DEVELOPMENT OF ASCIDIANS. 



395 



(Fig. 138, A, h) ; whether the primitive opening (Fjg. 386*, 

 A, a) is closed or not, KowaleTsky says is an interesting 

 question. According to analogy with many other animals 

 it probably closes. 



The larva hatches in from 

 forty-eight to sixty hours af- 

 ter the beginning of segmen- 

 tation, and is then of the 

 form indicated by Pig. 386' 

 (copied with some additions 

 and omissions from Kupifer's 

 figure, being partly diagram- 

 matic). This anatomist dis- 

 covered in the larva of ^s- 

 cidia canina, which is more 

 transparent than Kowalev- 

 sky's Phallusia larva, not 

 only a central nervous cord 

 overlying the chorda dorsalis 

 and extending well into the 

 tail, while in the body of the 

 larva , it becomes broader, 

 club-shaped, and surrounds 

 the sensitive cavity (a), but 

 he also detected three pairs 

 of spinal nerves (s) arising at 

 regular intervals from; the 

 spinal cord (A, h') and dis- 

 tributed to the muscles (not 

 represented in the figure) of 

 the tail ; Kupffer calls / the 

 middle and g the lower brain- 

 ganglion. The pharynx (5), 

 or respiratory sac, is now 

 very large ; it opens pos- 

 teriorly into the stomach and 

 intestine {i) ; x represents 

 one of the three appendages 

 itself to some object when about to change into the adult. 



Fig, 388*.— Larval Ascidian. a, sense 

 cavity containing the eye ; 6, pharynx or 

 c, notochord ; 



respiratory sac : 

 uditory org 



£, supposed 

 auditory organ ; /, middle, g, lower brain- 

 ganglion \ h, h, spinal cord ; «, «, «, three 

 setff of spinai nerves; i, intestine; t^ 

 body-wall, consisting of epithelial cells.— 

 Copied with some changes from Eupfler, 



by which the larva fastens 



