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The legs of Peripatus are unjointed, and have a thin cuticle, but end in a pair of claws, which have evidently arisen as a supporting armature, the result of the act of moving or pulling the body over the uneven surface of the ground.
Fig. 20.—A prothoracic leg of Chironomus larva; and pupa.
Fig. 21.—A, larva of Ephydra californica: a, b, c, pupa.
There is good reason to suppose that such limbs arose from dynamical causes, similar to those exciting the formation of secondary adaptations such as are to be seen in the prop or supporting legs of certain dipterous larvæ, as the single pair of Chironomus (Fig. 20) and Simulium, or the series of unjointed soft tubercles of Ephydra (Fig. 21), etc., which are armed with hooks and claws, and are thus adapted for dragging the insect through or over vegetation or along the ground.
Now by frequent continuous use of such unjointed structures, the cuticle would tend to become hard, owing to the deposit of a greater amount of chitin between the folds of the skin, until finally the body being elongated and homonomously segmented, the movements of walking or running would be regular and even, and we would have homonomously jointed legs like those of the trilobites, or of the most generalized Crustacea and of Myriopoda.