PHYSIOLOGICAL KITKCTS OF LACK <>r OXYGEN H>i 



If I],,, eggs have divided into two or four cells, and the 

 o\\ gen is thru removed completely from them, the cell-limits 

 l>ecome indistinct in about three hours. The cells thru 

 absorb water in consequence of the elTects of lack of oxygen. 

 The volume of the eggs increases, and the space within the 

 ineinbrane is soon filled uniformly with the protoplasm of 

 the cleavage-cells. The outlines of the cell then become 

 invisible, and the egg looks as if it had never divided. If 

 oxygen is readmitted, the eggs cleave anew, if too long a 

 time is not allowed to elapse. In many cases the old lines 

 of cleavage reappear, but this is by no means always the case. 

 The changes remind one of those in the eggs of Ctenola- 

 brus, only that they occur more rapidly and more distinctly 

 in the latter than in the eggs of the sea-urchin. 



The surface of the cleavage-cells of the Arbacia is pig- 

 meuted, and the pigment granules move upon the surface of 

 the egg during cleavage. I do not doubt that by more care- 

 ful study phenomena similar to those observed in the cleavage 

 of the Ctenolabrus and the Fundulus eggs will be observed 

 in the case of Arbacia also. 



The fact has been mentioned that, in general, the cleavage 

 of the Fundulus egg without oxygen occurs not only just as 

 rapidly as under normal conditions, but even a little more 

 rapidly, as stated in my paper on "The Kelative Sensitiveness 

 of the Fundulus Embryos in the Different Stages of Devel- 

 opment against Lack of Oxygen/' In that article, however, 

 I attributed this difference in time to the increase in tempera- 

 ture Ill-ought about, in sealing up the test -tubes used in the 

 experiment-. Since I again noticed these changes this year, 

 first in the Ctenolabrus egg, and later in the Arbacia egg, 

 in an Engelmann chamber where there was. therefore, no 

 considerable increase in heat- -I decided to determine by 

 more careful experiments whether this difference in time is 



indeed dependent entirely upon differences in temperature. 



