PKOJMORPHOLOGICAL RELATIOXS OP CLEAVAGE 



383 



the narrow end, according to Watase, representing the dorsal aspect, 

 the broad end the ventral aspect, the flattened side the posterior 

 region, and the more convex side the anterior region. All the eaj'ly 

 cltavage-fiirroivs are bilaterally arranged with respect to the pla?ie of 



a 



Fig. 180. — Eggs of the insect Corixa. [Metschnikoff.] 

 A. Early stage before formation of the embryo, from one side. B. The same viewed in the 

 plane of symmetry. C. The embryo in its final position. 



a. anterior end; p. posterior; / left side, r. right; t^. ventral, d. dorsal aspect. (These letters 

 refer to \hc final position of the embryo, which is nearly diametrically opposite to that in which it 

 first develops) ; m. micropyle; near/ is the pedicle by which the egg is attached. 



symmetry in the undivided egg; and the same is true of the later 

 development of all the bilateral parts. 



Scarcely less striking is the case of the insect Qgg, as has been 

 pointed out especially by Hallez, Blochmann, and Wheeler (Figs. 

 62, 180). In a large number of cases the egg is elongated and 



