It is well known that several species of amphibia, especially those of the genus Triturus, can regenerate a lens after removal of the original lens from the eye. In most of these species the regenerate develops from the iris (Reyer, 1954), but in larval Xenopus laevis (Overton &Freeman, 1960; Freeman & Overton, 1961, 1962; Freeman, 1963; Campbell, 1963) and possibly in early embryonic stages of Hynobius unnangso (Ikeda, 1936, 1939) the regenerating lens can be formed from corneal tissue. The morphological changes associated with regeneration of the lens from the cornea in X. laevis have been fully described by Freeman (1963), who has shown that the regenerate develops from the inner cell layer of the outer, or ectodermal, cornea, appearing initially as a small clump of cells in the midpupillary region. This aggregate organizes into a vesicle, from the posterior wall of which the primary lens fibres are formed.