CHAPTER XXII 
INFLUENCE OF EXTERNAL CONDITIONS ON THE LIFE-CYCLE 
OF THE ROTIFER; HYDATINA SENTA 
IN the rotifer Hydatina senta, both parthenogenetic and sexual 
reproduction takes place, and appears to be directly determined 
in part by external conditions; but also in part by an internal 
factor, viz. by the early fertilization of certain females. Maupas 
and later Nussbaum have carried out experiments with this 
form, and while they agree on certain essential points, especially 
in regard to the mode of reproduction depending on an external 
factor, yet Maupas believes the effect is produced by the tem- 
perature, while Nussbaum thinks that the cause of the result 
is the food supply, which may be affected by the temperature 
in the sense that at a higher temperature more food is required 
than at a lower, because the life processes go on faster. 
The males of Hydatina senta are smaller than the females, 
measuring .25 millimeter and the females .75 millimeter. The 
males take no food, and have, in fact, no digestive tract. They 
are not sexually mature when they leave the egg capsule, but the 
sperm ripens during the first day. They live two or three days 
only, but may fertilize several females during that time. The fe- 
males require a great deal of food and will die in two days if 
starved. In five minutes a hungry female will fill her digestive 
tract, and begin to empty it in 20 minutes. Microscopic organ- 
isms are eaten, Euglena being the chief food. 
The females may produce the soft-shelled summer eggs or 
the hard-shelled winter (or resting) eggs. The summer eggs 
develop without fertilization, and may produce either males or 
females, one sex or the other being produced by an individual, 
not both by the same individual. The winter eggs are fertilized ; 
346 
