XVI 



ECHINODERMATA 



551 



substratum by the secretion of the prae-oral pit. At first it lies 

 with its length parallel to the substratum, but it soon becomes 

 erected so as to stand at right angles to the substratum. The stomo- 

 daeum becomes completely closed from the exterior, and so resembles 

 the aniniotic space of the Echinopluteus 

 larva ; it rotates backwards along the 

 ventral surface till it comes to occupy 

 the posterior pole of the larva, the body 

 of which becomes differentiated into a 

 narrow anterior portion, the stalk, and 

 a posterior broader part, the cup or 

 calyx. This calyx becomes pentagonal 

 in section, and so the radii of the 

 Crinoid are marked out, and the lobes 

 of the hydrocoele soon come to corre- 

 spond with the sides of the pentagon. 



The fixation pit flattens out to 

 form a fixing disc, which becomes sup- 

 ported by a calcareous foot-plate. The 

 cilia are shed, and the cells which 

 formed the ciliated bauds secrete a 

 cuticle and then retreat from the surface 

 to some extent, touching it only by 

 thin prolongations ; processes from the 

 mesenchyme cells extend up between 

 them and it soon becomes absolutely 

 impossible to discriminate between 

 ectoderm and mesenchyme. The same 

 fate befalls the ectoderm cells forming 

 the intermediate areas, indeed it some- 

 times happens to them before fixation. 

 The ectoderm lining the stomodaeum, 



which has now become the closed FK) - 407.-Fixed larva of 

 vestibule, however, undergoes none of 

 these changes. Where it covers the 



sacc 



Ipc 



mtl 

 'torn 



az.t 



osacea, three and a half days after 

 hatching, viewed from the side 

 decalcified. (After Seeligcr. ) 



and the tentacles it is a -M, axial 01 -an containing the -enital 



thick SyilCytium, elsewhere it is a thin stolon; as./, axial band of fibres surround- 



1 f 41 "if i n '"K the chambered ornan ; az.t, azy-mis 



layer Ot flattened CellS. primary tentacle or the hyilrocoele ; int. 



The number of tentacles becomes rudiment or the intestine; int.t, inter- 

 raised to twenty-five by the appearance dial tentacles; oes _ oesophagus; pt 



. J ' t r _ paired tentacles; </r, rudiment ot sac- 



ot another pair in each radius, situated c,,ius; r .p.c, n.-ht posterior coeiom; st, 

 below those already formed and ap- stomach; stom, lan-ai stomodaeum now 



;i i ,1 o j i become the vestibule. 



parently springing directly from the 



hydrocoele. The first pair of tentacles also come to spring directly 

 from the hydrocoele ring, by the absorption into this ring of the base 

 of the primary tentacle of which they were outgrowths. All these 

 tentacles become long and protrude into the vestibule, but the last 

 formed are shorter and not so extensile as the first formed. All the 



