EaGS 



31 



a 



climbs the stem of a submerged plant and puts an Qgg 

 on each stem or leaf as she goes — one for each leaf ; 

 but the axolotl swims over and among the plants and 

 may put more than one of her Hat, buttonlike eggs, 



I 



^ •• -f^fr 





Fig. 16.— Eggs of different animals, showing variety in external 

 appearance, a, egg of bird ; &, eggs of toad ; c, egg of fish ; d, egg 

 of butterfly ; e, eggs of katydid on leaf ; /, egg-case of skate. 



all in a row, upon the stem. The Congo snake [Am- 

 phiuma) lays its eggs in a string in the water, then 

 coils its long body about them and bunches them into 

 a circular mass. So also the spotted triton (or spotted 

 salamander) bunches its eggs. The more land-haunt- 



