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THE PEARL
commonly the nuclei of Indian pearls. It is interesting also to learn that Mr. James Hornell (inspector of the pearl banks) finds these worms in another stage in the file-fish, which frequents the banks to prey upon the oysters, and con­fidently expects to find them in the adult stage in the shark, which in turn devours the file-fish.
It is the opinion of Jameson of London and others, that the parasite which causes the forma­tion of pearls in the mussels of Europe is fre­quently the larva of distomum somaterce, from the eider-duck and scoter, and that the larva first inhabits Tapes, or the cockle, before getting into the mussel.
Generally the nuclei appear to be the bodies or eggs of minute parasites—distoma, filaria, bucephalus, etc., and they vary in different localities according to the animal life of the neighborhood. In the still parts of the river Elster, where water-mites (Limnochares ano-dontce) were abundant, Kuchenmeister found that the mollusks contained more pearls.
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