528 



COMPARATIVE ANATOMY 



The two lateral mesoderm vesicles lengthen and fuse in front of and ahove the 

 mouth, and, further, surround the intestine. On the left vesicle (liydro-enteroccel 

 vesicle) a transverse constriction appears, which finally divides it into two vesicles, 

 an anterior, which at its posterior end opens outward through the stone canal and 

 water pore, and a posterior (Fig. 433). 



Fxirther development of the hydrocoel in Asterina gibbosa. — After the seventh 

 day the five outgrowths of the hydrociel (Figs. 437-440) become trilobate, and 

 later have five lobes. The unpaired terminal lobe of each outgrowth is the rudiment 

 of the terminal tentacle, the jiaired lobes are tlie rudiments of the first two pairs 



2~ 



Fig. 43l!.— Larva of 

 Asterias vulgaris, about 

 four days old, from tlit- 

 dorsal side (after Field). 

 1, Circuiiioral ciliated 

 band ; 2, u.outh ; 3, right 

 and left hydro-enterocoel 

 vesicles, with their hydro- 

 pores (4); 5, (Bsophagus; 0, 

 mesenchyniatous muscle 

 fibres ; 7, stomach intes- 

 tine ; 8, anus. Tlieinontli 

 and the anus lie on the 

 side turned away from 

 the reader. 



Fig. 433.— Dorsal aspect of a 

 Bipinnaria larva to illustrate the 

 developmentofthehydro-enterocoel 

 (after Bury). 1, Larval oesophagus ; 

 2, left anterior enterocoel ; 3, hydro- 

 poi'e ; 4, rudiment of the hydrocoel ; 

 5, stomach intestine ; (3, terminals ; 



7, left posterior enterocoel vesicle ; 



8, dorsal mesentery ; !>, right posterior 

 enterocoel vesicle ; 10, inadreporite ; 



11, blood vesicle, pulsating vesicle ; 



12, right anterior enterocal. 



Fig. 434.- Asterina gib- 

 bosa, larva six days old, 



horizontal lonj^itudinal sec- 

 tion from the ventral side 

 (after Ludwlg). The hydro- 

 coel (7) has become con- 

 stricted posteriorly from the 

 left enteroccel. An out- 

 growth of the intestine (S) is 

 the first indication of the 

 future (esophagus of the 

 Asteroid. 



of tube-feet. Each new pair of feet arises between the terminal tentacle and the 

 foot last formed. 



The five outgrowths of the hydrocod become outwardly visible, bulging out the 

 body. On the left side of the seven-days-old larva there are thus visible five flat 

 protuberances arranged in a convex arch directed upward and backward ; these 

 protuberances become more marked on the eighth day, and are then divided either 

 into three or five lobes each (Figs. 438-440). These are the first indications of the 

 young Asteroid, the rudiments of its ambulacral arms. 



The rudiment of the definitive oesophagus ajiijcars in the form of a bulging of 

 the left side of the archenteron, that facing the hydroccel. This arises in the region 

 which corresponds with the anterior part of tiie gastrula intestine (Fig. 434, 8), and 

 has nothing to do with the larval oesophagus. This latter degenerates on tlie 

 eighth or ninth day, and the larval anus also disappears. 



