54 REPRODUCTION AND LIFE HISTORY. 



which may befall the " body " which bears them. And, 

 finally, in the mixture of two units of living matter which 

 have had different histories, an opportunity for new permuta- 

 tions and combinations, in other words, of variation, is 

 supplied. Thus it is not surprising to find that the asexual 

 method of liberating buds has been replaced in most 

 animals by the more economical and advantageous process 

 of sexual reproduction. 



SUMMARY OF MODES OF REPRODUCTION. 



A. In Single-celled Animals (Protozoa). 



(1) The almost mechanical rupture of an amoeboid cell, which has 



become too large for physiological equilibrium. 



(2) The discharge of numerous superficial buds at once (e.g. Arcel/a 



and Pelomyxa). 



(3) The formation of one bud at a time (very common). 



(4) The ordinary division into two daughter cells at the limit of 



growth. 



(5) Repeated divisions within limited time and within limited space 



(a cyst). This results in what is called spore-formation, 

 "free-cell formation," "endogenous multiplication" (e.g. in 

 Sporozoa). 



B. In Many-celled Animals (Metazoa). 



(Asexual. ) 



(a} The separation of a clump of body cells, e.g. from the surface of 



some Sponges. (A crude form of budding. ) 



(/)} The formation of definite buds which may or may not be liberated. 

 ((} Various forms of fission and fragmentation. 



(Sexual.} 



(a) The liberation of cells from a simple Metazoon, in which there is 

 so little division of labour that the distinction between body 

 cells and reproductive cells is not marked. (Hypothetical.) 



(/>) The liberation of special reproductive or germ cells, which have 

 not taken part in the formation of the body, and which retain 

 the essential qualities of the original germ cell from which the 

 parent arose. These special germ cells the ova and sperma- 

 tozoa are normally united in fertilisation, but some animals 

 have (parthenogenetic) ova which developed without being 

 fertilised. 



Evolution of sex. A further problem is to account for 

 the two facts (a) that most animals are either males or 



