126 



COMPARATIVE MORPHOLGY OF VERTEBRATES. 



(myoccele) and an inner (splanchnic) and an outer (somatic) wall 

 The cells of the splanchnic wall rapidly increase in number and size, 

 thus tending to obliterate the myoccele. At the same time they be- 

 come rearranged, so that, instead of forming a cubical or columnar 

 epithelium, they have their long axis parallel to the long axis of the body 





FIG. 134. Myo tomes of Amblystoma developing into muscle fibres, ec, ectoderm; my, 

 myoccele; ms, mesenchyme; so, somatic layer which will form corium. 



(fig. 134), each becoming multinucleate. Gradually the mass of the 

 protoplasm becomes converted into contractile substance and the cell 

 is converted into a muscle fibre, the nuclei being in the interior in the 

 lower vertebrates, on the surface of the fibres in the mammals. In this 

 way the splanchnic wall of each myotome is converted into a muscle; 



?nc 



FIG. 135. Diagram of descending myo tomes, c, coelom; g, gonad; m, splanchnic wall 

 of myotome developing into muscles; me, myoccele; p, peritoneum; pd, pronephric duct; 

 so, somatic wall of myotome; v, ventral border of myotome. 



hence there are as many pairs of these primitive muscles as there were 

 of myotomes. The somatic wall of the myotome does not participate 

 in the muscle formation, but is gradually changed into mesenchyme 

 and eventually gives rise to the corium of the skin. Mesenchyme also 

 invades the spaces between the successive myotomes, develops into 



