PHYHTM CHORDATA 



17 



d'ujmata (Fig. 7\S,. •ilit/m.) armngod m transverse rows. Through 

 these the cavity of the pharynx couunmiieates with the atrial or 

 peribranchial cavity,^ which complete!}' surrounds it except aloiigone 

 side. The edges of the stigmata are beset with numerous strong- 

 cilia, the action of which is to drive currents of water from the 

 pharynx into the atrial cavity. It is to the movements of these cilia 

 lining the stigmata that are due the currents of water alreadj' 

 mentioned as flowing into the oral and out of the atrial apei'tures, 

 the ciliarj' action drawing a current in through the oral aperture, 

 driving it through the stigmata into the atrial cavit}^, whence it 

 reaches the exterior through the atrial aperture. The stigmata 

 (Fig. 717) are all vertical in position; those of the same row are 

 placed close together, separated only by narrow vertical bars ; 

 neighbouring rows are separated by somewhat thicker horizontal 

 bars; in all of these bars run blood-vessels. E.'itending across the 

 atrial cavity from the bod}'- 



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p 



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Fjc. 717, — Ascidia, ti single mcsli of the branchial 

 sac, seen from the inside, /. /, internal longi- 

 tndinal bar; I. v. longitvidinal vessel; v- I' • 

 papilltii i.irojccting inwards from the branchial 

 bar ; ,s^;/. stigma ; tr. transverse vessel. (After 

 Hcrdman,) 



wall to the wall of the 

 pharynx are a number of 

 bands of vascular meso- 

 dermal tissue, the con- 

 ncdivcs. 



It has been already men- 

 tioned that the atrial cavity 

 does not completely sur- 

 round the pharynx on one 

 side. This is owing to the 

 fact that on the side in 

 cjuestion, which is ventral 

 in position, the wall of the 

 pharynx is united with the 

 mantle along the middle 

 line (Fig. 719). Along the line of adhesion the inner surface of 

 the pharynx presents a thickening in the form of a pair of longi- 

 tudinal folds separated by a groove : to this structure, consisting 

 of the two ventral longitudinal folds with the groove between 

 them, the term endostyle end is applied. The cells covering the 

 endo.style are large cells of two kinds — ciliated celts and (jland- 

 cells—t\\e former beset at their free ends with cilia, the action ot 

 which is to drive floating particles that come within their influence 

 outwards towards the oral aperture, the latter secreting and dis- 

 charging a viscid and mucous matter. Anteriorly the endostyle 

 is continuous with a ciliated ridge which runs circularly round the 

 anterior end of the pharynx. In front of this circular ridge, and 



1 A distinction is sometimes made between the lateral parts of tlii^s space 

 (peribranchial cavitiex, right and left) and the median unpaired (dorsal) part, 

 {atrial cavity, or cloaca), in which the two peribranchial cavities coalesce, and 

 which leads to the exterior throngh the atrial apertnre. 



VOL. 11 ^ 



