ECHINODERMATA 443 



In the metamorphosis of the Spatavgoid Phitetis into the sea-urchin 

 the invagination is said by Metschnikoff to close. At the bottom of it 

 the earliest fundament of the sea-urchin then makes its appearance. 

 Furthermore the " amnion " is said to become detached from the larval 



I kin. In the protrusion of the feet the amnion, as well as part of the 

 irval skin, would therefore have to be broken through. 

 Crinoidea. — We left the larva of Antedon rosacea at a 

 tage in which the nearly ovate form exhibited slight curv- 

 ing toward the ventral side. The further development is 

 characterized by the fact that the larva abandons its free 

 life and grows into an attached stalked form. It therefore 

 passes through a stage in which it resembles a stalked 

 Crinoid. This is known as the pentacrinoid stage. Traces 



d^^'^-X-'^/^ 



^^ 



Fig. 216.— Young sea-urchin {Avbacia "[ivsiMlo&o) with degenerated Pluteus arms 

 attached (after Joh. Mullbb). /, feet; P, pedicellariaB; ^i, spines. 



of this stage are already shown in the free-swimming larva 

 through the fundaments of the skeleton, which make their 

 appearance in the mesenchymatous tissue of the larva. 

 They are first seen as small granules, which, however, soon 

 enlarge into triradial and quadriradial forms, and finally 

 become fenestrated plates (Fig. 217). Two rows of five 

 plates each can be distinguished, — the oraXia and hasalia con- 

 stituting the calyx,— and a piece lying below these, the future 

 terminal plate of the stem (Figs. 217, 221, and 222, p. 450). 

 According to Bury, it is this plate of the skeleton which first 

 makes its appearance deep in the body of the larva. Inas- 



