AQUATIC ANIMALS, animals living in or about water. It is worth noting that the home of almost all the simpler animals is distinctly and necessarily aquatic. While a few of the protozoa, such as one of the amcebaa, occur in damp places on land, or within other organ isms, the vast majority live freely in the water, and the same is true of the sponges, coelenterates, and echinoderms. Although the great majority of crusta ceans are aquatic, a few, such as the wood-louse and land crab, are modified for life ashore. The crowd of insects, spiders, and myriapods are of course terrestrial or aerial, though here also the habits of some adult forms, and the life of some of the young are distinctly aquatic. Among mollusks also there is an equally familiar occurrence of both aquatic and terrestrial habit, while nu merous forms illustrate the transition from the former to the latter. The as cidians are exclusively marine. Some fishes have a limited power of life out of the water, the double-breathing dipnoi being in this connection especially in structive. Among many amphibians, the transition from water to terra firma is seen in the individual life-history, when the fish-like gilled tadpole becomes the lunged gill-Iess frog. The instance of the gilled axolotl becoming, in the absence of sufficient water, the gill-less amblystoma, forcibly illustrates the importance of the medium as a factor in evolution. Among reptiles there are numerous aquatic forms—chelonians, lizards, snakes, and crocodiles, though the absence of any gill respiration marks the progressive general adaptation to terrestrial life. While an
emphatically terrestrial amphibian like the tree frog seeks a watery hole for the rearing of the young gill-breathing tad poles, the habit is reversed in such rep tiles as the sea turtle, which, having re turned to the more primitive aquatic home, yet revisits the land for egg-laying purposes. Among mammals the sea cow, the seal, and the whale are familiar illus trations of very different types which have returned to the primeval watery home and aquatic habit, with consequent change of structure.
In the more thoroughly aquatic ani mals, which have remained in the prim itive environment, and have not merely returned to it, the blood is usually puri fied by being spread out on feathery gills which catch the oxygen dissolved in the water; while in terrestrial forms which have betaken themselves to an aquatic life, the ordinary direct "air breathing" is still accomplished at the surface of the water, or, in some isolated cases of insects and spiders, by means of the air entangled in their hairs, or even con veyed into their submerged homes. The genuinely aquatic animals are known to have a body temperature not much higher than that of the surrounding medium, and often survive even the freezing of the water; while the higher warm-blooded vertebrates which have re turned to the aquatic habit, various modi fications, such as thick fur and plumage, waterproof varnish, formation of blub ber, serve as protections against the cold.