PLarE I. 
Figures of the Living Eggs of Cynthia partita; Maturation and Fertilization. 
Fig. 1.—Unfertilized egg before the fading of the germinal vesicle, showing central mass of gray yolk, 
peripheral layer of yellow protoplasm, test cells and chorion. 
Fig. 2.—Similar egg after the disappearance of the nuclear membrane, showing the spreading of the 
clear protoplasm of the germinal vesicle at the animal pole. 
Fig. 3.—Another egg about five minutes after fertilization, showing the streaming of the peripheral 
protoplasm to the lower pole where the spermatozoon enters, thus exposing the gray yolk 
of the upper hemisphere; the test cells are also carried by this streaming to the lower 
hemisphere. 
Figs. 4 and 5.—Other eggs showing successive stages in the collection of the yellow and elear proto- 
plasm at the vegetal pole; clear protoplasm lies beneath and extends a short distance 
beyond the edge of the yellow cap. 
Figs. 6-10.—Successive stages of the same egg drawn at intervals of about five minutes; viewed from 
the vegetal pole. 1n fig. 6 the area of yellow protoplasm is smallest, and the sperm 
nucleus is a small clear area near its center. Figs. 7-10 show stages in the spreading of 
this yellow protoplasm until it covers nearly the whole of the lower hemisphere; at the 
same time the sperm nucleus and aster move toward one side of the yellow cap and the 
yellow protoplasm begins to collect into a erescent at this side. 
Fig. 11.—Side view of ап egg of about the same stage as fig. 10, showing the eccentric position of the 
sperm nucleus and a small area of clear protoplasm at the upper pole where the polar 
bodies are being formed. 
Fig. 12.—Polyspermic (?) egg, viewed from the vegetal pole, showing four collections of yellow proto- 
plasm around as many sperm (?) nuclei (see p. 24). 
