xvi ECHINODERMATA 543 



sacs, whilst that of Auricularia is filled with mesenchyme. The 

 mode of segmentation of the coelom is widely different in Auricularia 

 from what it is in Bipinuaria. On the other hand, the retention of 

 the larval mouth and its shift towards the left, as seen in Holo- 

 thuroidea, is not found in Asteroidea or Echinoidea, and is paralleled 

 only by the development of the Ophiuroidea. 



The growth of the buccal tentacles into the atrium, i.e. the larval 

 stomodaeum, recalls what occurs in Ophiuroidea and in Echinoidea, 

 if our conception of the amniotic space of the latter as a separated 



v 



cole 



calc 



FIG. 402. Post-larval stage iu the development of Cucutnaria suxieola viewed 

 from the side. (Original.) 



b.t, buccal tentacles ; t.f, paired tube feet ; r, valves into which the atrium splits. 



portion of the stomodaeum be admitted ; but there is an important 

 difference, for the primary tentacles of Asteroidea, Ophiuroidea, and 

 Echinoidea are the lips of the radial canals, but the tips of the radial 

 canals of Holothuroidea do not protrude into the atrium, only their 

 basal branches, the buccal tentacles, do so. More light on this interest- 

 ing difference will be obtained when the complete history of Cucumaria 

 saxicola is worked out. This species, which is very closely allied 

 to Cucumaria planci, has been reared through the metamorphosis 

 by the authorities of the Plymouth Biological Station. 



The adult anatomy of a Holothuroid suggests the view that the 

 group may have been derived from early Echinoidea in which the test 



