Contribution to the Study of Germ-cells in the Anura
The problems of the germ-line of cells are of long standing in animal biology, but of these two surpass the rest in importance. At what stage in the life-cycle do the primordial germ-cells make their appearance, and do these gonocytes give rise to all, some, or none of the definitive sex-cells? Since Nussbaum (1880, 1884) first discussed the continuity of the germ-cells from one generation to the next, study in this field of embryology has resulted in a measure of agreement that the primordial germ-cells make their appearance in the endoderm or mesoderm early in development. The subject has been extensively reviewed in recent years by Bounoure (1939), Dantschakoff (1941), Everett (1945), Nieuwkoop (1946), and Johnston (1951). In the invertebrates, the origin of the gonocytes during cleavage is well established for some species (e.g. Parascaris), but, for the vertebrates, only Bounoure (1934) makes a claim for the formation of the primordial germ-cells as early as the blastula stage.