APPENDIX D. 



OX THE ORIGIN OF THE VERTEBRATE TYPE. 



\^Wh€n studiiing the development of the vertebrate skeleton, there 

 occurred to me the following idea respecting the possible origin of the 

 notochord. 1 was eventually led to omit the few pages of Appendix in 

 which I had expressed this idea, because it was unsupported by develop- 

 mental evidence. The developmental evidence recently discovered^ how- 

 ever, has led Professor Haeckel and others to analogous views respecting 

 the affiliation of the Yertebrata 07i the Molluscoida. Having fortu- 

 nately preserved a prooj of the suppressed pages, I am able now to 

 add them. With the omission of a superfluous paragraph, they are 

 reprinted verbatim from this p^'t' oof which dates back to the autumn oj 

 1865, at which time the chapter on " The Shapes of Vertebrate 

 Skeletons^ was written. — December, 1869.] 



The general argument contained in Chap. XVI. of Part lY., I 

 have thought it undesirable to implicate v/ith any conception more 

 speculative than those essential to it ; and to avoid so implicating 

 it, I transfer to this place an hypothesis respecting the derivation 

 of the rudimentary vertebrate structure, which appears to me 

 worth considering. 



Among those molluscoid animals with which the lowest verte- 

 brate animal has sundry traits in common, it very generally happens 

 that while the adult is stationary the larva is locomotive. Tho 

 locomotion of the larva is effected by the undulations of a tail In 

 shape and movement one of these young Ascidians is not altogether 

 unlike a Tadpole. And as the tail of the Tadpole disappears 

 when its function comes to be fulfilled by limbs ; so the Ascidiaii 

 larva's tail disappears w^hen fixation of the larva renders it uselebs. 

 This disappearance of the tail, however, is not without exception. 

 The Appendicidaria is an Ascidian which retains its tail through- 

 out life; and by its aid continues throughout life to swim about. 

 Now this tail of the App)endicularia has a very suggestive structure. 

 It is long, tapering to a point, and flattened. I'rom end to end 

 there runs a mid-rib, which appears to be an imbedded gelatinous 

 rod, not unlike a notochord. Extendinir alonjr the two sides of 



