scholarly journals The artificial production of echinoderm larvæ with two water-vascular systems, and also of larvæ devoid of a water-vascular system

The development of Echinoderms has been characterised, and with justice, as the most remarkable ontogenetic change in the animal kingdom. For the larva is an almost perfect example of a simple, bilaterally symmetrical Metazoon, and the amazing thing is, not that the radially symmetrical adult should develop out of a bilaterally symmetrical larva, but that the axis of symmetry of the radial adult should cut the principal axis of the bilateral larva at an angle which approaches 90°. In the three orders Asteroidea, Ophiuroidea, and Echinoidea, the general anatomy of the early larva is of the same type. In all three groups the larva possesses a simple alimentary canal, consisting of a conical œsophagus opening by a wide mouth, a globular stomach, and a sac-like intestine opening by a narrow anus and directed forwards, so that the whole alimentary canal has the form of a U. On each side of the œsophagus a flattened cœlomic sac is situated; of these, the left sends up a vertical outgrowth termed the pore-canal, which fuses with the dorsal ectoderm, and opens to the exterior by a pore called the madreporic pore. Each cœlomic sac subsequently grows backwards, so that its posterior portion lies beside the stomach, and this portion later becomes separated by a constriction from the rest. Consequently, each sac becomes divided into an anterior and a posterior cœlom.

Parasitology ◽  
1937 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis van den Berghe

During my stay at the Zoological Station of Wimereux, Pas de Calais, France, in August 1934, I made a special study of Protozoa parasitic in marine fishes. The examination of ten specimens of youngRaia batisrevealed a coccidial infection in two individuals, measuring about 25 cm. in length. In one of these the mucus in the terminal portion of the intestine contained a few unsegmented spherical oocysts, with diameters from 24 to 28μ. Sections of different portions of the intestine and of the liver failed to exhibit any stages of schizogony or gametogony, evidently owing to the fact that there was a single infection at the end-phase. However, the second skate showed very numerous unsegmented oocysts in the posterior portion of the alimentary canal (Pl. I, fig. 1). This specimen provided material for the morphological study and biological observations which follow.


Paleobiology ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 364-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keonho Kim ◽  
H. David Sheets ◽  
Robert A. Haney ◽  
Charles E. Mitchell

Traditionally, the distinction between meraspis and holaspis among trilobites has been based on the achievement of the full adult complement of thoracic segments. Using a large sample (over 700 specimens collected from a single bed) we explore the utility of employing the ontogenetic trajectory of the cranidium as an alternative means to differentiate trilobite growth stages. This method is particularly useful for species represented solely by exuviae and disarticulated individuals. We use geometric morphometrics to examine shape change among cranidia ranging in size from 0.9 mm to 11.6 mm in cephalic length. The 114 measured specimens exhibit a rather continuous gradation in size in which no distinct instars are evident.The meraspid and holaspid specimens exhibit allometry when partial warp scores and uniform components of shape derived from thin-plate spline analysis are regressed onto log centroid size. To describe allometric shape change, deformation vectors from the smallest to the largest specimen in both ontogenetic stages are presented in three different superimposition settings by using a new software program. We have concluded that a new superimposition method (the Sliding Baseline Registration) is a useful tool for visualizing allometry in organisms that contain an axis of symmetry. As a result, we conclude that allometry is evident in meraspides and holaspides, but the degree of allometry in holaspides is very small relative to that in meraspides. The boundary between meraspis and holaspis in Triarthrus becki appears to correspond to a large change in the rate of ontogenetic change, but neither to a change in the direction of that trajectory nor to a cessation of ontogenetic change. This boundary also corresponds to a cranidium centroid size that matches well previous determinations that holaspis begins at about 2.8 mm in cephalic length.


Ten almost complete specimens have been studied in detail; nine coming from C. D. Walcott’s original collection, one from the recent re-investigation. The cuticle is preserved as a thin, dark layer; the external surface was apparently smooth, except for striations on the frontal process and adjacent to the mouth. Dorsally on the short cephalon were five eyes, thought to have been compound, the inner and outer pairs pedunculate, the median not stalked. From the anteroventral slope of the cephalon arose a long, flexible frontal process, divisible into a longer, cylindrical proximal portion, and a shorter, broad distal portion. The latter was divided longitudinally, each half bearing a group of long spines, directed inward and forward. The process probably contained a median, fluid-filled canal. The mouth was situated on the vertical, posteroventral wall of the cephalon, the alimentary canal U-shaped. The cylindrical axial region of the trunk tapered slightly backward, the alimentary canal situated ventrally and extending to the tip. The trunk was divided into a main portion of 15 segments, subequal in length, and a short posterior portion lacking segmentation. The junctions between segments gave a limited flexibility to the body. Each segment of the main portion of the trunk bore a pair of thin lateral lobes, directed downward and outward, overlapping, of maximum width medially, the lobes progressively more strongly prolonged backward. Dorsal to lobes 2-15, a paddle-shaped gill was attached near the base of the lobe. The ventral surface of the gill was flat, the outer, dorsal surface bearing imbricated, thin lamellae. The gills lay between adjacent, overlapping lateral lobes. Internally, in the main portion of the trunk what may have been diverticula of the gut are preserved, extending into the proximal portions of the lateral lobes. The posterior portion of the trunk bore three pairs of thin, lobate blades, directed upward and outward, overlapping in the opposite sense to the lateral lobes, the entire structure forming a tail fan. The dorsal margin of the tip of the axial region of the fan appears to have borne a pair of spines. The body is preserved with thin layers of rock between such parts as left and right eyes of a pair, adjacent lateral lobes, between gills and lobes, and between gill lamellae. The parts of the bodies are shown to have been entombed at varied angles to the horizontal bedding planes, and are greatly compressed. It is therefore considered that individuals were trapped in a cloud of sediment in suspension, moving along the sea bottom, and buried as it settled out. If so, the animal was benthonic in habit. Opabinia regalis may have ploughed shallowly in the bottom mud, propelled by movement of the lateral lobes. The eyes are presumed to have been capable of detecting movements in the surrounding waters, and the frontal process to have been used to explore the mud for food and bring it to the backward-facing mouth. The posterior region of the trunk may have aided in producing water currents over the dorsal surface of the body, or have aided in steering if the animal was capable of swimming. No structures that appear to have been antennae, and no other jointed appendages, have been observed, and the gills are not trilobite-like. O. regalis is not considered to have been a trilobitomorph arthiopod, nor is it regarded as an annelid. It may be descended from segmented animals from which arthropod phyla and/or annelids were derived.


Perception ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 97-97
Author(s):  
L Boutsen ◽  
C Marendaz

Two-dimensional (2-D) shape identification is sometimes described in terms of access to structural descriptions based on the extraction of principal axes of elongation and symmetry. In four experiments we examined the effects of implicit axes of elongation and symmetry on visual search for shape orientation, on the basis of previous observations of search asymmetries in the detection of the orientation of line segments. We found search asymmetries in the detection of vertical versus oblique line segments and in 2-D shapes, studied earlier by Quinlan and Humphreys (1993 Perception22 1343 – 1364): search times for a vertical target among oblique distractors (rotated 18° from the vertical) are higher than those for an oblique target among vertical distractors. We found that the search asymmetry in the detection of shape orientation is larger when the shape contains an unambiguous axis of elongation or symmetry. Search asymmetries disappear when the principal axis of the shape is oriented horizontally, or when the shape contains no unambiguous axis of elongation or symmetry. Overall search times tend to decrease when the axis of elongation is aligned with an axis of symmetry. These results suggest that the detection of implicit axes plays a role in the perception of object shape and orientation.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 605-613 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Mohd. Mohsin

Glossogobius giurus is a carnivorous fish with a wide mouth and a short alimentary canal. All the layers of tissue ordinarily found, in the wall of the gut are well developed except in the buccal cavity and the pharynx where the muscular layers are missing.The mucous membrane and the musculature vary greatly in the different regions. The muscularis mucosa is generally wanting. The stratum compactum is not well developed except in the buccal epithelium. There is a true stomach but no pyloric caeca. It is tentatively concluded that fish possess only pepsin-secreting gastric glands. Detailed descriptions are given of typical transverse sections of the various regions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 76-78
Author(s):  
R.R. Thapa

The paper deals with the stability of the solutions of Sitnikov's restricted problem of three bodies if the primaries are triaxial rigid bodies. The infinitesimal mass is moving in space and is being influenced by motion of two primaries (m1>m2). They move in circular orbits without rotation around their centre of mass. Both primaries are considered as axis symmetric bodies with one of the axes as axis of symmetry whose equatorial plane coincides with motion of the plane. The synodic system of co-ordinates initially coincides with inertial system of co-ordinates. It is also supposed that initially the principal axis of the body m1 is parallel to synodic axis and are of the axes of symmetry is perpendicular to plane of motion.Journal of Institute of Science and Technology, 2014, 19(2): 76-78


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