REDUCTION OF THE CHROMOSOMES 



characterized, especially in the male, by a more or less complete 

 concentration of the chromatin-substance at one side of the nucleus. 

 This stage, to which Moore has given the name synopsis (Fig. 120, A), 

 sometimes occurs when the spireme thread is already split (Ascaris, 

 Lilium), sometimes before the division is visible (insects). In either 

 case the chromatin-segments emerge from the synopsis stage longitudi- 

 nally divided, and in tJie reduced number, a fact which gives ground 

 for the conclusion that the synapsis is in some way concerned with 

 the rearrangement of the chromatin-substance involved in the numer- 

 ical reduction. During the synapsis the nucleolus remains quite 

 distinct from the chromatin, and in many cases it afterward persists 

 beside the tetrads, in the formation of which it takes no part, to be 

 cast out into the cytoplasm (Fig. 124) or to degenerate in situ during 

 the first maturation-division. 



A suggestive phenomena, described by several observers, 1 is the 

 casting out of a large part of the nuclear reticulum of the germinal 



Fig. 137. Types of maturation-spindles in the female. 



A. First polar spindle with tetrads, in Heterocope. [HACKER]. B. Second polar spindle 

 in Triton. [CARNOY and LEBRUN.] C. First polar spindle of Ascaris. [FiJRST.] 



vesicle at the time the polar bodies are formed (Figs. 97, 128). In 

 these cases (Asterias, Polych&rus, Thalassema, Nereis] only a small 

 fraction of the chromatin-substance is preserved to form the chromo- 

 somes, the remainder degenerating in the cytoplasm. 2 



As a final point we must briefly consider the varying accounts of 

 the achromatic maturation-figures in the female already briefly referred 

 to at page 85. In many forms (e.g. in turbellarians, nemertines, anne- 

 lids, mollusks, echinoderms) the polar amphiasters are of quite typical 

 form, with large asters and distinct centrosomes nearly similar to those 

 of the cleavage-figures. In others, however (nematodes, arthropods, 

 tunicates, vertebrates), the polar spindles differ markedly from those 

 of the cleavage-figures, being described by many authors as entirely 

 devoid of asters and even in some cases of centrosomes (Fig. 137). 



1 Cf. Mathevvs (Wilson and Mathews, '95), Gardiner ('98), Griffin ('99). 



2 Cf. the enormous reduction of the chromatin-substance in the elasmobranch egg, p. 338. 



