U4 ZOOLOGY. 



The Turbcllaria are hermaphroditic, the ovaries andtestes 

 with the accessory apparatus (Fig. 95) being present in the 

 same individual ; but in many forms the sexes are distinct. 



Little is known of the development of the flat-worms. 

 In a common marine Planarian, Stylochus elliptica (Girard), 

 which is about two centimetres long, and lives tinder stones 

 between tide-marks, north of Cape Cod, the eggs are depos- 

 ited in May and June, in a thin, viscid band, on stones and 

 sea-weeds. The egga undergo total segmentation in four or 

 five days after they are laid. The larva is round, ciliated, 

 with a caudal flagellum. In eight or ten davs after the 



o / 



larva has hatched, it stops swimming about, and becomes a- 

 "mummy-like body," which Girard calls a " chrysalis." 

 In this state it floats about in the water. Its further his- 

 tory is unknown. 



In Leptoplana (Poly cells), according to Keferstein, the 

 yolk undergoes total segmentation as in Stylochus the 

 outer layer of cells forms a blastoderm which surrounds the- 

 more slowly growing cells within. Keferstein describes 

 and figures the various stages by which the spherical cili- 

 ated embryo attains the form of the adult, whose devel- 

 opment seems to be less in the nature of a metamorphosis, 

 than that of Styloclius. 



The Planarians also in some species mul- 

 tiply by fission, and when cut into pieces,, 

 according to H. J. Clark, each piece may 

 eventually become a well-formed Planarian. 

 Clark figures in his " Mind in Xature" two 

 Planarians derived from two sections of 

 Dendroccelum lacteum, which became fully 

 developed within eleven days after the opera- 

 tion. Several Turbellarians are known to> 

 undergo spontaneous fission. 



Catenula lemnce Duges, by transverse dt- 

 Fie.9fi.-'V<w/- v ' s ' on > forms chain-like aggregations, and 

 la <]<,t(r,,a und.-r- a South African species, C. quaterna, of 



goin<* self -division. ' -* 



After schmarda. Sclimarda, has been found by him to have the 

 same habit. Fig. 96 represents two individuals (much: 

 enlarged) in partial division, and a chain of five individ- 



