500 



ZOOLOGY 



SECT. 



in Bonellia. The ordinary large individuals (Fig. 390), to various 

 points in the structure of which reference has been already made, 

 are females. The single, greatly enlarged nephridium contains a 

 spacious cavity, which has been termed the uterus. In the 

 interior of this is found the very small male (Fig. 397), which is 

 not unlike a Planarian in appearance: it is compressed and covered 

 with cilia, with a pair of ventral hook-like settle. In the interior 

 of the body bundles of dorso- ventral muscular fibres placed at 

 regular intervals give an appearance of rudimentary segmenta- 

 tion. The alimentary canal is vestigial and completely closed, 



ant.nep 



ml.vess 



ant.nepn 



-post.neph 



-ne.co 



KM;. 3;i.j. Echiurus, internal organisation, an. 

 anus; ui>.t. ncjih. anterior nei>hridia ; int. in- 

 testine; int. rests, intestinal vessel; c,s. <eso- 

 phagus ; pott. n</>/<. posterior nephridia ; vent, 

 vess. ventral vessel. (After Greef.) 



Fi<;. S'.Mi.- Echiurus, general out- 

 line of the animal, with the 

 nervous system (diagrammatic). 

 ne. co. nerve-cord ; nc. ri, nerve- 

 ring. (After Greef.) 



both mouth and anus being absent. There is a pair of 

 nephridia placed posteriorly. The sperms, developed from 

 modified ccelomic cells, reach the exterior through a duct, dilated 

 externally into a vcsicula serninalis, and opening internally into 

 the coelome by a funnel-shaped aperture. In Hamingia, also, there 

 are imperfectly developed males which are lodged in the nephridia 

 of the female. 



Development.- -The larva of Echiurus (Fig. 398) has a well- 

 developed prc-oral or prostomial lobe with pre-oral and post- 

 oral circlets of cilia, and in other respects closely resembles the 

 trochophore embryo of a Ghaetopod, The posterior part of the 



