64 AMPHIBIA 



occasionally postpone their metamorphosis, and also that such 

 Urodela sometimes become adult fur all practical purposes, but 

 retain their gills. 



This retardation, the retention of larval characters beyond the 

 normal ])eriod, was called Neotenie by Kollmann ^ (veo<i, young ; 

 reivw, extend, stretch). He distinguished further between : — 1 . 

 Partial Neoteny, namely, simple retardation of the metamor- 

 phosis beyond the normal period, for instance, the wintering of 

 tadpoles of Felohates fuscvs, Bombinator pachypus, Pelodytefi 

 ■punctata^, Alytes ohstetricam, Hyla arhorea, Rana escidenta, 11. 

 tetn'poraria, Bufo indgaris, and B. oiridis : II. Total Neoteny, 

 where the animal retains its gills, but becomes sexually mature ; 

 hitherto observed in Urodela only, e.g. Triton vidgaris, T. alpes- 

 tris, T. cristatvs, T. hoscai, T. wcdtli and Amblystoma. Inter- 

 mediate stages between these two categories are not uncommon. 



A satisfactory explanation of the meaning of neoteny is beset 

 with difficulties. Some authorities look upon the phenomenon 

 simply as the result of adaptation to the surroundings, which 

 make it advantageous for the creature to retain its larval features. 

 Others think that the surroundings somehow or other retard iJv 

 prevent the assumption of the adult characters. Undoubtedly 

 there are many cases in which larvae have been reared in water- 

 lioles with steep walls, so that they could not change from aquatic 

 to terrestrial life, and it stands to reason that abnormally forced 

 and prolonged use of the gills and of the tail may stimulate these 

 organs into further growth at the expense of the limbs and 

 other organs which are intended for terrestrial life. But not 

 unfrequently typical neotenie and overgrown specimens occur side 

 by side with others which have completed their metamorphosis, 

 and the same is true of larvae of newts which were reared, for 

 experimental purposes, under exactly the same conditions — for 

 instance, in a high-walled glass vessel. 



Weismann tried to explain neoteny as cases of reversion to 

 atavistic ancestral conditions, but this idea is based upon an 

 assumption which is probably wrong. His idea necessitates 

 the supposition that all the Amphibia were originally gill- 

 breathing, aquatic, and limbless animals, and that every feature 

 seen in a larva must necessarily indicate an ancestral phylo- 

 genetic stage. It is, on the contrary, much more probable that 

 ' J'er/i. Gcs. Basel, vii. 1882, p. 387. 



