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<h2>LESSON V.</h2>
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<p><b>SHRIMPS, PRAWNS AND BARNACLES.</b></p>
<p>In nearly every shore-pool you may see Shrimps and Prawns
darting out of sight, and, for every one you see, there are many
more hidden away. These delicate, transparent, lively creatures are
not much like the boiled Shrimps and Prawns of the fish-shop.</p>
<p>They are the prey of so many fish, crabs, and birds, that they
have learnt to "make themselves scarce." Have you ever watched them
in a glass tank, or aquarium? If so, you will know that it is not
easy to see them. In the shore-pools it is harder still.</p>
<p>Some are swaying about in the still, clear water, moving their
long feelers from side to side. Others have burrowed into the sand.
In doing this, they raise a sandy cloud, which settles on them and
hides them. To catch some, you must use a "shrimp-net," for they
can dart across the pool like arrows.</p>
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<center><ANTIMG src="Illus036.png" width-obs="60%" title="THE SHRIMP." alt=""></center>
<h4>THE SHRIMP.</h4>
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<p>Some are Shrimps, and some are Prawns; how can we tell the
difference? When they are boiled the answer is easy. All the
Shrimps turn brown and the Prawns red. (The red "Shrimps" are near
relations of the Prawn.) To tell a live Shrimp from a Prawn, look
at the long pointed beak which juts out from the front of the head.
That of the Prawn is toothed, like a little saw. If the beak is
quite smooth its wearer is a Shrimp.</p>
<p>Until Prawns are grown up, they haunt the sandy shallows with
their cousins the Shrimps. But the larger Prawns live in deeper
water. They are generally caught in traps, as are their relatives,
the crab and lobster.</p>
<p>Now look closely at a Prawn, and try to find how it swims. Turn
it upside down. It has ten legs; and, under each of the horny rings
of its body, you can see a pair of little paddles. They are fringed
with hairs. When the Prawn or Shrimp is not in a hurry, he swims
slowly but surely with the little paddles, or "swimmerets." If any
danger threatens, he uses his tail, in this way:--It is made of
five fringed plates, which, as you can see, spread out or close up,
like a fan. As he doubles up his body, the plates spread themselves
out. They strike the water with great force, and so send the Prawn
or Shrimp quickly <i>backwards</i>. As the body becomes straight
again, the fan closes, ready for another stroke. To move quickly,
the Shrimp or Prawn merely bends his body, then straightens it. The
tail thus becomes a strong oar, driving him backwards with rapid
jerks.</p>
<p>Look now at the Prawn's long, hair-like feelers. There are two
pairs. On one pair are the ears, a special kind of ear for hearing
in water.</p>
<p>You will notice that the Shrimp's eyes are on the end of short
stalks. Each big eye is really a cluster of little eyes, rather
like the "compound eyes" of insects. If you lift up the horny
shield behind the head, you see a row of what look like curly
feathers. These are the breathing gills.</p>
<p>Shrimps carry their eggs about with them; no doubt you have
often found masses of eggs under the Shrimp's body. Each egg is
fastened by a kind of "glue," or else the rapid jerking of the
mother Shrimp would soon loosen the eggs and set them free.</p>
<p>The hard, shelly covering of the Shrimp and Prawn is like the
armour of the crab--it will not stretch in the least. The body is
easily bent, owing to the soft hinges between the hard rings. But
the coat itself will not stretch. Then how do these little
creatures grow? We see small Shrimps and large ones, so grow they
must, in some way.</p>
<p>They are of the same family--the <i>crustacea</i>--as the crab;
and they grow in much the same way. The hard covering gets too
tight for the body inside it. Then it splits across the back. After
much wriggling, the Shrimp appears in a new soft skin. While the
skin is still soft the Shrimp grows very quickly. Crustaceans have
a funny way of growing, have they not? Instead of growing evenly,
little by little, they grow by "fits and starts," a great deal in a
few hours and then not at all.</p>
<p>Besides being good food for us, and for the fish, Shrimps and
Prawns have another use. They are scavengers. They pick to pieces
and eat the vegetable and animal stuff which floats in the sea.
Before it can decay and become poisonous, these useful creatures
use it up as food. Great numbers of Shrimps and Prawns are caught
for our markets. Some are caught by men who push a small net over
the sands near shore, but most are caught by the
<i>shrimp-trawl</i>, a large net cast from a small sailing
vessel.</p>
<p>The rocks, and the wooden piles of the pier, are often covered
with the hard shells known as Barnacles, or Acorn Shells. If you
slip on them with bare feet their sharp edges cut you. Each Acorn
Shell is a little house. Have you ever caught a glimpse of the
animal living inside?</p>
<p>If you will look very carefully, you will see that the Acorn
Shell is made of three-sided pieces, closely joined. There is a
little door at the top, kept tightly closed until the tide comes up
and covers the rocks. Then watch, and you will see a bunch of tiny
feathers appear through a slit in the door. This means that the
animal is hungry, and has put its twelve legs out of doors to catch
a dinner!</p>
<p>This is strange, but true! The Barnacle is always upside down in
its home, and its twelve feathery legs are thrust out of the door
at the top. They make a fine net, in which minute animals are
caught and brought into the mouth below. This funny creature
actually kicks its food into its mouth! If you own a magnifying
glass, you can see this for yourself at the seaside.</p>
<p>You will not be able to see the mouth, however, which is inside
the shell. It is fitted with moving parts, and feelers, like the
mouth of a crab. Also, the Barnacle has a good set of teeth to
grind its food. It has no real eyes, having no use for them. Of
what use are eyes to an animal standing on its head in a small dark
shell! Now and then it casts its coat (like the Crab and Shrimp).
The old coat is rolled up and thrown away outside the door.</p>
<p>Now comes the strangest thing of all. As a baby, the Barnacle is
a free swimming creature. It has three pairs of legs, a tail, a
useful mouth, and one eye. After kicking about in the sea for some
time, and changing its skin, it changes its shape entirely. It now
looks more like a tiny mussel. It has two little "shells," two
eyes, legs, and feelers. Now its swimming days are nearly over, and
it must settle down. It gives up eating, and roves about looking
and feeling for a place to settle on.</p>
<p>Finding a suitable spot, the little animal stands on its head.
Then a kind of glue is formed, which fixes it for life to that
place, head down. The two shells and the two eyes are now thrown
off. The Barnacle quickly builds up a shelly house, and, after a
life of adventure and change, becomes a fixed Barnacle for the rest
of its days.</p>
<p>For many years people knew little of this strange animal. All
its wonderful changes, and the way its body is made, tell us
plainly that the Barnacle is actually first cousin to the Crab,
Lobster, Shrimp and Prawn! It belongs to the class known as the
<i>Crustacea</i>; but, for some reason or other, it has chosen to
live its grown-up life fixed to a rock.</p>
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<p>EXERCISES</p>
<p>1. How does the Shrimp swim?</p>
<p>2. Of what use are Shrimps and Prawns in the sea?</p>
<p>3. How can you tell a live Shrimp from a live Prawn?</p>
<p>4. How does the Barnacle obtain its food?</p>
<p>5. Give the names of five crustaceans.</p>
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