484 THE ANATOMY OF INVERTEBRATED ANIMALS. 



ambulacral vessel, but is also covered by the superambulacral 

 plate. A neural canal lies between the nerves and the ambu- 

 lacral vessels. The pedicels are tentaculiform, and have no 

 vesicles at tlieir bases. The genital glands are lodged in the 

 disk, and pour their products into the peritoneal cavity, which 

 communicates freely with the exterior by vertically-elongated 

 apertures placed interradially on its margins.^ According to 

 Metschnikoff, Opldolepis squamata is hermaphrodite. 



The early conditions of the embrj^os of most OpJiiuridea 

 are similar to those of other Echinoderms, and acquire the 

 characteristic bilateral ciliated zone ; but in some the embryo 

 does not become an EchinopcEdium^ but passes directly into 

 the adult condition. Thus Krohn discovered that the embryo of 

 Ophiolepis ciliata is developed within the body-cavity of the 

 parent, to which it adheres by a kind of pedicel. Where an 

 Echmopcedium stage exists, the larva is a Fluteus (Fig. 135, 

 C C). The dorsal wall of the body of the embryo exhibits a 



Fig. 140. — A, OphioJejns ciliata, oral ekeleton from within (after Miiller) ; a, dor- 

 sal marginal plates ; b. ventral jjlates : d, vertebral OBbiclcs ; e, iiiteranibulacral 

 pieces of oral an^ile ; /. torus anjiiilaris ; g. aperiurcp lor oral tentacles ; h. posi- 

 tion of nervous collar ; i, impression of circular ambulacral vessel ; k, orifice in 

 the first ambulacnil plate for thetentacnlnr brancli of theoral vessel ; o. jiaiae ang-u- 

 lares. B, Astrophyton, oral skeleton seen from within (.after Miiller): rn m, peris- 

 tomial plates ; other letters as in A. 



median conical outgrowth ; along the course cf the ciliated 

 band symmetrically-disposed processes are developed ; and 



1 Miiller, " Ueber den Bau der Echinodermen " ("Abh. Berl. Akad." 

 1853) ; Teuscher (l. c) ; Simrock, " Anatomic nnd Sclnzoironie der Opinadis 

 Tirens^^ (Zeitschriftfi'ir^viss. Zoologie., 1876). The latter Avriter describes nu- 

 merous apparently cWcal diverticula of the circular ambulacral canal, and of the 

 necks of the Polian vesicles {vasa ambulucralia cavi) which traverse the peri- 

 toneal cavity in all directions. 



