110 



EMBRYOLOGY. 



is comparable with a siphon. The upper arm, which is the neural 

 tube, continues, for a time, to open to the outside world at its 



anterior end. The bent por- 

 tion of the siphon, or the 

 blastoporic region, by means 

 of which the neural and the 

 intestinal tube are united, is 

 called canalis neurentericus 

 (fig. 68 en), a structure which 

 we shall again encounter in 

 the development of the re- 

 maining Vertebrata. 



Simultaneously with the 

 neural tube are developed 



Fig. 69.-Cross section of an Amphioxus embryo, in ,1 , vnirffffp fiprm Ifiiifir* 



which the first primitive segment is being formed, G ^ >^a>y& 



after HATSCHEK. and the chorda dorsollS (fig*. 



ak, Outr, ik, inner, mk, middle germ-layer ; hb, 



hb 



eft 



mt 



at 



epidermis ; mp, medullary plate ; ch t chorda ; 

 *, evagination of the ccelenteron. 



ale -a 



69 and 70). At the front 

 end of the embryo there 

 arise in the roof of the 



ccelenteron close to each other two small evaginations, the body-sacs 

 (mk), which grow dorsally and laterally at either side of the 

 curved medullary groove. 

 These are slowly enlarged, 

 since the process of evagina- 

 tion progresses from the an- 

 terior toward the posterior 

 end of the larva, and finally 

 reaches the blastopore. The 

 narrow strip of the wall of 

 the ccelenteron which is found 

 between them and separating 

 them (its limits marked by 

 two stars * * in figs. 69 and 

 70), and which lies under 



Fig. 70. Cross section of an Amphioxus embryo, 

 in which the fifth primitive segment is i 

 process of formation, after HATSCHEK. 



ak, Outer, ik, inner, mk, middle germ -layer ; mp, 

 medullary plate ; ch, chorda ; *, evaginatiou 

 of the coelenteron ; dh, intestinal cavity ; lh,. 

 body-cavity. 



the middle of the medullary 

 groove, represents the funda- 

 ment of the chorda (ch). 



The primary inner germ- 

 layer therefore has now undergone division into four different parts : 

 (1) the fundament of the chorda (ch), (2) and (3) the cells (mk) which 

 line the two body-sacs (lh) and represent the middle germ-layer, and 



