderfully conservative bed, a few inches thick, containing saurians, fish, Ammonites, &c, &c From this I have a slab 18 inches long with a piece of wood with many Mytilidæ and above them a colony of Pollicipes, but without trace of their peduncles— (I have Pollicipes also in the Rhætic Beds.)3

The same bed contains numerous Ammonites with their Aptychi in position often far back in their outer chambers some of them being almost microscopic. Years ago I wrote a short paper pointing out that there was never more than one Aptychus to an Ammonite, & that being too small for an outer operculum I thought it might perform some office connected with the siphuncular tube—4

When Ammonites of 4 to 8 in. in diameter are found in the above bed they usually lie on the surface, or rather the shell has been very gradually denuded, or dissolved away, leaving clear & sharp impressions or moulds of where they lay.— The small ostraea & other shells that were attached to the exterior of the ammonite still lie in the stone below but above these is to be traced the original internal smooth surface of the shell to which they were attached5

Curiously enough, the Aptychus, sometimes very perfect still lies in the impression of the outer chamber, and in addition to this portions of the siphuncular tube still remain

But the remarkable fact is this that the tube, or the hollow that represents it appears to have been surrounded by thick membranous layers, in one instance passing round the various whorls for nearly 18 inches in length, the largest part being half as big round as my little finger— Seemingly like the peduncle of cirripedia it was an ovæ-bearing tube, & it had even suggested itself to me, Why might not Aptychus be a parasitic male to the Ammonite?!!6

But these Balani? now bother me— A few days ago on examining more closely one of these ammonite impressions I found to my great surprise that the surface was covered with very small globular ovæ, but becoming larger & more disc like towards the outer chamber— Then I found strings of them lying together—like little Nodosarian shells— Next bivalve-looking entomostracan-like bodies presented themselves, sometimes hollow, sometimes pointed at one end, undistinguishable from the horn sheaths containing the antennæ you have referred to in connexion with some of the larvae of the cirripedes7

There appear to be several stages of development before they pass into the pyramidal barnacle like forms I have now sent, but I need not now refer to them minutely If these are Cirripedes it will be wonderful to find on a single Ammonite so many points of interest which it took you so much labour & research to determine—8

I have these points shewn more or less on about 12 ammonites— If I could brush off from the surface of one specimen, all the ovæ carapaces, &c &c they would about half fill a tumbler!

Some of my Aptychi are in very perfect condition & there is something more to be said of them. Whatever they may be there is no doubt D’Orbingy was mistaken when he figured his specimen, making the cirripedal antennae project through a membrane which united the two valves together9

I remain My dear Sir | Yours faithfully | Chs. Moore

Footnotes

The fragment of the ammonite has not been found. In stratigraphy, the Lias is the lower Jurassic period. Ammonites are an extinct group of marine cephalopods of the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods; their closest living relative is the nautilus.
Balanus is a genus of sessile cirripedes commonly known as acorn barnacles; in adults, the opercular valves or terga open like hinged doors to reveal a thick opercular membrane through which cirri can be extended and withdrawn. Anchylosed valves are those which have fused together.
Mytilidae is a family of mussels (marine bivalve molluscs); Pollicipes is a genus of pedunculate cirripedes, known as goose-neck barnacles. The Rhaetic was a geological stage in the late Triassic period.
Aptychi are calcitic plates, occurring singly or in pairs in the body chamber of ammonites; in the mid nineteenth century, some naturalists believed they were separate animals while others argued they were ammonite valves. Alcide d’Orbigny maintained that Aptychus was a pedunculate cirripede (Orbigny 1849–52, 1: 254–7), but CD had argued against this (see Correspondence vol. 4, letter to S. P. Woodward, 21 March [1850] and n. 2, and Fossil Cirripedia (1851), pp. 3–5). In ‘On the Aptychus’ (C. Moore 1851), Moore argued that the Aptychus was part of the body of the ammonite rather than a parasite and further suggested that its attachment to the siphuncular tube indicated that it had some connection with the function of that organ. The siphuncle is a small tube that fills the chambers of the ammonite with gas and water to control buoyancy.
Ostraea is a genus of oysters (bivalve molluscs); one valve of their shell is slightly concave where the shell attaches to a substrate.
In 1848, while working on cirripedes, CD discovered that some species had developed what he later termed ‘complemental males’ attached to hermaphrodite individuals (see Correspondence vol. 4, letter to J. D. Hooker, 10 May 1848 and n. 12; see also Living Cirripedia (1851), pp. 281–93, and Living Cirripedia (1854), pp. 23–30). Moore probably speculated that ammonites could be analogous.
Nodosaria is a genus of Foraminifera characterised by shells composed of globular chambers. The name Entomostraca was formerly used to refer to all crustaceans other than Malacostraca (Leftwich 1973). CD wrote that the antennae of larval Scalpellum vulgare first appeared within an envelope or horn (Living Cirripedia (1854), p. 105).
Cirripede larvae have up to six naupliar stages plus a cyprid stage before becoming adults.
See Orbigny 1849–52, 1: 255; Orbigny figured side by side images of the largest valve of the pedunculate barnacle Anatifa laevigata (a synonym of Lepas anatifera, the pelagic goose-neck barnacle) and the valve of what he termed Aptychus sublaevis, together with images of what he imagined the Aptychus would have looked like when living, complete with projecting cirri. Orbigny supposed that the valves of Aptychus were analogous to the largest of the five valves of the Anatifa.

Bibliography

Fossil Cirripedia (1851): A monograph on the fossil Lepadidæ, or, pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain. By Charles Darwin. London: Palaeontographical Society. 1851.

Leftwich, A. W. 1973. A dictionary of zoology. 3d edition. London: Constable.

Living Cirripedia (1851): A monograph of the sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Lepadidæ; or, pedunculated cirripedes. By Charles Darwin. London: Ray Society. 1851.

Living Cirripedia (1854): A monograph of the sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species. The Balanidæ (or sessile cirripedes); the Verrucidæ, etc. By Charles Darwin. London: Ray Society. 1854.

Moore, Charles. 1851. On the Aptychus. Proceedings of the Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society 2: 111–15.

Orbigny, Alcide d’. 1849–52. Cours élémentaire de paléontologie et de géologie stratigraphiques. 3 vols. Paris: Victor Masson.

Summary

Sends an ammonite from the Upper Lias, which has Balanus-like bodies on surface. He wants CD’s interpretation. Discusses possible function of aptychi, siphuncular tube, and operculum in ammonites.

Letter details

Letter no.
DCP-LETT-12055
From
Charles Moore
To
Charles Robert Darwin
Sent from
Bath
Source of text
DAR 171: 233
Physical description
ALS 4pp & ADraft 3pp & ADraft 8pp

Please cite as

Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 12055,” accessed on 20 April 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-12055.xml

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