scholarly journals V. On the early development of cirripedia

During a short stay at Plymouth, in 1889, I was engaged in studying certain points in the anatomy of Cirripedia; finding, however, that a knowledge of the embryology was necessary in order to arrive at a complete understanding of the adult structure, I became wishful to investigate the life-history of some one member of the group. This I had an opportunity of doing at Naples, where I was appointed to occupy the Cambridge University Table at the Zoological Station for a period of six months, subsequently increased to nine. I here succeeded in obtaining a practically complete series of stages of Balanus perforatus , Bruguiere, as well as many stages in other members of the group. Though a number of able observers have occupied themselves with the embryology of Cirripedes, yet, owing to lack of opportunity, and to the difficulty of obtaining complete series of developmental stages, as well' as to the inherent difficulties in the subject, much remained to be done in this line. Willemoes-Suhm alone, with the advantages afforded by his position during the Challenger Expedition, has hitherto obtained a complete series of stages of any one form, but he failed to trace the history of the earlier stages, and in the later, limited himself to the appearance of fresh and spirit specimens, as seen without cutting sections. In fact the method of sections has been little applied to the development of Cirripedes, and not at all to the earlier stages. There is, therefore, little apology needed for an account embracing the results obtained by the employment of some of the more modern methods of embryological study.

1974 ◽  
Vol 106 (8) ◽  
pp. 785-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. S. Olton ◽  
E. F. Legner

AbstractThe synonymy, distribution, host range, and life history of the gregarious larval–pupal parasitoid Tachinaephagus zealandicus Ashmead, is discussed. Laboratory studies of its biology were conducted at 25° ± 2 °C using Musca domestica L. as host. Its developmental stages are described. Under laboratory conditions its life cycle lasted 23–27 days. Parasitoid development accelerated with higher average densities per host. Single standardized hosts produced 3–18 adult parasitoids. Mated females provided with hosts lived 50.4–67.2 h. The average length of the reproductive period and number of hosts parasitized were independent of host density; however, the average number of eggs deposited per host increased at lower host densities. Adult emergence displayed circadian rhythmicity independent of photoperiod over 3+ days.


1991 ◽  
Vol 7 (25) ◽  
pp. 77-96
Author(s):  
Richard Andrews

The regular community drama activity of the village of Monticchiello in Italy has been pursued for nearly a quarter of a century, but is still little known abroad. A full study of the phenomenon is as much a study of the community, past and present, as it is a piece of theatrical analysis, in the area where there is a complete interlock between social history and the theatrical activity which a society produces. Since the work and history of the Teatro Povero have too many ramifications for everything to be summarized or even alluded to in one article, Richard Andrews here sets out to introduce the subject to students of theatre ‘by example’ – aiming to dig a single trench into the strata, in order to convey the outlines of the subject, hopefully without damage to the evidence needed for a more complete survey. Richard Andrews is Professor of Italian at Leeds University, having previously taught at Swansea and Kent. For the past fifteen years his research interests have been mainly concentrated on theatrical material, and he is currently preparing a study of sixteenth-century Italian comedy for Cambridge University Press. His regular contact with Monticchiello dates from 1983, and has been supported by a systematic analysis of all the texts produced there since 1967.


1905 ◽  
Vol 51 (212) ◽  
pp. 1-51
Author(s):  
W. Lloyd Andriezen

Science, whose high aim it is to investigate Nature, to under stand her secret workings, and thus to win for man the mastery of Nature, must set out with the conviction that Nature is intelligible, comprehensible, and conquerable. In the domain of biological science the problem of heredity occupies a position of great importance, one full of interest to every student of life. For the serious thinker who has not only looked backwards and studied the past of the human race but is inspired by ideals and desires for its future good, the subject of heredity provides an inspiring theme for contemplation and study. The development of our knowledge and the history of human endeavours to reach a complete understanding of the phenomena and conditions of heredity form one of the most interesting chapters in human evolution. Theories of heredity, like theories regarding other phenomena of life, have been expressed in three sets of terms: theological, metaphysical, and scientific. It required no skilled observation of early man to see that in the act of fecundation the male furnished the seminal substance, whereas the female seemed to furnish nothing except the receptacle or “mould,” in the form of the womb, within which the fótus was formed. Thus, what was more natural than to suppose that heredity was solely paternal, that the male element was the germ or seed, and the female organs the soil, in which, by some mysterious process, growth and development of the germ took place. This view of heredity has been expounded in the Manava Dharma-Sastra, one of the ancient sacred books of the Hindus (Delage, L'hérédité, 1903, p. 380). The same view, more or less modified according to the prevailing state of knowledge, was current among the ancient Greeks (Eristratos, Diogenes, and others). Galen and the school of philosophers of Alexandria also upheld the doctrine of the paternal factor of heredity, and thus constituted themselves the school of the Spermatists. Spermatist views prevailed for many centuries, and when towards the close of the seventeenth century Leeuwenhoeck discovered the presence of spermatozoa by the aid of the microscope, the spermatists had a season of rejoicing. Hartsoeker (1694) supposed that within the spermatozoon there was a little being, a human being, in miniature, with all its parts and organs complete, and figured a spermatozoon (highly magnified, of course) in which the little “homunculus” is to be seen seated within the “head” of the former with its arms and legs folded together in small compass, somewhat like a fcetus in utero. The theory of the spermatists was not destined to remain in undisputed possession of the field. The rival school of Harvey in the sixteenth century taught that the semen or sperm did not fertilise the ovum nor even enter the womb, but that it fertilised the entire constitution of the mother by a sort of contagion which rendered her capable of acting as the stimulus of development for the ova in the uterus, and Descartes, in the early part of the seventeenth century, entertained the same views. The ovists now claimed that all the organs of the future being already existed, preformed in miniature, in the ovum, as opposed to the spermatists, who claimed the same preformed structure for the spermatozoon. To the ovists, therefore, the act of fecundation was only an impulse or stimulus to development communicated by the male element to the ovum; the male contributed nothing material in forming the parts and organs of the fótus which existed, preformed in the ovum, so that the child was the product of the mother alone. Among the upholders of the ovist theory, in the eighteenth century were Malpighi, Haller, Bonnet, and Spallanzani. Difficulties, however, arose over both these theories of exclusive inheritance, for the ovists could not explain how the offspring sometimes resembled the father rather than the mother, and the spermatists could not account for cases of close resemblance between the mother and offspring, while neither could, again, account for cases of the mixed or blended resemblance of the offspring to both parents. The theory of preformation gradually lost its interest and its vitality, and received its death-blow at the hands of Wolff (1759), who, not only by theoretical arguments but by indisputable facts as to the nature and process of development of the hen's egg, demonstrated the baselessness of the fancies of the pre-formationists, whether of the spermatic or ovarian school. Finally, there gradually grew up in the nineteenth century the modem view that the male and female (germ and sperm) cells of the respective parents contributed in equal, or nearly equal, proportions to the constitution of the embryo, and that the environment and nourishment of the fertilised ovum during its growth and evolution in the womb was a third factor of importance, especially in the case of those animals which went through a long period of intra-uterine growth and evolution, as in the case of man and the higher mammals.


1975 ◽  
Vol 53 (7) ◽  
pp. 942-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Amaratunga ◽  
S. Corey

A 17-month field study showed that Mysis stenolepis in Passamaquoddy Bay, New Brunswick lives for about 1 year. Young are released in shallow water early in spring and grow rapidly during the summer. In the fall, young adults migrate to deeper water where they reach sexual maturity. Transfer of sperm lakes place during winter in deeper regions of the Bay. soon after which the males die. Females survive and in spring migrate to shallow waters to release young after which they die. Females breed once and carry an average of 157 young per brood. Developmental stages of the postmarsupial young are described and discussed.


1933 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phyllis A. Clapham

During the course of some experiments involving the Nematode worm Heterakis gallinæ, it became necessary to know the exact life history in order to interpret the results. On consulting the literature it became evident that the details of the life history had never been worked out accurately in either this worm or in any of its near relations. Further-more, there was considerable controversy on the subject. For this reason therefore the whole morphology and life history were investigated in detail and some interesting points came to light.


Since publishing, with Mr. Lapage, the first account of the life-cycle of Helkesimastix facicola , I have continued to work alone on the biology and life-history of the flagellates occurring in simple dung-cultures. In the course of this investigation, I have made certain observations which I wish here to record, together with one or two suggestions which I have to offer. The work promises to occupy considerable time before it is completed, and in the case of some of the forms studied I am not yet able to describe the life-cycle in its entirety. Little or no attention has been paid hitherto to the protozoa active in dung, and the study of this fauna is probably not without interest and importance in connection with the subject of the soil-protozoa. To distinguish those protozoa which are carried through the alimentary canal in a passive, encysted condition and become active and go through their life-history in the moist dung, Prof. Minchin has suggested, in the course of his lectures, the useful term coprozoic . The coprozoic fauna of goats and sheep is entirely different from their parasitic fauna, which has for its principal habitat the rumen. Neither the various specialised ciliates (of the fam. Ophryoscolecidæ ) nor the flagellates ( Sphæromonas , Trichomastix and Callimastix ), some of which are invariably present in the rumen, ever occur in an active condition in dung-cultures; and, on the other hand, I have never found any of the coprozoic flagellates active in the rumen-contents, when freshly examined. These facts, readily determined because the sets of forms in the two cases are entirely different, afford important confirmation of the view, now generally accepted, that the Entamæbæ —the truly parasitic forms—are quite distinct from the Amoebæ which develop in fæcal cultures, i. e .,coprozoic species.


1974 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Sutton

One of the most dramatic advances in the physical sciences during the nineteenth century was the emergence of spectroscopy. It rapidly became an invaluable experimental technique for chemists and astronomers, while for physicists it opened a window upon the world of sub-atomic phenomena. Sir John Herschel played an important part, the value of which has sometimes been underestimated, in the early development of spectroscopy. This paper examines his contribution to the subject during the period 1819–61 in the light of his publications and of certain manuscript material preserved in the Royal Society's Library. Herschel corresponded with most of the scientists who did important work in spectroscopy during his lifetime, and he expressed definite opinions on most of the practical and theoretical problems that arose in it; however, the present study cannot pretend to offer a complete discussion of all aspects of the early history of spectroscopy.


1883 ◽  
Vol 36 (228-231) ◽  
pp. 47-50

This Æcidium, which is common in this country upon Rumex hydrolapathum , Huds, obtusifolius , Linn., crispus , Linn., and conglomeratus , Murray, was regarded by Fuckel and Cooke as being a condition of Uromyces rumicis (Schum .), is now stated by Winter in his last work to be a condition of Puccinia magnusiana . During the present year I have conducted a series of cultures, in which the life history of this fungus has been carefully, if not laboriously, worked out, from which it appears that Æcidium rumicis bears the same relationship to Puccinia phragmitis (Schum.) (= P. arundinacea , D. C.) as Æcidium berberidis , Gmel., bears to Puccinia graminis , Perss. History of the Subject .—Winter, in 1875, showed that those botanists who had associated this Æcidium with the Uromyces rumicis , simply because these two fungi occurred upon the same host plant, were wrong, and that the fungus in question was the æcidiospore of Puccinia phragmitis . Stahl, in 1876, repeated Winter’s experiment, and confirmed it. Now it happens that there are two Pucciniœ common upon Phragmitis communis , the (Schum.), and P. magnusiana , Körn. In March, 1877, Schröter placed the spores of both these Pucciniœ upon Rumex hydrolapathum (the species Winter originally experimented with), and found that the Æcidium was only produced from P. magnusiana . Winter, in the “Kryptogamen Flora,” now in course of publication, accepts Schröter’s statement, and gives as the æcidiospores of Puccinia magnusiana , not only the Æcidium on Rumex hydrolapathum , but also on R. cripus, conglomeratus , obtusifolius , and acetosa , and adds a note to the effect that the Æcidium upon Rheum officinale has probably the same life history.


Author(s):  
Barry S. C. Leadbeater

In recent years the external morphology of marine choanoflagellates has been the subject of close scrutiny. This is a result of the attention given to marine nanoplankton, of which choanoflagellates are a part, and the relative ease with which choanoflagellates with loricae of costal construction can be observed in shadowcast whole mounts with an electron microscope. However, detailed ultrastructural studies of choanoflagellate protoplasts have been limited to one freshwater species Codosiga botrytis (Ehr.) Saville-Kent (Petersen & Hansen, 1954; Fjerdingstad, 1961; Hibberd, 1975) and four marine species Salpingoeca pelagica Laval (Laval, 1971), Stephanoeca diplocostata Ellis (Leadbeater & Manton, 1974), Savillea micropora (Norris) Leadbeater (Leadbeater, 1974) and Codosiga gracilis James-Clark (Leadbeater & Morton, 1974b). Of these only the recent studies by Hibberd (1975), Laval (1971), Leadbeater & Manton (1974), Leadbeater (1974) and Leadbeater & Morton (1974b) contain micrographs of material processed by modern methods.


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