CHAPTER III 



THE GERM-CELLS 



" Not all the propjeny of the primary impregnated germ-cells are required for the forma- 

 tion of the liudy in all animals; certain of the derivative germ-cells may remain unchanged 

 and become included in that body which has been composed of their metamorphosed and 

 diversely combined or confluent brethren; so included, any derivative germ-cell may com- 

 mence and repeat the same processes of growth by imbibition and of propagation by spon- 

 taneous fission as those to which itself owed its origin; followed by metamorjihoses and 

 combinations of the germ-masses so produced, which concur to the development of another 

 individual." RlCJiAKU UWEN.i 



" Es theilt sich demgemass das befruchtete Ei in das Zellenmaterial des Individuums und 

 in die Zellen fiir die Erhaltung der Art." M. NUbSBAUM.'^ 



The germ from which every living form arises is a single cell, de- 

 rived by the division of a parent-cell of the preceding generation. 

 In the unicellular plants and animals this fact appears in its simplest 

 form as the fission of the entire parent-body to form two new and 

 separate individuals like itself. In all the multicellular types the 

 cells of the body sooner or later become differentiated into two groups, 

 which as a matter of practical convenience may be sharply distin- 

 guished from one another. These are, to use Wcismann's terms : (i) 

 the somatic cells, which are differentiated into various tissues by 

 which the functions of individual life are performed and which col- 

 lectively form the ** body," and (2) \hQ (^ej'm-cells, which are of minor 

 significance for the individual life and are destined to give rise to 

 new individuals by detachment from the body. It must, however, be 

 borne in mind that the distinction between germ-cells and somatic 

 cells is not absolute, as some naturalists have maintained, but only 

 relative. The cells of both groups have a common origin in the 

 parent germ-cell ; both arise through mitotic cell-division during the 

 cleavage of the ovum or in the later stages of development ; both have 

 essentially the same structure and both may have the same power of 

 development, for there are many cases in which a small fragment 

 of the body consisting of only a few somatic cells, perhaps only of 

 one, may give rise by regeneration to a complete body. The dis- 

 tinction between somatic and germ-cells is an expression of the 



1 Parthenogenesis, p. 3, 1849. 



2 Arch. Mik. Anat., XVIIL, p. 112, 1880. 



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