fa O S ~ os) =o Spo Oa owe a WLLL ECEL LCL LL “a > a eae = ” a ze 7 re ' a KLEMENTS OF THE COMPARATIVE ANATOMY OF VERTEBRATES ELEMENTS OF THE COMPARATIVE ANATOMY OF VERTEBRATES ADAPTED FROM THE GERMAN OF DR. ROBERT WIEDERSHEIM PROFESSOR OF ANATOMY, AND DIRECTOR OF THE INSTITUTE OF HUMAN AND COMPARATIVE ANATOMY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG-IN-BADEN BY W. N. PARKER, Pu.D. PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY AT THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF SOUTH WALES AND MONMOUTHSHIRE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF WALES 5) = 2 5) , > 3 , e@° 3398 o. ‘ie. EE | Ae Y o >. © > ) > 802° 2B oy" 6 eg SL e 4 SHCOND EDITION (FOUNDED ON THE THIRD GERMAN EDITION) a»? s, as WITH THREE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-THREE WOODCUTS AND A BIBLIOGRAPHY. — Londo MACMILLAN AND CoO., LIMITED NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1897 All rights reserved Re Lasers 7 27 RicHARD CLAY AND Sons, LIMITED LONDON AND BUNGAY.— GIFT OF a. 2 99° oe Ca a) et * ° . av« > > > bs) a §. 9 oS e Yaa ¢ PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION PROFESSOR WIEDERSHEIM’S Grundriss der vergleichenden Anatomie der Wirbelthiere, published at Jena in 1884, was written to supply a need which had been felt forsome time past for a short text-book on Vertebrate Anatomy embodying some of the more recent views on the subject. The present book is a modified translation of the Grundriss, and it is hoped that it will serve to render Professor Wiedersheim’s work more widely known amongst English students. | The plan of the original has been retained throughout, though numerous additions and modifications have been made to the work ; for many of these I have to thank Professor Wiedersheim,—for others I am myself responsible. I must also express my indebtedness to Professor Wiedersheim for revising the whole translation with me last summer, and for much help while the work was in progress. Within the limits of a short text-book like the present, much of the matter is of necessity greatly condensed: more detailed accounts of the various parts and organs will be found in the new edition of Professor Wiedersheim’s Lehrbuch der vergl. Anatomie der Wirbelthiere, which is to appear shortly, and on the first edition of which the Grundriss was founded. V3d0G48 vi PREFACE The brevity of the descriptions is, however, to some extent made up for by the number of woodcuts. Most of these are taken from the German edition, but several new figures have been added. The arrangement of the book according to organs, and not according to groups of animals, is likely to render it more difficult for a beginner, and a general knowledge of Zoology will be of great assistance. The pages on which the different groups are described are, however, collected together in the index, so that the sections relating to any one group can be easily referred to. The present arrangement seems to be the only possible one if the book is to be founded on a scientific basis, for it is most important that the student should grasp the fact that there has been an evolution of organs, as well as of animals. The more theoretical and detailed matter is printed in small type, and in the form of notes: the student should in most cases pass this over when reading the book for the first time. A black and a spaced type have been used to render prominent important words or sentences. _ A bibliography is appended at the end of each chapter. This in no case presumes to be anything like a complete list of the literature of the subject: our object has been more particularly to mention the recent and the more important works, though many of these have doubtless been omitted. References to other re- searches can be found by consulting the works mentioned. At Professor Wiedersheim’s suggestion, I have not inserted a translation of the preface to the original, as it seemed unnecessary so todo. I may, however, mention that the book was written for students of Medicine, as well as for those of Comparative Anatomy : the intimate connection of the two subjects renders it most PREFACE vil important that medical students should have a general scientific basis for their special anatomical knowledge. My sincerest thanks are due to my friends Professors F. Jeffrey Bell and G. B. Howes, who have kindly read through the proof- sheets. To them I am indebted for numerous valuable suggestions, as well as for correcting many faults of style and expression which had escaped my notice. I must also express my thanks to my father, Professor ‘W. K. Parker, and to Dr. Gadow, for many special details in connection ‘with the skeleton, as well as to Mr. E. Radford for help in making the index. W. N. PARKER. UNIVERSITY CoLLecr, CARDIFF, May, 1886. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION SINCE the publication of the first edition of the Grundriss, on which the first English edition was founded, two further German editions have appeared, one in 1888 and another in 1893, the latter containing 695 pages as compared with 272 pages in the first edition. The book has, in fact, grown beyond the limits of a “Grundriss,” and has replaced the original Lehrbuch, no new edition of which has appeared since 1886. : As it seemed desirable that the second English edition should be brought up to date without greatly exceeding the limits of the first, it has been necessary to use a free hand in abridging and recasting the text. I have therefore, with the author's permission, attempted to prepare a short text- book which, while retaining the original descriptions and arrangement as far as possible, should deal with the more essential and well-ascertained facts of Comparative Anatomy, presenting an approximate equality of treatment as regards its different sections without entering too fully upon doubtful theories or special details in Embryology and Physiology. The book has thus been almost entirely rewritten, with the approval of Professor Wiedersheim, who, besides revising the work, has furnished me with much new material. A number PREFACE ix / of the old figures have been replaced and several additional _ ones inserted. | _ The bibliography appended to the book, which has been considerably added to by Professor Wiedersheim since the third German edition was published, is rather extensive for a work of the kind, but I have not ventured to make selections from it and have merely modified the arrangement in some respects and made a few additions which seemed to me important for English readers. It will, I trust, be found useful by more advanced students. I must acknowledge my obligations to my brother, Professor T. Jeffery Parker, F.R.S., for numerous suggestions, and also to Professor G. B. Howes, F.R.S., Mr. Frank J. Cole, and Mr. Martin F. Woodward for valuable information on several special points. W. N. PARKER. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, CARDIFF, April, 1897. CONTENTS oe I. On the Meaning and Scope of Comparative Anatomy ....... II. Development and Structural Plan of the Vertebrate Body ..... ITI. Classified List of the Principal Vertebrate Groups. ........ IV. Table showing the Gradual Development of the Vertebrata in Time. : SPECIAL PART. Bi EIN R I as a Sse an FeO OM, ea of Amphioxus, Fishes, SUE SONNE Sa Se Goins eos ae TR fe Nar, a ee eat Soe Sea Oe Au as Boe: OE ERROR Sorat ae ener ay es aoe Le, SS ee 4 eve DRONE cas sre ene ye Soe gy Went ghee BE: age Pe A os oe iit oe ta ee et Ne ieee Beas De MaRS MRNA I Oy cable Bh ca ge ase ay ie Ge Bake oa 8 bt PE Sg 0 I arn aa a eI a Es VRAD, CURING te ae eid acetic he Bae aehie em, s CT SEMA GIO TORN it a ay paraiso eas Ox URINE Sr tee 8 GON Wi uae cist oe ee ee Vg OE TLORIIOUs jie Fora Po ectlijedt Aca Ay ees oO He OE APRN a Pei ens negli g 25 Va nig sy eg bak apy keen Bis eis ated SO as iy fo ole cs OWL oie go SENG Of Washes and: Dipnpane: 02) Se OF AMBER fs ci2 5) Sea oe POR a of Reptiles of Birds - ee AO Se ee Meet Cane, 6, tr Se BO = oy 86, el ee. Dae ee a ee ea ia EL ER Pe Bre hee 2.6 UR RR ie. fond 9 i Pe oe ae er te gt Gah tae eg xii ~ CONTENTS PAGE ees I ee ay as ee ae oe Wo Sh: APSE) SUP Sr eR 58 Rc ee TN cys ee Si goon eye me Maen op 62 Wich Mele Spt eee ee ee ye et bg Sgt eae Bagel “pie oily 64 INDIR MEINN oe et sgh pe i Ce eR NSLP aay 64 a. Brain-case PORTE OS Sy ge ya age eee hes es 67 Uh. 2 ORR ONO 6 sg sy Oy ER ey a oe ake 69 Os AMMO I PORMEAE 8G oc iry a Sas Uy a noes eM 1, Anatomy of the Skull (special part) ......... eer ees & te RS 0 oa ee ca eM nae Oe 72 B. ‘ me eronne eS Ee ae prerekt anes, C. ¢: PERERA SS ee 82 D. ee OE ION oi Ra eae RR ek CaN 88 E. a oe SRR Piette ER Oh iL oh F i PER ree igs Te he em ek ca das 96 MA RRM a er ean ne Py ees Gg Gg wy ce 102 ey RE I ee ee hae gs ea hs ‘py ed aaa emmyeomegee ( - Peete Pee TINO, Pe te a ee a eg ie es 103 MOONEE VCH eee a eet ee oop eee 106 Gt Pianos Ge SIMMONS em ee ee ae 106 gr hire sks, © TBR ah eee aS Sheep ot Ree gly ELMS SED 107 of Reptiles... .. Po Ne se nr RC Pegg te A, 108 OF NGS Ge Sas: Pelee Beane 109 GF Mammile cain os oc orale een Se 109 PRO ATOR ge a iia Son sc Wak ee has RI Nae 109 CUR OOR Sree ai ae ae oe eee eB 109 PER PIRMODNE i ee ae LS A eet a 11] Oe TIN ns oi a las oe Eg ie es 111 OE ENOTES toy tii, 2, Noe cas @ wee San OKEON 114 FE SRE SR ee ye ease Sen ee ee ae FN ged otk 119 fre RIMS oe tag BL oN eas ge Naa es ee roee 120 POOR AIR a eye ae hie atk Or gee ea enn be gee ee ABZ OL FsBO8 GG DNOOANE 6 a ee eee 122 Phylogeny of the Ichthyopterygium ........... 124 General Considerations on the Limbs of the higher Vertebrata 125 Free Limbs of Amphibians. . . .-)'. 2. Se. 127 Oe Tee re te pe re! 5, Pee eas we 127 es i a pte ath ces Sangre, >, Mee ene 129 of Mammals REE rear gad od Gees Was od ee 130 C PIU RCUL ER MEPL Ree. oe ieee eee 135 TINTEGUMENEARY MUSCULATURE «2. -. os 0 6 Has aabpiietin 602s 136 PETERS CRU MR) ON 6 ee ie Die ir ae Re a tae 8 137 of Amphioxus, Fishes, and Dipnoans ............ 137 ERD oi ss o Rae Ce hs ses 137 RIMOMMAIOB oy se aie se hb eke ORE RM ee a Ree 138 CONTENTS MUSCLES OF THE TRUNK (continued)— MUSCLES: OF THE APPENDAGES 3. 2°... EYE-MUSCLES » . 5. 4. Sate rs eck ee hie WIGUERAL MUSCEBS 60 Ee a SS a ae ad tie! Of Fiske: 22 (pee ae ee a Besa Ay ae Of Apap 5 eG = es ee Her of Amniota "Gh lie teks Si eg oh chee ek Paleron ati gs St ee Th RLROTRIO RAG ANe ao E, NERVOUS SYSTEM AND SENSORY ORGANS i. CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEMs 2204 ese wil, : MEMBRANES OF THE BRAIN AND SPINAL CORD .... 2S RE A ORT SG a en a OE Tore a TOM RES 2. BRAIN (general description and development) OE SOMONE. I aS Lee of Elasmobranchii and Holocephali. . .... . OME 2 5c Pe ahora oa OF Teladeten: oo iyott hr a eee OE BOR Bs aS gin gd Of AMPObian 2101648 DAE a) RT ls OE DONOR ee ge we Nee au ed es OF IR ee ea kat eh get EU of Mammals i Re ee ORE eg te, ETA II. PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM ......... l. SPINAL NERVES PV OMIDR RENE oe ins eee ee a cae fee BSL Ill. SENSORY ORGANS (general description and development). . . SENSE-ORGANS OF THE INTEGUMENT. .......... a. Nerve-Eminences ....... DPE Rate sare Soares 0, OB BGGa heuer siae id ind as 5 ae US c. Tactile Cells and Corpuscles . .......:.. d. Club-shaped Corpuscles. ... 2... 2... edu. OLFACTORY ORGAN (general description and development) . . . . of CU CROMURIRBN ee ia ak tga gk Woe” OE SERN oy pciga viva Me opine te nest ses Meee Oe RON sce a ae ok a Re CE IR Oe ee Ihe ene OR UR lisse ca 2 mee CP AIOE Ge a a og Ae Soy gs ee BN OR er ay ole OR Bee roe, GPG Pama, eeake lao! Peer ier tt Dee aera eS i en a” i) el PAGE X1v CONTENTS EYE (general description and development) ........... 207 OF ELON ONRES a ees Nie a Sad eae year, 211 of Kishes-and Dipnoans . eo SR ae ee. 211 Ok AAD 6005 5. sion Ge ro Oe ae Teg 212 oF Mepiiieeand Tints he a aS. 213 OER i ee sings, ol id aa ee Ee 214 PAE ee ara ain eR Ro) 0 koe ee RS aT 214 Accessory Organs in Connection with the Eye... ..... 216 fs Re NORRIE SSO Sa Sina a Sa pet SO we ees 216 Dt ROR ee a eek? Gis Sle val = Mee Ee 217 ¢ Glands . a i ail ha gle ay ee 217 ‘AUDITORY ORGAN (general description and development) .... . 220 Pt Reem ee ee ar ee Pe Pe as 224 On eee She Srrenieme see eee BE os 224 CL AMO GOO oh Ree allo elas Wah SOROS Bi. 226 WE UOC MN TATA i a le epee a eee 5 ae De RMON ooh ns Se nie Lae eee e secs aS 229 FicORGANS OF MUTRITION . 2. oie 235 ALIMENTARY CANAL AND ITS APPENDAGES (general descrip- OTR) ae aia ee al at Aig me aes, Ne Oe gel EMBERS PR Sigs ass RN ce 235 EMOTE prt a esa a ake oa ride Caran oe Bea's Sas orhcg ( 239 Deoth (general description) oo a er PR ss ae 239 of Fishes, Dipnoans, and Amphibians. ......... 241 of Reptiles and Birds .... . "> REE aos gee, Le, 243 HE NER Direc) Fh sp oe wh a EAE wees 245 Giants OF ae Wiig eo cn... DN Seino Soe rae eraeas 250 OF Annan a hr LPR es BR eS 251 Of Tien e ere a in is Rs ERPS hs: 251 rig Meg) Saeed hadi De aR RE a Oe REP ORR ceag g oS oek ks en 252 OE ERY a oa Si dais aos BEC Pee 252 OAD rts NTR Poss ke TE Sele ah Rete a Feta wo 252 WERT yo Ghee Say nts MURAL KG BES SHR Rah) GRO 5, 255 TUE MOS hiligds Oi eebe aod woe To ee ein soa Ruther Mun eae AN I 256 Il. G@SOPHAGUS, STOMACH, AND INTESTINE... 1... se se. 257 ge oa kalo hs Teac 2 Wd ees ce eg eco Se eae eee 257 Ot Reptiles oh ec x PG NG Suny LA ig sy eae 262 oS DR Rane ae CANS ic, Ge i oie ea Se oe oe 262 eRe aS are See we et Eee wae foe Tee 263 Histology of the Mucous Membrane of the Alimentary Canal . 267 SEV UR sie ene nas 0 et ek a eh CORIO AR on 20 5 SPRUNG RA Cr Tre mer Tee 269 ON (ye pe ete tL Ck SF a lt Nee rds yt. ae tae a meee cel ia ce eae 272 G. ORGANS OF RESPIRATION .....--.-+..-52..2.. 273 Oy BARU icles Bd ia a iy Poe sh ga OT eh RL ks eee goa 273 De SIR i ccoka cad ade ag cet cael oe a one) Coon 9 Pees 275 PNA eg sk ada ede ee aie ere oe Nee es ot CONTENTS XV PAGE GILLs (continued)— GUT AIS 95 2 ga Seg et ee ge Oe IES isl gh. PrN hig. an 276 DE A DOGNS a ern eis ee ee ete pb bap bra ete Herne “Lee 278 Of Arovbibiansg ace eae ae ee ew ees 279 i. ALC BLADDER AM DUNG 30, oe ee wee 280 a AAR NN See ie ae ne ea) at Re ee 280 CA Fs aa OR aie ae sas e197 a Se Pt Mee es calla koe) A ena oeiectie 3 Ady ‘Tubes: qd Spgs ee a TN ae oui tees 283 Of Dinca pa ets ie ete es ee ee ees wn 283 Ot AM ore Pere ee oe ee 283 ag (Pinon WR anor 2 ge ce Pie ee tiie Al ets ge ae aap ~~ , 284 PANU a sek ek ee ee Ree Fou ge ays 285 iy NE OE, SORE Res Seni ete Were. at hig may 286 BOpRee CRON e ecarce e e e k 288 SOE RPEPIOGTN Gia ea E e e 288 OL minpmaae 7 Se As EES AE ee SSE 288 BE MUMDIEIDR 3 ors has ek ne gs PY 290 LT rae eae YE 7 a a eR uc re Daneel 291 fie PEN as ase hole Pe a A nd TOP ad eke, Me ) 296 PER eee MEY oe prs os eS east iat 4g laa ter ee 298 Bi: UBB MOOR CORGUEAR ELON: «/ jee es, ot. Meee gw e's 299 General Description and Development .........2.... 299 Heart, together with Origin of Main Vessels .......... 305 AB RRM SIR BR dips SAE Sis te °F ape Ne 305 OF NN ek ee ae eg SEP e e igme! 2 oie 307 GURNEE ise ei te nd a= 5 oa oS diac oe le ee 309 Oe ONO ln ae neti a. bin) hens b LG Su ele! tee oe as 313 CR SULRCE BRIE: MARI se cee gc AA. eee Sh atk ie eS 315 Prt ss Tiree oe eae hee uc 8 eee OR eve fh a 319 MIATA PM MRDT ete Se 5 eet N A eal ile he bum tl PEWS G2 es ial eed 322 CE RRMOe eer era eee ee hy Ag Aas yd vid. “eee 322 PU TARA aa ae Pek oe eso ee PM a ok ET ine ee 326 ITs PRN VEE 5 an ieee SR is os eee Puc yn 4.1% 328 Rin PRAM CO ee ane rs Poe rae ee As Ce Ge Saar ng 328 Subba, DERI Se a es es Ge ES a ae 333 Eeyrnpstic Beyateen Siar cle SES AS OS a 333 MODIFICATIONS FOR THE INTER-UTERINE NUTRITION OF THE EMBRYO: FETAL MEMBRANES ......... 336 Fy PE I PS ee ee ee eee ay arg PELE . GAD s \ 2 \ £ a— O ———= = VRE 1 O = TEE — Fig. 12.—SEcTION THROUGH THE SKIN OF ADULT SALAMANDER (S. maculosa). Ep, epidermis ; Co, dermis, in the richly pigmented (Pz) connective-tissue stroma of which the various sized integumentary glands (4, C, D, D, H) lieembedded ; M"', the muscular layer of the glands, lying ‘within the basement membrane (Pr); M, the same, seen from the surface; HL, epithelium of glands; S, secretion of glands; Mm, subcutaneous layer of muscles, through which vessels (G') extend towards the dermis. rounded by muscle and connective-tissue fibres, pigment, blood- vessels, and nerves. Their secretion serves to keep the skin moist, but as experiments have shown, it also forms an important weapon of defence on account of its poisonous properties. : This richness in glands is a characteristic of the skin cf Amphi- bia and to it they owe their moist and slippery nature. Frequently, as for instance in Toads, the skin is not smooth, but has a rough, warty appearance, caused by local proliferations of the epidermis. Epidermic claws, analogous to those of the Amniota, are present only in Xenopus (Dactylethra) and Onychodactylus. The pigment, accumulated principally in the dermis—partly diffused, partly enclosed within the cells—is under the control of the nervous system, and thus renders a change of colour possible; and c2 20 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY as the colour becomes modified according to the surroundings of the animal, it may serve as a protection (¢.g. Hyla). Calcifications may occur in the dermis, or, as in Ceratophrys dorsata, definite bones may be formed (see p. 33): the dermis also encloses numerous smooth muscle-fibres. Reptilia.—The characteristic peculiarity of the skin of Reptiles is its capacity of producing scales (these are very simple in Geckos and Chameleons), warts, prickles, shields (e.g. the “ tortoiseshell of Chelonians), claws, rattles (Rattlesnake), and other epidermic structures (Fig. 18). All these are due in the first instance to the formation of dermal papillze, the markedly stratified epidermis covering which becomes cornified secondarily. The horny layer of the epidermis may be periodically cast off either entire (Snakes) B Mae y Yi) of HY} MT] ) 4 / 4 YY Ui MW) 4, id } YM YG: YY YA Yf Lt py fi Wf Yl TUM, Mif{fys 4 MMI UY ff yy ff Uf YY yyy Uy Fie. 13.—D1aGRamMMatic Sections THrovucH Various KINDS oF EPIDERMIC ScaLEs OF REpTILES. (From Boas’s Zoology.) A, rounded scales ; B, shields ; C, imbricating scales ; D, overlapping scales with bony scutes in the underlying dermis; h, horny layer; s, Malpighian layer of the epidermis ; /, dermis; 0, bony scutes. or in shreds: it is renewed from the Malpighian layer. The integument of Hatteria retains the most primitive characters amongst Reptiles. Pigment-cells occur in the integument, rendering a change of colour possible in many cases (¢.g. Chameleon). Ossifications in the dermis are very common in Reptiles, and there is great variation in the degree of their development, from the small bony scutes present in Geckos (Ascalabota) to the large exoskeletal plates of Chelonians (see p. 33). Muscles are also present in the dermis. In contrast to the skin of Amphibians, that of Reptiles is entirely wanting in glands. In Lizards, the so-called femoral glands occurring along the ventral side of the thigh are said to be merely solid cones of epidermic cells, which form a series of papillee or warts and serve as clasping organs during copulation. Birds —PBirds possess a thinner dermis than any other Ver- tebrates, and it is less plentifully supplied with blood-vessels. INTEGUMENT feet In the deeper layers there is a strongly developed network of muscle-fibres showing traces of transverse striation: these are inserted into the feather-sacs, and serve to erect the feathers. | Apart from a gland present in the neighbourhood of the auditory passage amongst Gallinacez, there is only a single gland situated at the base of the rudimentary tail (uropygium): this uropygial gland is present in nearly all Birds, and its secretion serves to oil the feathers. Dermal bones are characteristically absent, while epidermic structures, such as /eathers, claws, spurs, foot-scales, and beak-sheaths, are strongly developed. ~One of the most marked characteristics of Birds is the pos- session of feathers. In the majority of Birds they are of two kinds—down-feathers and contour-feathers, and are usually arranged in so-called feather-tracts (pterylw) separated by naked regions (apteria). The base of each feather is embedded in an epidermic sac or follicle. Their mode of development corre- sponds essentially with that of the epidermic scales of Reptiles. In the region where a feather is to be formed, the dermal tissue becomes raised up towards the ectoderm (Fig. 14, A), and thus gives rise to a vas- cular papilla. As this papilla grows out to form an elongated cone with a pointed apex, the feather-germ (B), its base sinks gradually deeper and deeper into the dermis, and thus becomes surrounded by a sort of pocket—the feather-follicle. The horny, as well as the Malpighian layer of the epidermis extends into the base of the follicle, and thence into the feather-germ, the interior of which is throughout filled by cells of the dermis, which give rise to the pulp. As the feather-germ keeps on.growing, the cells of the Malpighian layer begin to proliferate rapidly, giving rise to a series of radial folds arranged along a central axis, which extend inward towards the pulp, and are immediately bounded by the horny layer (C). These folds, between which the nutritive pulp extends, then become cornified and separated from above downwards from the surrounding cells ; and, by a gradual drying of the central pulp-substance, give rise to a tuft of horny rays, which are, however, at first bound together by the enclosing stratum corneum. Most Birds are hatched when the feathers are in this stage of development, and they thus appear as if covered with brush-like hairs. By the shedding of the surrounding horny layer the rays or barbs become free (D), and if these are all similar to one another, an embryonic down- feather is formed. The whole feather-germ, however, does not become divided up into barbs in this manner: its lower portion, embedded in the skin, retains a more uniform character and forms the qwill (calamus). The embryonic down-feathers (E), on the individual barbs of which smaller secondary rays or barbules become developed, may retain their char- acter as such throughout life or may be replaced by definitive feathers. In this case a second, larger, follicle early arises from the base of the follicle of the down-feather, the pulp of the two being in connection (D). The papilla developing within the interior of this new follicle grows rapidly, gradually pushes the base of the down-feather out of its follicle, and comes to the surface. Each contour feather (enna) at first closely resembles a down- feather (plwma) in structure, and consists of a tuft of similar rays or barbs provided with secondary rays or barbules. In the course of further growth, however, one of the rays becomes rapidly 22 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY thickened, and forms a main axis or stem (scapus), to which the barbs are attached on either side. The proximal or basal portion of the scapus which bears no barbs is called the quill (calamus), and _the distal part, to which the barbs are attached, the shaft (rachis). The barbs together constitute the vane (vewillum) (Fig. 14, F), 4%, off ge cory neese pee 11s18e1/ HSL \ / ‘ \ lt ee ae) 8 20) x () oOu ous . Fe ; 2exe < a 40) \, re} 1G Pom ee Fia. 14.—Sr1x STaGes IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE FEATHER. (Mainly after Th. Studer.) Cu, dermis ; SM, stratum Malpighii; Sc, stratum corneum ; SM/!, Sc', extensions of these tissues into the feather-papilla, Pap; /K, feather-germ; /, F", feather-follicle ; P, pulp ; Fal (SM/*), folds of the Malpighian layer extending into the feather-germ, and enclosed externally by the horny layer, HS (Sc!) : both layers are seen in the transverse section (C); /'Sp, quill of feather, which breaks up above into a tuft of rays or barbs (HS?) ; sec, sec, secondary rays (barbules) arising from the latter; R, rachis ; V, vexillum. For further details as to the different stages A-F, compare text. The barbules are so arranged on each barb as to make the latter resemble an entire feather in appearance. The barbs may become very closely united together by means of minute hooks on the barbules, so that an extremely strong and resistant though pliant structure is formed; this is especially the case in the large wing and tail feathers (remiges and rectrices). In many Birds each quill of the ordinary feathers of the body bears two vexilla, the second being spoken of as the aftershaft (hyporachis). INTEGUMENT 23 _A periodic casting of feathers, or moulting, takes place in all Birds, and corresponds to the similar process of the casting of the horny layer of the skin in Amphibians and Reptiles. The feather-covering of Birds must have been acquired in very early geological periods, for Archzeopteryx, found in the Jurassic strata of Bavaria, possessed well-formed feathers with a very delicate shaft and vane. Palzeonto- logical researches have not brought to light any definite intermediate stages between scales and feathers, but that they must once have existed is shown by the development of these structures. . Mammals.—The integument of Mammals gives rise to havrs, which are characteristic of and confined to this Class. They may be almost uniformly developed all over the body and even on the soles of the feet, or may become reduced in more or less extensive regions. They are most scanty in the Cetacea, where. only a few occur on the lips, and even these may disappear in the adult. The first to appear are certain tactile-hairs (vibrisse) on the head, along the course of the trigeminal nerve; all the hairs, however, serve as tactile organs as well as for keeping the body warm. Nothing definite can be at present stated as regards the phylogeny of hairs, but it seems at any rate probable that they are not directly comparable to the scales of Reptiles and feathers of Birds:! the arrangement of the hairs in alternating groups is probably the last indication of the former possession of scales. Each hair first arises as a proliferation of the epidermic cells in the region of the Malpighian. Jayer which comes to project inwards towards the dermis (Fig. 15, A, B and C). In this manner the hair-germ is formed. Thus the epidermic portion is the primary one ; a corresponding dermal papilla is formed secondarily, and is the homologue of the papilla which forms the his trace of the scale in a Reptile or the feather in a Bird, The thickening of the epidermis then grows downwards in the form of a papilla and becomes surrounded by the cells of the dermis, so that, as in the case of the feather, it comes to lie within a kind of pocket, the hair-follicle (Fig. 14, C). The originally uniform mass of cells of the hair-germ later becomes differentiated into a peripheral and a central portion. The latter consists of more elongated cells, and gives rise later to the hair-shaft with its medulla or pith, and to the cortex, as well as to the cuticle of the shaft and the so-called inner root-sheath; the former gives rise the outer root-sheath (comp. Fig. 16 A, which represents the fully-formed hair). The base of the hair-shaft which fills up the bottom of the follicle is broadened out to form the hair-bulb (Fig. 15, D), which grows round the later formed and highly vascular hair-papilla like a cap (C, D). At Dr, in D, the sebaceous glands (p. 27) are seen arising by a proliferation of the Malpighian cells. The hair usually breaks through the skin in an oblique direction ; the direction differ- ing in different parts of the body. The hair or hair-shaft embedded at its base in the hair- JSollicle, is more or less cylindrical: it consists of three parts— ? It has been suggested that the hairs correspond to modified integumentary sense-organs such as occur in the lower Vertebrates (comp. Figs. 15 and 150). 24 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY medulla, cortex, and cuticle (Fig. 16 A), all of which are formed from cells. The follicular tissue, which is richly provided with blood-vessels, extends into the bulb-like base or root of the hair- Fie. 15.—Dracrams oF Four Staces (A-D) IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF HAIRS. (After F. Maurer.) Se, stratum corneum; SM, stratum Malpighii, which gives rise to an epithelial knob at Zp ; this grows inwards into the dermis (C) ; /’, rudiment of the hair- follicle ; HP, hair-papilla; HK, hair-bulb; Dr, rudiment of the sebaceous gland. In D,/ indicates the stratum lucidum with eleidin-granules in the cells. shaft, and gives rise to the hair-papilla. From this region a new hair-shaft may develop when the hair is shed, periodically or non- periodically as the case may be, often by the formation of a new papilla. ‘The colour of the hair is due to three causes :—Firstly, INTEGUMENT 25 to the greater or less accumulation of pigment in the cells of the cortical layer; secondly, to the air contained in the intercellular AF Fic. 16, A.—LonerrupinaL Section THROUGH A HATrR. (Diagrammatic. ) Sc, stratum corneum ; SM, stratum Malpighii ; Co, dermis ; Ap, arrectores pili ; Ft, adipose tissue ; F, outer longitudinal layer, and J", inner transverse layer of dermic coat (both composed of connective-tissue) ; Sch, hair-shaft ; MV, medulla ; R, cortex ; O, cuticle of shaft; WS, WS}, external and internal root-sheath,—the latter reaches above only as far as the point of entrance of the ducts of the sebaceous glands (HBD); HP, hair-papilla, containing vessels ; GH, hyaline layer, which lies between the inner and outer hair- sheaths, 7.e., between the root-sheath and the follicle (dermic coat). spaces of the medulla; and lastly, to the nature of the surface of © the hair, 7.¢., whether it is rough or smooth. The hairs are usually arranged in groups of finer and coarser elements, and, especially in the case of the vibrissz, are well innervated. 26 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY A richer hairy covering (lanwgo) is often met with in the embryonic -condition—as, for instance, in the human foetus—than occurs later ; and this fact, together with the occasional appearance of abnormally hairy individuals, indicates that at one time Man was distinguished by a far more abundant clothing of hair than at the present day. Other epidermic structures, formed as thickenings of the horny layer, also play a very important part in Mammals; such are— claws, nails, bristles, and spines (Hedgehog,.Porcupine); the so- called whalebone (baleen) of the Mystaceti; the horn-sheaths in Ruminants; the nasal horns of the Rhinoceros; the scales in Manis and on the tail of the Beaver and other Mammals; the palatal plates of Sirenia; and the ¢schial callosities of certain Apes. When pigment is present, as, for instance, on the snout in many Mammals and on the external genitals (labia majora and scrotum) and the teats in the human subject, it is always situated in cells of the Malpighian layer. The outer layer of the dermis, as may be seen by a glance at Fig. 16, B, may be divided into an outer papillary and an inner reticular portion. The pa- pillee of the former are ac- curately adapted to the over-lying epidermis: some of them contain blood- and lymph-capillaries, and others, nerves with tactile cor- puscles. The latter, on the other hand, becomes lost without any sharp boundary line in the sub-dermal con- nective-tissue and in the more or less strongly-de- veloped fatty layer (panni- culus adiposus). ‘The pads (tort) on the soles of the feet of most Mammals are due to large dermal papille. Fic. 16, B.—SEcTION THROUGH THE HUMAN In addition to numer- SKIN. ous elastic fibres, smooth Sc, stratum corneum; SM, stratum Malpighii; muscle elements are distri- Co, dermis ; F’, /, subcutaneous fat; VP, buted throughout the der- sensory papille ; GP, vascular papille ; V ‘Wee : and @; nerves and vessels of the dermis; '™S> they are particularly SD, SD, sweat-glands, with their ducts abundant in the scrotum (SD', SD"); H, hair with sebaceous (dartos) and in the teats, ee ae and are present in connec- tion with the hair-sacs (arrectores pil): the power of erecting the hair possessed by many Mammals is due to these (Fig. 16, A). A bony dermal skeleton is found only in ‘the Armadillo amongst existing Mammals (comp. p. 34). 3 INTEGUMENT 27 ‘The integumentary glands, which are well developed in all Mammals except the Cetacea, are of two kinds, tubular and acinous. The former include the sweat-glands and their various modifica- tions ; while the latter are spoken of as sebaceous glands, and include the already-mentioned glands of the hair-sacs, which serve to oil the hair (Figs. 15 D, and 16, A and B), the preputial glands, the inguinal glands of certain Rodents, the Meibomian glands of the eyelids, and many others. It must be borne in mind, however, that there is not always a sharp distinction between these two kinds of glands. The paired femoral gland of Ornithorhynchus opens by means of a long duct on to the spur present on the hind foot. Its secretion is poisonous. Another important modification of the integumentary. glands of the Mammalia is seen in the mammary glands, which secrete Fic. 17, A-—A, VENTRAL ViEW oF A BroopinG FEMALE oF Echidna hystrix. B, DissecTioN OF THE VENTRAL INTEGUMENT FROM THE DoRsAL (INNER) Sipe. (After W. Haacke.) +, .t, the two tufts of hair in the lateral folds of the mammary pouch (b.m.) from _ which the secretion flows. On either side of the pouch, which is surrounded by;strong muscles, a group of mammary glands (g.m.) opens; c/, cloaca. milk for the nutrition of the young. In Monotremes these apparently correspond to sweat glands, while in other Mammals they represent sebaceous glands. bo io 2) COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Monotremes possess no ¢eaés, and the milk probably passes along the hairs, which in this region are arranged in bunches, and is then licked off by the young animal. The gland is compressed by a strong sphincter muscle. In Echidna, a mammary or marsupial pouch which is primarily paired and becomes unpaired secondarily, is early formed for the reception of the young, and the gland-masses open into two depressions of the ventral integument where the bunches of hair are situated (Fig. 17). These depressions may be called mammary pockets, and are of especial interest as they repre- sent the first stage in the development of the various forms of teats present in all other Mammalia, in many of which distinct indica- tions of the Monotreme 0. Fe condition are met with. The marsupial pouch B W piel sinh | of the Marsupialia is Y KC)» probably basaloes esp, * Me YW Yj cos aah: of riots L,Y ~ us a_ similar ‘ Life mammary pocket is gf. formed in the embryos A | of Marsupials and pla- cental Mammals by the epidermis extend- ing inwards towards the dermis, and cylin- drical, more or less A” nem WI ‘> SQANNNnndWdos R Witxves Y branched processes a- LG rising from the base 6 UGG , of the pocket thus oF, 1% ~ formed (Fig. 17, B, AK A). These processes \ | og only are the glands sr proper, the mammary CG pocket being simply a art of the outer sur- Fic. 17, B.—DIAGRAMMATIC REPRESENTATIONS OF P Steels hi cue Earty DEVELOPMENT oF THE Leapina {ace OF t € skin which Types oF Mammary GLANps. (Modified from has sunk inwards, and Gegenbaur. ) : thus it may give rise to A, first or undifferentiated (mammary pit) stage; hairs and other integu- B, stage of the false teat; C, stage of the true ey oe : teat ®, v, rim (or rampart) of the glandular mentary structures. area ; f,g, glandular area ; g/, mammary glands ; The teats may be- d, mammary canal. come developed in one of two ways. In the first of these, the skin surrounding the pouch becomes raised up to form a circular rampart, and thus gives rise to a teat perforated by a canal, into the base of which the ducts of the gland open (Fig. 17, B, B). In the second case, the gland sur- face itself becomes elevated into a papilla, while the surrounding INTEGUMENT | 29 skin remains almost on a level with the rest of the integument (C). In the latter case the teats may be described as frwe or secondary (Marsupials, Rodents, Lemurs, Monkeys, and Man), and in the former as pseudo- or primary teats (Carnivora, Pigs, Horses, and Ruminants). The latter condition 1s already indicated in certain Marsupials (e.g. Phatangista vulpina). The number of teats varies greatly: there may be as few as one pair, or as many as eleven pairs (Centetes). They are often situated in two nearly parallel rows along the ventral side of. the thorax and abdomen which slightly converge towards the inguinal region: in other cases they may be restricted either to the inguinal (Ungulates and Cetaceans) or to the thoracic region (Sloths, Elephants, Sirenia, many Lemurs, Cheiroptera, and Primates) : while in others, they may be axillary or abdominal, or they may occur in various combinations of all these regions. In the male, the mammary apparatus becomes aborted, though usually at birth and puberty milk is produced in the human subject. Male goats and castrated sheep have also been known to give milk, and the same is probably true of male Bats. The occasional existence in men of supernumerary teats, and in women of supernumerary mammee and teats (polymastism and poly- thelism) is very remarkable. They are usually situated in the thoracic region, and must be considered as atavistic to a primitive form which possessed numerous teats and which produced a number of young at atime. Such a transition from polymastism to bimastism may be seen plainly at the present day in the Lemurs: in them the inguinal and abdominal teats are seen in various degrees of retrogressive metamorphosis, while a single pair of thoracic teats remain well developed. This accords with the fact that most Lemurs bear only a pair of young ones at a time, which they carry with them at the breast. Moreover, in various Mammals a greater number of teats are present in the embryo than in the adult. The mammary glands, which are at first solid, become secondarily hollowed out and further differentiated. The whole intermediate tissue during lactation is filled with white blood-corpuscles (leucocytes); and possibly the well-known structural elements of milk, known as colostrums and milk-spheres, owe their origin to these corpuscles, which have passed through the walls of the acini. B. SKELETON. 1, EXOSKELETON. THE hard exoskeleton, consisting of bone or other calcified tissues, must be distinguished from the horny exoskeletal parts described in the last chapter, in which, however, the former was also referred to. Thus it will be remembered that the term “scale” is some- times used for a horny epidermal structure, and sometimes for a bony dermal one (pp. 18, 20). The first and most primitive hard structures in Vertebrates are met with amongst Elasmobranchs in the form of small, pointed Fic. 18.—DERMAL DENTICLES oF Centrophorus calceus. (Slightly magnified. ) (From Gegenbaur’s Comp. An- atonvy. ) denticles (placoid organs) in the skin ; these consist of enamel and dentine, resting on a basal plate of bone, thus resembling in structure ordinary oral teeth, which will be described later. Primitively, as in many Rays, there is a relatively small number of these placoids, which do not touch one another, while in most Sharks and Dog- fishes they are much more numerous and close-set (Fig. 18). Their shape is rhombic or more or less rounded, each bearing a spine, and new ones being continually formed. The enamel, developed in connection with epidermic cells, is the primary part of the den- ticle (Fig. 19) ; the dentine is developed secondarily—that is, later—from the phyletically younger mesoderm, and this is also true of the bony portion. The enamel is therefore the first, and originally the only hard substance of the placoid organ. The first bony tissue to be developed is thus formed in connection with EXOSKELETON 7 31 these denticles, the basal-plate representing an accessory portion of the denticle, and serving to fix it within the skin. In the further course of evolution the denticle itself undergoes reduc- tion, the basal-plate remaining as an independent structure.. This is illustrated by a study of the exoskeleton in other Vertebrates. : 3 In the Holocephali dermal denticles are only present on certain appendages (the claspers), and the first dorsal-fin is. strengthened by a large bony spine. In most Ganoids thick plates, usually rhombic in form, are present in the skin; in bony Ganoids these cover the entire body, their margins being in apposition! These ganoid-scales: correspond to the main (deeper) part of the placoid basal-plates,. 0 é pP 5 SHON ACIO Os aS Sere? OLDE SOSS Soap Oto (NEFF YO ZS OSS SSS EB Ko PPASX SSOP C|o|alalclciclolais 2a 2S o~ IO XO = Fic. 19.—VeERTICAL SECTION THROUGH THE SKIN OF AN EmBrRyo SHARK. (From Gegenbaur’s Comp. Anatomy. ) C, dermis ; ¢, ¢, c, d, layers of the dermis ; p, papilla; H, epidermis ; ¢, its layer~ of columnar cells ; 0, enamel layer. the spine having become rudimentary. Their surface is dense and smooth (ganoin-layer), and was formerly erroneously supposed to consist of enamel. In Lepidosteus they bear numerous small denticles; but from what has been said above, this fact does not indicate that each ganoid-scale corresponds to a multiple of placoids. The exoskeleton was largely developed amongst fossil Ganoids. The scales of Teleosts, the first indication of which, as in the case of placoid scales, is seen in the form of small papillze of the dermis extending into the epidermis, correspond to the super- ficial portions of the basal-plates. In the further course of develop-- ment they are seen to consist of bony plates arranged in oblique rows and lying directly beneath the epidermis, the individual scales not touching one another, and their surfaces lying parallel to the- 1 In Amia, the scales have a “ cycloid” form. (See note on p. 32.) 32 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY surface of the body. In this stage their arrangement resembles that seen in Ganoids. Subsequently they usually come to lie within definite pockets or sacs, and to overlap one another like tiles on a roof (Fig. 20 a). The surface of the scales may be sculptured. : ji Fi — ee" ai = Ay aL, Wf << wf WH Wiel Fie. 20a.—Di1aGRAMMATIC LONGITUDINAL SECTION THROUGH THE SKIN OF A TELEOSTEAN, TO SHOW THE RELATION OF THE Bony SCALES. (Fron Boas’s Zoology.) 1, dermis ;. s, scale ; 0, epidermis. Amongst the Siluride (Fig. 20, B), Plectognathi, and Lopho- branchii, they may be of relatively large size and so arranged as to form a strong bony cuirass. Scales are wanting in Cyclostomes, and may be reduced or absent in repre- sentatives of the three larger Orders described above (viz., in Electric Fishes Spatularia, and some Eels). In the Dipnoi the arrangement of the scales is similar to that seen in the Teleostei. They consist of an external hard substance Fic. 208.—DERMAL ARMATURE OF Callichthys. B, barbules ; BrF’, pectoral fin; BF, pelvic fin; RF, dorsal fin; DS and VS, dorsal and ventral bony shields; +, lateral line. arranged in a network and provided with numerous denticles, and of an internal portion composed of firm connective-tissue and bone. 1 Different forms of the rounded or polygonal scales in Teleostei are dis- tinguished as cycloid and ctenoid. The former, which are the more primitive, have a smooth margin, while in the latter the posterior margin is toothed and comb-like. Various intermediate stages exist between the two forms. EXOSKELETON 33 These denticles are developed from connective-tissue cells, and are not comparable to the placoid denticle ; the resemblance, too, between the scales of the Dipnoi and Teleostei is only a superficial one. Thus the exoskeleton plays an important part in Fishes, and in numerous fossil Amphibians it reached a still higher develop- ment (Stegocephala). Amongst these, specially strong dermal plates were formed in the region of the shoulder-girdle, and very commonly most of the body was covered with scales. Fossil genera of Amphibia have, however, bequeathed but slight traces of this strong dermal armour to the existing forms of the group: as examples may be mentioned the bony plates in the skin of the back, of certain Anura (Ceratophrys dorsata and Ephippifer auran- tiacus), as well as the scales lying between the ring-like scutes of 2 Fig. 21.—A, Carapacr, and B, PLastron or A YounG TEStupo Graca; C, PLASTRON OF CHELONE MrpaAs. NWN, neural plates; OC, C, costal plates; MM, marginal plates; Np, nuchal plate ; Py, Py, pygal plates ; H, entoplastron ; Hp, epiplastron ; Hy, hyoplas- tron; Hp, hypoplastron ; Xi, xiphiplastron; R, R, ribs. (V indicates the anterior, and H the posterior end. ) the footless Amphibia (Gymnophiona). The latter resemble in many points the scales of Fishes and Dipnoans, and may be derived from such a scaly covering as that of the Permian Salamander, Dis- cosaurus. The dermal skeleton was still more highly developed amongst fossil Reptiles, ¢.g., many Ornithoscelida (Stegosaurus). In these, enormous bony plates and spines, sometimes as much as sixty-three centimetres long, were present in the dorsal region. Teleosaurus also, as well as the Triassic Aétosaurus ferratus and the Cretaceous Nodosaurus textilis, possessed a strong exoskeleton. Amongst existing Reptiles (comp. p. 20), Crocodiles, many Lizards (Anguis, Cyclodus, Scincus), and more especially Chelonians, exhibit a well-developed dermal skeleton. In the latter Order D 34 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY there is a dorsal and a ventral shield (carapace and plastron) con- sisting of numerous pieces and completely enclosing the body (Fig, 21). Both arise independently of the endoskeleton, which is preformed in cartilage: that is to say, they are true exo- skeletal membrane bones (cp. note on p. 71). The exoskeleton, however, comes into the closest relation with the endoskeleton, and may supplant it here and there: thus, in Testudo, for instance, the thoracic and lumbar vertebre and ribs become quite rudimentary. Birds, as already mentioned in the chapter on the integu- ment, have no dermal skeleton, and this is true of all Mammals except Armadillos (Dasypodide). In these it consists of a series of movable transverse bony scutes covering the head and body and of smaller plates on the taii and limbs. Sparse hairs occur between these plates. It is very doubtful whether this exoskeleton has been derived from that of Reptiles: more probably it, like the horny exoskeleton of Manis (p. 26), has arisen secondarily, and in consequence of its development the hairs have become reduced. In Glyptodon, a fossil member of this group, the dermal plates were firmly united together to form a large shield which covered the whole body. 2. ENDOSKELETON. I. VERTEBRAL COLUMN. An elastic rod, the notochord or chorda dorsalis, lying in the longitudinal axis of the embryo between the neural and visceral tubes (see p. 9), is the first part of the endoskeleton to be formed, and is the fore-runner of the vertebral column. It _is developed as a ridge of the primitive hypoblast, from which it becomes constricted off, and is therefore of epithelial origin. The large parenchyma-like cells of which it is composed consequently do not give rise to any intercellular substance ; vacuoles, however, soon appear within the cells, the protoplasm of which undergoes. modification, and thus a retrogressive metamorphosis sets in (Fig. 22). The fact that this occurs at such early stages of develop- ment shows that the notochord must long ago have begun to lose its primitive function, whatever that function may have been. As, these degenerative processes are gradually carried still further, only the walls of the cells persist in the greater part of the notochord ; these become flattened by mutual pressure, so that they appear like a meshwork of pith-cells. At the periphery, however, the cells retain their protoplasm, and become arranged like an epithelium. Around the notochord two sheaths (Fig. 22 A, 4) VERTEBRAL COLUMN 35 ee irp kl Fig. 22.—DIAGRAMS ILLUSTRATING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NOTOCHORDAL SHEATHS AND VERTEBRAL COLUMN. A.—Karly stage, showing notochordal cells (xc) and primary sheath (sh!), as well as the mesoblastic skeletogenous layer (sk./). B.—Later stage, in which the central notochordal cells (xc) have become vacuolated and the peripheral cells have given rise to the ‘‘ notochordal epithe- lium” (ne. ep.) from which the fibrillar secondary sheath (sh?) is derived : waaay dorsal and ventral cartilages (d.a, ¢.a) have arisen in the skeletogenous ayer. C.—Cartilage cells have passed through the primary sheath, and are invading the secondary sheath (Cartilaginous Ganoids, Holocephali, Dipnoi, Elasmo- branchii : in the last named chorda-centra are thus formed). D.—The cartilages are growing round the notochord, outside its sheaths, which gradually become reduced: thus arch-centra are formed (Bony Ganoids, Teleostei, Amphibia, Amniota). — A—D represent the caudal region. £.—A later stage in the development of a pre-caudal vertebra. The notochord (nc) has become constricted, and the cartilages have united into a single mass and have given rise to a centrum (c), neural arch (n.a@), neural spine (x. sy), transverse processes (¢7.p) and articular processes (a7‘). D2 36 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY are successively developed from its cells, and these differ both chemically and physically from one another. The primary sheuth (so-called elastica) is first secreted by the peripheral notochordal cells: the secondary sheath, which has a similar origin from the so-called “notochordal epithelium,” appears later, and occurs in all the Craniata; it is said not to be present in Amphioxus, the notochord of which, like that of the Tunicata, apparently represents the oldest and most primitive form of this struc- ture, such as is still repeated ontogenetically in Elasmobranchs. The thick secondary sheath, which like the primary, is at first homogeneous, gradually becomes fibrillar and replaces the primary sheath fanctionally. | From the surrounding mesoblast a skeletogenous layer is de- veloped: this not only surrounds the notochord, but extends dorsally to it as well as ventrally (Fig. 22). Thus a continuous tube of embryonic connective-tissue is formed enclosing the spinal cord and only broken through at the points of exit of the spinal nerves. This stage is known as the membranous stage, and in it no indication is seen of the segmentation which occurs later in the vertebral axis. The cause of this segmentation is to be traced primarily to the muscular-system ; and it is evident, for mechanical reasons, that the segmentation of the vertebral column must alternate with that of the muscular segments or myotomes. Small masses of cartilage arranged metamerically later appear in the skeletogenous tissue close to the notochord, and these represent the rudiments of the dorsal and ventral arches and bodies or centra of the vertebrae (Fig. 22, B, D, E). This is the beginning of the second or cartilaginous stage of the vertebral column; the various processes (spinous, transverse, articular, &c., Fig. 22, E) are then formed, and now ossification may occur (bony stage). Those parts of the fibrous tissue which do not become consolidated in this manner give rise to the /igaments of the vertebral column. During these differentiations of the skeletogenous tissue, the notochord suffers a very different fate in the various Vertebrate groups; it may increase in size and persist as a regular cylindrical rod, or it may become constricted at definite intervals by the forma- tion of vertebral bodies, or even entirely disappear. All these ontogenetic stages find their exact parallel in the phylogenetic development of Vertebrates, as the following pages will show. Amphioxus, as already mentioned, apparently possesses the most embryonic type of notochord. It is surrounded by a connec- tive-tissue layer and is entirely unsegmented. In Cyclostomes a very similar primitive condition is retained ; but a secondary sheath becomes developed, and cartilaginous ele- ments appear in the caudal region: in the adult Petromyzon these are present all along the notochord in the form of rudi- VERTEBRAL COLUMN 37 mentary newral (dorsal) arches, which, however, do not. meet above the spinal cord. These cartilages, of which there are two pairs to each muscular segment or myotome, correspond to the “intercalary pieces” of Elasmobranchs (p. 58); they serve in the first instance for the origin and insertion of the muscles, and at the same time form a protection for the spinal cord. Newral spines also occur in the middle of the axis, and in the caudal region hemal (ventral) arches enclosing the caudal aorta and vein, as well as hemal spines, are present, and fusion of the cartilaginous elements occurs. To the condition found in Cyclostomes, that seen in the Cartilaginous Ganoids, Holocephali, and Dipnoi is directly connected, inasmuch as the metameric character of the skeletal axis F Fic. 23.—PorTION OF THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN OF Spatularia. (Side view.) Fic. 24.—TRANSVERSE SECTION OF THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN OF Acipenser ruthenus (in the anterior part of the body). Ps, spinous process ; HL, longitudinal elastic band ; SS, skeletogenous layer ; Ob, upper arch ; M, spinal cord ; P, pia mater; Jc, intercalary pieces ; C, noto- chord ; He, primary, and Cs, secondary sheath of the notochord ; Ub, lower arch ; Ao, aorta ; fo, median parts of the lower arches, which here enclose the aorta ventrally ; 7, basal processes of the lower arches. is essentially indicated by the neural arches. In the two groups last mentioned, however, skeletogenous cells break through the primary notochordal sheath (elastica) and so invade the thick secondary sheath, which in consequence encloses cartilage cells amongst its fibres. In Chimera calcified rings are also developed in the central part of the sheath: these are more numerous than the arches. The latter are developed as paired dorsal and ventral cartilages : they remain cartilaginous in the Cartilaginous Ganoids (Figs. 23 and 24) and Holocephali, but become densely ossified in the Dipnoi (Fig. 25). In the caudal region the hzemal arches enclose the caudal aorta and vein; further forwards the cartilages do not meet in the middle line below, and consequently the lower arches end 38 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY on either side in a laterally-directed cartilaginous projection, or basal process, The relations of the arches in Elasmobranchs, Bony Ganoids and 'Teleosts is similar to that above described. For the further strengthening of the vertebral column so-called intercalary pieces (Figs. 23, 24, 26, 28) appear between the upper and-lower arches in Cartilaginous Ganoids and Elasmobranchs, and these in the Fic. 25.—PorRTION OF THE VERTEBRAL CoLUMN OF Protopterus. C, notochord ; DF, neural spine ; #7’, interspinous bone ; JS, fin-ray. case of the dorsal arches are often spoken of as internewral plates. In Elasmobranchs the neural arch may be made up of several more or less distinct pieces—the neural processes arising from the centrum, the newral and internewral plates, and the neural spines. In the Elasmobranchii, the skeletogenous cells invade the notochordal sheath, as in the Holocephali: and Dipnoi; but the sheath then becomes segmented to form a series of cartilaginous 06 Ie i i ee Fic, 26.—PortTioN oF THE VERTEBRAL CoLUMN oF Scymnus. WK, centra; Ob, upper arches ; Ic, intercalary pieces. The apertures for, the Spinal rerves are seen in the arches and intercalary pieces. vertebral bodies or centra, which from the mode of their formation may be called chorda-centra. The fact is thus accounted for that the number of arch-elements does not necessarily correspond with that of the centra in these Fishes. Ossification may occur in the concave ends of the centra and in longitudinal bars along each centrum. VERTEBRAL COLUMN 39 In Bony Ganoids and Teleosts paired dorsal and. ventral carti- lages likewise arise above and below the notochordal sheath, but in the course of development so extend at the base as to completely surround it. From the dorsal carti- lages the upper arches take their origin, and from the ventral the lower ; while the cartilage surround- ing the notochord gives rise to the vertebral centra, which may there- fore be distinguished from those described above as arch-centra. In the development of the centra of both kinds, the notochord becomes constricted by the growth of the cartilage at regular intervals, while the latter undergoes segmen- tation into centra, Hach point of | Fic. 27. —PorTIoN OF THE VERTE- BRAL CoLuMN oF Polypterus. WK, centra; BF, basal processes ; Ob, upper arches; Ps, neural spine. constriction corresponds to the middle of a centrum, 2.¢., it is intva- vertebral in position, and the notochord may here disappear entirely ; \ CR Fic. 28.—PortTIoN OF THE VERTEBRAL CoLUMN oF Lepidosteus. (After Balfour and Parker. ) vertebra from anterior surface ; B, two vertebre from the side. cn, anterior convex face, and en!, posterior concave face of centrum ; h.a, basal process ; n.a, upper arch ; 7.c, intercalary cartilages ; /./, longitudinal ligament ; 7.s, interspinous bone. 40 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY intervertebrally it remains expanded and so persists'as a kind of connecting- or packing-substance between contiguous centra, which are consequently of a deeply biconcave or amphicelous form (Figs. 29a and 29B). One of the Bony Ganoids, Lepidosteus, forms a marked excep- tion to other Fishes as regards its vertebral column, inasmuch as definite articulations are formed between the centra. A con- cavity is formed at the hinder end of each centrum (Fig. 28), which articulates with a convexity on the next vertebra behind (opisthocelous form). The notochord (except in the caudal region) entirely disappears in the adult; in the larva it is seen to be ex- panded zntravertebrally, and constricted intervertebrally, a condition of things which appears again in the higher types—as, for instance, ¥>A of LOB RL LZ, UNG 7 Fig. 294.—DIAGRAM SHOWING THE INTERVERTEBRAL REMAINS OF THE NovrocHorp. C, C!, expanded and constricted portions of notochord ; WA, centra; Lz, inter- vertebral ligaments. Fic. 29n.—PortTION OF THE VERTEBRAL CoLUMN OF A YOUNG DOGFISH (Scyllium canicula), After Cartier. notochord ; Kn, outer, and Kn', inner, zone of cartilage; A, the fibro-carti- laginous mass lying between these zones, which is undergoing calcification ; In, invertebral ligament. in Reptiles. In a still earlier larval stage, however, the constric- tions are intravertebral, as in other Fishes. The vertebral column of Fishes is characterised by a very uniform character of its elements, so that a distinction can only be seen between the trunk and caudal vertebre. Its primitive character is shown by the fact that the neural arches are usually incomplete dorsally. As a rule, the closing in of the arch is effected by special pieces of cartilage (comp. p. 38) and by an elastic longitudinal band (Figs. 24, 28) which is always present : this also applies to the hemal arches. Articular processes between the arches (zygapophyses). are usually present in Fishes which possess bony vertebree; in Rays and Chimeroids only amongst Fishes are definite articulations formed between the skull and VERTEBRAL COLUMN 4] vertebral column, and in these Fishes the anterior vertebre are fused into a single mass. In the caudal region of Amia the centra are mostly double, an archless plewro- or post-centrum alternating with an inter- or pre-centrum, A some- what similar condition is found in the Jurassic Eurycormus and other fossil Ganoids. As a rule Elasmobranchs and Ganoids possess a greater number of vertebre (in Alopecias vulpes there are 365) than Teleosts, in which we seldom meet with more than 70: the Eel, however, possesses more than 200. The caudal region of-the vertebral column deserves particular attention in Fishes, and the condition of this region in Amphioxus, Cyclostomi and Dipnoi, may be taken as a starting-point. In these, the notochord extends straight backwards to the hinder end of the body and is surrounded quite symmetrically by the tail- fin, which is therefore spoken of as protocercal or diphycercal (Fig. 30). This condition is also met with in many Fishes of the a ae SSE = SEBEL ee Ss ———— a is ———— Fie. 30.—Tai or Protopterus. Devonian strata as well as in young stages of Teleostei. In the latter, however, the ventral half of the tail-fin with its sup- porting skeleton (hemal arches and fin-rays) is, as a result of un- equal growth, more strongly developed than the dorsal, and the end of the vertebral column becomes bent upwards, thus giving rise to a heterocercal tail. This form of tail may be recognised externaily, as in many Elasmobranchs, Ganoids, and numerous fossil Fishes ; or may be masked by a more or less symmetrical tail-fin, as in Lepi- dosteus (Fig. 31), Amia, and more particularly in most Teleosts! (e.g. Salmo, Fig. 32), in which the heterocercal character is only visible internally. The posterior end of the vertebral column is then frequently represented by a rod-like wrostyle, and in Teleosts one or more wedge-shaped hypural bones (enlarged hemal arches) generally occur directly beneath it (Fig. 32). 1 The term homocercal is sometimes used to describe the masked heterocerca condition of the tail in Teleostei. 42 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Amphibia.—The vertebral column of Urodeles may be differ- entiated into cervical, thoraco-lumbar, sacral, and caudal regions, and these regions can be recognised, except in certain modified forms, in all the higher Vertebrates. On account of the absence of extremities in Cecilians, the vertebral column can only be Fic. 31.—Tam or Lepidosteus. divided into three regions—cervical, thoracic, and a very short caudal. In Anura, no special lumbar region can be recognised, and the caudal portion is modified to form a urostyle (see pp. 41 and 44). The centra of the Amphibia, as well as those of the Amniota, correspond to arch-centra (see p. 39). Fic. 32.—Caupat Enp or VERTEBRAL CoLUMN oF SaLMon. (From Boas’ s Zoology.) h, centrum ; h’, urostyle ; , hemal arch ; n’ hypural bone; 0”, neural arch ; ¢, , neural spine. The notochord of Urodele larve, like that of most Fishes, undergoes intravertebral constrictions, while intervertebrally it grows thicker, and accordingly appears expanded. Thus the vertebre here also are amphicelous. Later, intervertebral masses of cartilage become developed, which, together with the bone which is formed at the same time in the surrounding connective- VERTEBRAL COLUMN 43 tissue, extend inwards towards the centre, gradually constricting the notochord so that it may eventually become entirely obliterated. Finally a differentiation, as well as a resorption, extending inwards from the periphery, occurs in these cartilaginous parts: in the interior of each an articular cavity is formed, so that an the vertebre of the higher Urodeles an anterior convexity and LT CES ~~ Soe Ke S25 Sorc S WN TK LK Sc$O INQ SS re IO NY me — CO A rerasry) orion tetas = sessr== SS Sue syeeytees === Sc5 ase Dae. OG wwe te ".o 5 284% x 2C YS2 cS FO or§ Sore > _ SSSaeer CO Fic. 33.—LoNGITUDINAL SECTION THROUGH THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN OF VARIOUS Uropetes. A, Ranodon sibericus ; B, Amblystoma tigrinum ; C, Gyrinophilus porphyriticus (the three anterior vertebre, J, JZ, III); D, Salamandrina perspicillata. ‘Ch, notochord ; Jvk, invertebral cartilage: CK, vertebral cartilage and fat-cells ; K, peripheral bony covering of centrum; R, ribs and transverse processes ; S, vertebral constriction of notochord in A mblystoma tigrinum, without cartilage ~ + and fat-cells in this region ;**, intervertebral cartilaginous tracts; Mh, Mh, narrow cavities; Gp, Gk, articular socket and head; Ligt, intervertebral ligaments. a posterior concavity may be .distinguished, both covered ‘ with cartilage ; they are, therefore, opisthocelous. A glance at Fig. 33, A to D, will make this clear. In the development of the vertebral column of Urodeles we can thus distinguish three stages:—(1) A connection of the indi- 44 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY sidwal: vertebree by means of the intervertebrally expanded notochord ; (2) a connection by means of intervertebral masses of cartilage : and finally (3) an articular connection. These three different stages of development find a complete parallel in the phylogeny’ ‘of tailed Amphibians, inasmuch as many of the Stegocephala of the Carboniferous period, as well as the Perennibranchiata, Derotremata, and many Salamanders, possess simple biconcave vertebrz without differentiation of definite articulations.! The bony parts of the vertebre of Urodeles are not formed from the carti- - laginous sheath of the notochord, but in the surrounding connective-tissue, there being only an intervertebral cartilaginous zone, extending into the ends of the centra. In the Anura,on the other hand, as in Elasmobranchs, Teleosts, bony Ganoids, and the higher Vertebrata, the vertebree are preformed in cartilage, and true arti- culations always arise between the vertebrae: as a rule the convexity is posterior and the concavity anterior (pro- celous form). A further difference is seen in the relations of the notochord, which persists eptot S i SS ~~ ~ . x. ener Be Fie. 61.—A. CRANIAL SKELETON OF SALMON AFTER REMOVAL OF THE JAWS, AND ORBITAL AND OPERCULAR Bones. (From the right side.) B. Longitudinal section of the same. The cartilaginous parts are dotted. vo, vomer ; psph, parasphenoid ; fr, frontal; ekteth, ectoethmoid ; socc, supra- occipital ; exocc, exoccipital ; basocc, basioccipital ; Col.vert, point of connec- tion of the skull with the vertebral column; basph, basisphenoid ; orbsph, orbitosphenoid ; alsph, alisphenoid ; epiot, epiotic; pfero, pterotic ; opisth, opisthotic; proot, prootic; sphot, sphenotic; NV.o//, canal for the olfactory nerve. the others are, the articular, angular, and coronoid. The last two, however, may be wanting. The hyoid arch is followed by four branchial arches and a rudimentary fifth which forms the “inferior pharyngeal bone.” THE SKULL 81 The dorsal segments of these arches become fused together to form the “superior pharyngeal bone,” which, like the inferior pharyngeal, usually bears teeth. : A curious asymmetry is seen in the head of adult Plewronectide. When hatched, these Fishes are quite symmetrical, but later on the eye of one side becomes rotated, so that eventually both eyes are situated on the same side ; in consequence of this, the skull also becomes asymmetrical. The tactile barbules present on the head of many Fishes (e.g., Siluroids) are supported by skeletal parts. | B. Dipnoi. The skull of the Dipnoi is in a sense intermediate between that of the Holocephali, Ganoidei, and Teleostei, on the one hand, and Psp Qte orem Fig. 62.—CraniaAL SKELETON, PECTORAL ARCH, AND ANTERIOR EXTREMITY OF Protopterus. W, W?, the vertebree which are fused with the skull, with their neural spines (Psp, Psp") ; Oce, exoccipital, with the hypoglossal foramina ; Ob, auditorycapsule ; Tr, trabecular region, with the foramina for the trigeminal and facial nerves ; FP, fronto-parietal ; Ht, membranous fontanelle, perforated by the optic foramen (JJ); SK, supra-orbital; SH, supra-ethmoid; NX, cartilaginous nasal capsule ; A’, antorbital process (the labial cartilage, which has a similar position and direction, is not indicated) ; PQ, palatopterygoid, which converges towards its fellow of the other side at PQ!; Sq, squamosal, covering the quadrate ; A, A}, articular, joined to the hyoid (Hy) by a fibrous band (B) ; D, dentary; +t, Meckel’s cartilage, which is freely exposed, and grows out into prominences.; SZ, a, b, teeth; Op, Op', rudimentary opercular bones ; I to V, the five branchial arches; KR, cranial rib; LK, MK, lateral and median bony lamelle which ensheathe the cartilage of the pectoral arch (Kn, Kn); co, fibrous band which binds the upper end of the pectoral arch with the skull; x, articular head of the pectoral arch, with which the basal segment (b) of the free extremity articulates; *,*, rudimen- tary lateral rays of the extremity (biserial type) ; 1, 2, 3, the three next seg- ments of the free extremity ; K, external gills. G 82 : COMPARATIVE ANATOMY that of Amphibia on the other. In certain respects, however, it presents special characters in which it differs from that of all these forms. The chondrocranium is retained either entirely (Ceratodus) or at any rate to a large extent (Protopterus and Lepidosiren), and the cartilage bones are much less numerous than in Ganoids, exoccipitals only being present (Fig. 62). The cranial cavity extends forwards between the orbits to the ethmoidal region, and the lamina cribrosa is largely cartilaginous. The quadrate, which is covered by a sguamosal (which corresponds to the preopercu- lum of Fishes), is fused with the cranium, and the connection between the latter and the strongly ossified palatopterygoid, which unites with its fellow anteriorly, is a very close one. The lattice-like cartilaginous nasal capsules are situated right and left of the apex of the snout, close under the skin. As in ‘all the higher Vertebrates, each nasal cavity communicates with the mouth by internal nostrils (choane) as well as with the exterior by the external nostrils, which are, however, covered by the upper lip. The labial cartilages are directly connected with the inter- nasal septum. The occipital region is immovably connected with the eeriabial column, some of the anterior vertebre being firmly united with the skull. The teeth, which are sharp and blade- like, are covered with enamel, and are borne on the palatoptery- goid and mandible; small “vomerinue teeth” are also present, though there is no vomer. The gill-covers and branchiostegal rays are greatly reduced, and even the five cartilaginous gill- arches are in a very rudimentary condition in Protopterus and Lepidosiren. The strong lower jaw is ossified by an articular, a dentary, an angular, and a splenial, on the last mentioned of which the teeth are borne; Meckel’s cartilage extends for a short distance an- teriorly to the dentary. The Dipnoi are an extremely ancient group ; they existed in the Trias and Carboniferous periods, and possibly even extended into the Silurian. Several facts as regards their skull cannot be satisfactorily elucidated until something is known of its development. The morphology of the so-called ‘‘ cranial rib ” (Fig. 62), for instance, is not at present understood. c. Amphibia. Urodela.—The comparatively simple skull of tailed Amphi- bians is distinguished from that of bony Fishes in general principally by negative characters——on the one hand by the presence of less cartilage in the adult, and on the other by a reduction in the number of bones. In the larval condition (Fig. 63), the chondrocranium, with its nasal, orbital, and auditory THE SKULL 83 on lee -Coce Osp Fic. 63.—SKULL oF A YOUNG: Fic. 64.—SxKkuuu oF Salamandra atra AxoLoTL. Ventral view. (AputtT). Dorsal view. Iinxn (¢ GER / se pre Fie. 65.—SKuLL oF Salamandraatra (ApuLT). Ventral view. Tr, trabecula ; OB, auditory capsule ; Fov, fenestra ovalis, closed on one side by the stapes (St); Lgt, ligament between the stapes and suspensorium ; Cocc, occipital condyles ; Bp, cartilaginous basilar plate between the auditory cap- sules; Osp, dorsal tract of the occipital cartilage ; JN, internasal plate, which extends laterally to form processes (7'F' and AF’) bounding the internal nostrils (Ch) ; NK, nasal capsule ; Can, nasal cavity ; Na, external nostrils ; F/, foramen for the olfactory nerve ; Z, tongue-like outgrowth (intertrabecula) of the internasal plate, which forms a roof for the internasal cavity ; Qu, quadrate ; Pic, cartilaginous pterygoid ; Pot, otic process, Ped, pedicle, and Pa, ascending process, of the quadrate; Ps, parasphenoid; Pt, bony pterygoid ; Vo, vomer; P/, palatine; Pp, palatine process of maxilla ; Vop, vomero-palatine ; Pmx, premaxilla; M, maxilla; Os, sphenethmoid; As, prootic ; NV, nasal; Pf, prefrontal, perforated at D for the lachrymal duct ; fF, frontal; P, parietal ; Squ, squamosal (‘‘ paraquadrate,” Gaupp) ; J, optic, V, trigeminal, and VJJ, facial foramina; Rt, point of entrance of the ophthalmic branch of the fifth nerve into the nasal capsule. G 2 84 - COMPARATIVE ANATOMY regions, has very distinctly the relations described in the introduc- tion to this chapter. The auditory capsules (Figs. 63 to 65)—which are bound together by cartilaginous tracts in the basi- and supra- occipital regions, and generally become strongly ossified later by the exoccipitals_ and prootics——show a new and _ important modification as compared with those of Fishes in the presence of an aperture, the fenestra ovalis, on the outer and lower side of each. This fenestra is closed by a cartilaginous plug, the stapedial plate, probably corresponding to a part of the wall of the auditory capsule; from it a rod-like cartilage or bone, the columella «awiis, corresponding phylogenetically to the upper element of the hyoid arch, extends outwards towards the quadrate in most Urodeles and serves to conduct the sound to the ‘inner ear, the position of the semicircular canals of which is indicated by corresponding cartilaginous ridges on the capsule. In all Amphibians two condyles for articulation with the first vertebra are developed on the ventral periphery of the foramen Fic. 66.—SKULL AND VISCERAL ARCHES OF Menopoma. (From the side.) I, mandible ; II, hyoid ; ITIJ-VI, branchial arches; qu, quadrate, above which is the squamosal; ar, articular; mk, Meckel’s cartilage, enclosed by the dentary bone. magnum. The occipital region is ossified by two exoccipitals, a bony supra- and basioccipital rarely being present in recent forms (certain Anura). The large nasal capsules, consisting throughout life of consider- able cartilaginous portions, are connected with the auditory capsules by means of the trabecule, which give rise to the side walls of the skull and become more or less entirely ossified as the sphenethmoid and prootics, The cranial cavity is closed dorsally by the frontals and parietals, and ventrally by the parasphenoid, which is sometimes provided with teeth, In front of it are the vomers, which bound the internal nostrils; in adults each vomer becomes fused with the corresponding palatine, which forms a delicate bar lying on the ventral surface of the THE SKULL 85 parasphenoid. These relations are secondary, for in the larval condition a typical palatoquadrate or pterygopalatine bar is present (Fig. 63). The‘lamina cribrosa (p.74) is either cartilaginous (e.7., Salamandra) or membranous (¢.g., Triton); or the cranial cavity may be closed in front by special modifications of the frontals. On the outer side of the vomer lies the maxilla, and in front of this is a premaxilla which usually encloses, or at least bounds, a cavity. The latter bone extends on to the dorsal surface of the skull and abuts against the nasal, behind which usually follows a prefrontal. 3 The suspensorium is much more simple than that of Fishes (Figs. 683—66). It consists of the quadrate only, which has usually four typical processes connecting it with surrounding parts. and which bécomes fused secondarily with the skull. On the outer surface of the quadrate an investing bone, the squamosal,} becomes developed. In Tylototriton verrucosus the quadrate sends forwards a process which connects it with the maxilla: this is quite exceptional amongst Urodeles. With the exception of the lower jaw, in connection with which articular, splenial, and dentary bones are developed, the visceral skeleton of Urodeles undergoes various modifications in the different types. We may consider the ground-form, as exhibited in the larva, to consist of five pairs of bars in addition to the mandibular arch (Fig. 66). The anterior bar, or hyoid, consists of two segments (Fig. 67, A), as do also the two first branchial arches. The third and fourth branchial arches are much smaller, and each is composed of a single segment. All the above-named arches are connected with their fellows of the other side by means of a single or double basal piece. At the close of larval life, that is, when the gills are lost, the two hinder pairs of arches disappear entirely, while the two anterior pairs undergo changes as regards form and position, and may become more or less densely ossified (Fig. 67, B—D). In the genus Spelerpes, which possesses a sling-like tongue, the dorsal segment of the first branchial arch grows out into a long cartilaginous fila- ment, which extends far back under the dorsal integument (Fig. 67, D). The skull of the Gymnophiona differs from that of Urodeles mainly in its extremely solid and strong character, the ossifications being more extensive. In the extinct tailed Amphibians (i.e., Stegocephala, Fig. 68) some of which were comparatively gigantic, the cranial bones were very numerous and dense. A parietal foramen was present, as well as a ring of orbital bones. These forms possessed the same number of visceral arches as Urodeles, and it has been shown that they (e.g., Branchiosaurus) underwent a metamorphosis. Existing Amphibia cannot have been derived directly from them. Anura.—The skull of the tailless Batrachia is at first sight very similar to that of Urodeles. It undergoes, however, an 1 According to Gaupp, a trie squamosal is never present in existing Amphibia, and the bone which is usually so designated he calls the paraquadrate. 86 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY essentially different and much more complicated development, and cannot in any way be directly derived from that of tailed Amphibians. : BorI EL ) Fic. 67.—HYoBRANCHIAL APPARATUS OF URODELES. A, Axolotl (Siredon stage of Amblystoma); B, Salamandra maculosa; C, Triton cristatus; D, Spelerpes Suscus. D Bor, I, I, first and second basibranchial; KeH, ceratohyal ; HpH, hypohyal ; Kebr I, II, first and second ceratobranchial ; Hpbr J to IV, first to fourth epibranchial ; KH, KH’, small anterior and posterior pairs of cornua ; O.th, part of skeleton of larynx ; G.th, thyroid gland. A suctorial’ mouth, provided with labial cartilages and horny jaws, is present in the larva. An advance on Urodeles is seen in the formation of a tympanic cavity which is closed externally by a tympanic membrane, while internally it opens into the mouth by an _ THE SKULL 87 Eustachian aperture. With the exception of certain small regions (fenestree) on the dorsal side, the skull of Anura forms a com- Fic. 68.—RESTORATION OF THE SKULL OF A STEGOCEPHALAN (from the Carboniferous of Bohemia). (After Fritsch.) Pmx, premaxilla ; A, maxilla ; NV, nasal ; Na, nostril ; /’, frontal ; Pf, prefrontal ; P, parietal; Fp, parietal foramen; Socc, supraoccipital; Br, branchial apparatus ; Oc, sclerotic ring (orbital bones. ) ; plete cartilaginous box, the ethmoid region being at first entirely cartilaginous, and later becoming ossified by a sphenethmoid, which Fic. 69.—SKvuxu oF Rana esculenta. Ventral view. (After Ecker.) The investing bones are removed on the right side. Coce, occipital condyles ; Olat, exoccipital ; GK, auditory capsule ; Qu, quadrate ; Qig, quadratojugal ; Pro, prootic; Ps, parasphenoid ; As, alisphenoid region ; Pt, bony pterygoid ; PP, palatopterygoid ; /P, frontoparietal ; #, spheneth- moid (girdle bone) ; Pal, palatine ; Vo, vomer ; M, maxilla ; Pm, premaxilla ; N, N!', cartilages in connection with the nasal capsules; W.A, prorhinal cartilage ; JJ, V, VI, foramina for optic, trigeminal, and abducent nerves. 88 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY encircles the whole skull in this pegipn and is perforated by the olfactory nerves. In the adult the bones are not so numerous as in Urodeles, and the frontal and parietal of either side as a rule fuse together, thus giving rise to a fronto-parietal. The maxillary bar grows pack- wards much further than in Urodeles, and becomes connected with the suspensorium by means of a small intermediate bone, the quad- ratojugal (Fig. 69). The maxillary arch is therefore complete, as in Tylototriton amongst Urodeles (p. 85). The palatoquadrate is united anteriorly with the carti- laginous nasal capsule. (For the relations of the bones ‘bounding the mouth-cavity compare Fig.69.) The bones of the lower jaw are a dentary and an angular, the distal end of Meckel’s cartil- age ossifying as a small “ mentomeckelian.” There is a much ereater reduction of the _ branchial skeleton at the close of larval life than in Urodeles. In. the larva representatives of the hyoid and of four branchial arches can be recognised, but these are all fused together and form a continuous struc- ture, reminding one of Fic. 70.—HYOBRANCHIAL SKELETON OF LARVAL the branchial basket- (A) AND ApULT (B) FRoG. are. YT, (Miter Gaupp3 work 0 e Lamprey. bs, body of the hyoid; a.c, anterior cornua ; In the adult this be- p.c, posterior cornua. comes greatly reduced, and the apparatus con- sists of a broad cartilaginous plate in the floor of the mouth, with long anterior and shorter posterior (thyro-hyal) cornua, the latter of which become ossified. D. Reptiles. Although as regards the structure of the skull existing Reptiles and Amphibians are widely separated from one ‘another, certain resemblances exist between their extinct representatives (e. J: Palzohatteria and the Stegocephala). THE SKULL 89 ‘Excepting in the naso-ethmoidal region, the whole chondro- cranium usually becomes almost obliterated by an extensive process 7 pix a - oc.cond bas.oc Fic. 71.—Skvuu or Lacerta agilis (from Parker and Haswell’s Zoology, after W. K. Parker). A, from above ; B, from below ; C, from the side. ang, angular ; art, articular ; bas.oc, basioccipital; bas.pty, basipterygoid processes; - bas.sph, basi- sphenoid ; col, epipterygoid ; cor, coronary; dent, dentary; eth, ethmoid ; ex.oc, exoccipital; ext.nar, external nares; for.mag, foramen magnum ; fr, frontal ; int.nar, internal nares ; ju, jugal ; Jer, lachrymal ; maz, maxilla ; nas, nasal; oc.cond, occipital condyle; o/f, olfactory capsule; opi.ot, opis- thotic; opt.n, optic nerve; pal, palatine; par, parietal; para, para- sphenoid ; par.f, parietal foramen; p.mz, premaxille ; pr.fr, prefrontal ; ptg, pterygoid; pt.orb, postorbital ; qu, quadrate ; s.ang, supra-angular ; s.orb, supraorbitals; sq, squamosal; supra.t.', supra.t.*, supratemporals (‘‘ paraquadrate,” Gaupp) ; trans, transverse bone ; supra.oc, supraoccipital ; vom, vomer. 90 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY of ossification, which gives the skull a very firm and solid appear- ance; only amongst Lizards (Fig. 71), and especially in Hatteria is the cartilage retained to any considerable extent, and owing to the . conformation of the bones in the posterior region, the skullin these forms presents a number of distinct spaces or fossze in the dry state. In Snakes and Amphisbeenians the cranial cavity extends forwards between the orbits as far as the ethmoidal region, while in the Lacertilia, Chelonia, and Crocodilia—in which a fibro-carti-~ laginous interorbital septum perforated by the olfactory nerve is present—its anterior boundary is much further back. The parasphenoid, which plays so important a part as an investing bone of the roof of the mouth in Fishes and Amphibians, Fig. 72.—SkKuLL oF SNAKE (Z’ropidonotus natrix), dorsal view. Fic. 73.— ,, me es wa ventral view. Cocc, occipital condyle ; Osp, supraoccipital ; O/, exoccipital ; Fov, fenestra ovalis ; Pe, periotic; P, parietal; J, frontal; #7, postfrontal; P/, prefrontal ; Eth, ethmoid ; N, nasal; Pmz, premaxilla; M, maxilla; Bp, basioccipital ; Bs, basisphenoid ; Ch, posterior nostrils; Vo, vomer; P/, palatine; Pt, pterygoid; 7's, transverse bone; Qu, quadrate; Squ, squamosal ; Art, articular ; Ag, angular ; SA, supra-angular ; Dt, dentary ; //, optic foramen. begins to disappear; amongst Reptiles it only attains any im- portant development in Snakes, where the anterior part remains and forms the base of the interorbital region. Its place is taken by two cartilage bones, the basioecipital and basisphenoid, situated along the basis cranii. In contradistinction to the Amphibia, only a single condyle connects the skull with the vertebral column: this, on close examination, is seen to be formed of three parts, derived from the basioccipital and exoccipitals respectively. THE SKULL . 91 The roofing bones of the skull are well-developed and in the Lacertilia may become closely united with overlying dermal bones, while the trabecular region (ali- and orbitesphenoids) becomes of secondary importance in the adult, its place being partly taken by processes growing downwards from the frontal and parietal: this is especially the case in Snakes. The parietals are paired in the Chelonia and in Hatteria; in all other Reptiles they become fused together, as do also the frontals in many Lizards and Crocodiles. A parietal foramen’ is present in many Lizards. The topographical relations of the several bones to one another are shown in Figs. 71 to 74. It will be seen in them that the ground-plan of the Urodele skull is here fundamentally retained. In addition, however, to a postorbital, an imperfect circumorbital ring of bones is present in Lizards. In many Lizards, moreover, Fic. 74.—SKuLL or YouNG WATER-TORTOISE (Emys europea). Side view. Osp, supracccipital, which gives rise to a crest; Pf, prefrontal, which forms a great part of the anterior boundary of the orbit ; J, point of entrance of the olfactory nerve into the nasal capsule ; Na, external nostril; Sz, interorbital septum ; 7K, horny sheaths of jaws ; Jug, jugal ; Qjg, quadratojugal (‘‘ para- quadrate,” Gaupp); Mt, tympanic membrane; BP, cartilaginous interval between basioccipital and hasisphenoid ; Md, mandible. Other letters as in Figs. 72 and 73. a rod-like bone, the epipterygoid (also represented in Crocodiles), connects the parietal with the pterygoid, and a transverse bone extending from the maxilla to the pterygoid is typically present in Reptiles, but is wanting in the Chelonia and Typhlopide. The auditory capsules are ossified from three centres, the prootic usually remaining free, and the epiotic uniting with the supraoccipital and the opisthotic with the exoccipital. maxilla also come into connection with the palatines :—thus a secondary roof is formed to the mouth-cavity distinct from the true (sphenoidal) base of the skull. The cavity thus formed closes in the posterior pro- longation of the nasal chambers, which consequently become sharply differentiated from the mouth. In Chelonians the pterygoid bones do not take part in the formation of this hard palate, which in Crocodiles is much more markedly developed, and is formed by the premaxille, maxilla, palatines, and pterygoids, the posterior nostrils here opening far back into the pharynx (Fig. 75). A number of bones arise in connection with the lower jaw, v1Z., articular. Teeth are well developed in all Reptiles except Chelonians, 1 In Snakes (Figs. 72 and 73) (except Tortrix), the quadrate is only indirectly a dentary, angular, supra-angular, splenial, coronoid, and connected with the skull by means of the squamosal, which extends backwards, and thus throws the articulation of the lower jaw far back, giving rise to a very wide gape. In most Snakes, and particularly in the Viperine forms, the facial bones are capable of movement upon one another, but in Typhlops they are im- movably connected with the skull. The two rami of the mandible are connected by a more or less elastic ligament. THE SKULL 93 in which they are replaced functionally by strong horny sheaths on the edges of the jaws. The teeth may be borne on the palatine and pterygoid, as well 3 as on the maxilla, premaxilla (which is usually unpaired), and dentary. In the young Hatteria only amongst existing Reptiles do the vomers bear teeth (usually one on each). In certain fossil forms brush- like masses of sphenoidal teeth were present. The remarkable horned skull of the gigantic Ceratopside (Dino- sauria) which reached a length of nearly seven feet, possessed horny beaks in addition to teeth on the maxilla and dentary. A parietal foramen was present. In correspondence’ with the absence of branchial re- spiration during development, the branchial apparatus plays no great part in Reptiles, and ~ often only the slightest traces of it are seen: thus in Snakes, for instance, only the hyoid remains, and this not always. Fic. 76.—HYoBRANCHIAL APPARATUS witH LARYNX AND TRACHEA OF Hmys europea. ZH, basihyobranchial, which widens at In Chelonians a basal piece (“basihyobranchial”) as well as the first branchial arch per- ZB and bears the cricoid (RX) and arytenoid (AK) cartilages of the larynx; KH, lesser hyoid cornua; ZH, greater hyoid cornua ; 1K, first sist in addition (Fig. 76). branchial arch ; 7'r, trachea. E. Birds. The skull of Birds is formed on a simiiar plan to that of Reptiles—more particularly of Lizards, but it exhibits certain special characteristics (Fig. 77). The brain-case is proportionately very large, and all the cranial bones show a tendency to run together by the obliteration of the sutures originally present between them ; they are usually delicate | and spongy (“pneumatic”), thus contrasting greatly with those of Reptiles.” Only in the region of the nose does the cartilage persist throughout life to any extent, and even here not always. 1 It should, however, be mentioned that the development of air spaces within the bones of the skull is hinted at in Crocodiles and certain fossil Reptiles. 94 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY The wnpared occipital condyle no longer lies at the posterior boundary of the skull, but becomes relatively shifted forward along its base, so that the axis of the latter lies at an angle with that of the vertebral column. The basis craniiis formed by a basioccipital and a basisphenoid, from which latter a bony rostrum, the remains of the anterior part of the parasphenoid, extends forwards. The posterior part of the parasphenoid persists as a large plate, the basitemporal, which underlies the basisphenoid and part of the basioccipital. Above the rostrum a small presphenoid is present in the embryo, and orbitosphenoids and alisphenoids are better developed than in Lizards, The auditory capsules ossify by three centres, and the relations of the tympanic cavity, auditory fenestra, and columella are very similar to those of Reptiles. The two Eustachian tubes open together in the middle line. The quadrate is movable upon the skull, as is also the whole maxillopalatine apparatus; the palatopterygoid bar is separated from its fellow in the middle line and slides on the rostrum of the basisphenoid, thus allowing the beak to be raised or lowered to a greater or less extent: a complete bony palate comparable to that of Crocodiles is consequently never present. This mobility of the upper jaw is most marked in Parrots, in which the frontonasal joint forms a regular hinge. The vomers, which may be absent, usually unite with one another, and with the palatines in a greater or less degree! The posterior nostrils are always situated between the vomers and palatines. The maxilla and quadrate are connected by a jugal and a quadratojugal, and a squamosal is present ; small bones may also occur in the neighbourhood of the lachrymal. (For other details, compare Fig. 77.) ; Teeth were present in Jurassic and Cretaceous Birds (Archzo- pteryx, Hesperornis, Ichthyornis), but are no longer developed in existing forms, their place being taken functionally by horny sheaths covering the bones of the jaws, which thus form a beak, much as in Chelonians. Several bones are developed in connection with the lower jaw, the relations of which are essentially similar to those seen in Reptiles : they, however, become fused together in the adult, and the two rami of the mandible unite distally by synostosis. The visceral skeleton is greatly reduced, though the basihyal and basibranchial—which are embedded in the tongue, as well as the first branchial arch persist, and the latter may, as in the Woodpecker, grow out into a pair of very long jointed rods extending far over the skull. 1 The differences in details as regards the arrangement of the bones of the palate are important for purposes of classification. THE SKULL 95 Fie, 77.—SKULL oF A Wiip Duck (Anas boschas). A, from above; B, from below ; C, from the side. (From a preparation by W. K, Parker). a.l.s, alisphenoid ; ag, angular ; ar, articular ; a.p.f, anterior palatine foramen ; b.t, basitemporal ; b.o, basioccipital ; b.pg, basipterygoid ; b.s, basisphenoid ; d, dentary; e¢.n, external nostrils; eth, ethmoid; ¢.0, exoccipital; e.w, Eustachian aperture ; fr, frontal; fm, foramen magnum ; 7.c, foramen for internal carotid artery; j, jugal; J/c, lachrymal; mz.p, maxillopalatine process ; mz, maxilla; n, nasal ; n.px, nasal process of the premaxilla ; pz, premaxilla ; y, parietal ; ps, presphenoid ; pg, pterygoid ; p/, palatine ; p.n, internal nostrils; g, quadrate; g.j, quadratojugal; sq, squamosal; s.o, supraoccipital ; ty, tympanic cavity ; v, vomer ; /7, foramen for optic nerve ; V, for trigeminal; 7X, X, for glossopharyngeal and vagus; XJJ, for hypoglossal. 96 . COMPARATIVE ANATOMY -F. Mammals. In Mammals there is a much closer connection between the cranial and visceral regions of the skull than is the case in the Vertebrates already described. In the fully-developed skull both maxillary and palatopterygoid regions are united to Fic. 78 A.—LONGITUDINAL VERTICAL SECTIONS THROUGH THE SKULLS oF—A, Salamandra maculosa, B, Testudo greca, AND C, Corvus corone, TO SHOW THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE CRANIAL AND VISCERAL PORTIONS. the cranium, though a facial and a cranial region can still be distinguished. The higher we pass in the Mammalian series, the more does the former come to lie below instead of in front of the latter. In Man the facial skeleton is proportionately small THE SKULL 97 when contrasted with the large cranial portion of the skull, and the reduction of the angle between the basi-cranial and Fic. 78 8. —LONGITUDINAL VERTICAL SECTIONS THROUGH THE SKULLS OF A, DEER, B, BaBpoon, AND C, MAN, TO SHOW THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE CRANIAL AND VISCERAL PORTIONS. ‘ vertebral axes is carried still further than in Birds (comp. Figs. 78 A and B). The base of the skull is mainly preformed in cartilage, as in Reptiles and Birds. The parasphenoid has practically disappeared, H SM i hah, WORM (Or. ET THE SKULL 99 Fic. 79.—SkULL or GREYHOUND. A, from above; B, from the side; C, from below ; and D, in longitudinal section. Jm, premaxilla ; V, nasal ; W/, maxilla, with the infraorbital foramen (Finf) ; Jg, jugal; Sq, squamosal ; Pjt, zygomatic process of the squamosal ; ZL, lachry- mal, surrounding the lachrymal canal; P, parietal; Sq.occ, supraoccipital ; C.occ, occipital condyles, on the exoccipitals ; B.occ, Occ.bas, basioccipital ; Pal (P in C), palatine ; Pt, pterygoid ; Sph, alisphenoid ; Sph’, basisphenoid ; Sph", presphenoid ; Maud, external auditory meatus ; 7’, tympanic ; For.m, foramen magnum ; Pet, petrous portion of periotic ; Cho, posterior narial passage ; Vo, vomer; Hth, lamina perpendicularis of the ethmoid; Z£th’, cribriform plate ; Cav.gl, glenoid cavity for the lower jaw. the anterior part of the basis cranii being formed by the ossification of the cartilage: this either gives rise to a distinct presphenoid (Marsupials, Rodents, and some Insectivores), or may be due to a union of the basal parts of the two orbitosphenoids. Ali- sphenoids, as well as a basisphenoid, a basioccipital, a supraoccipital, and exoccipitals are always. present, the paired condyles being furnished by the exoccipitals (Fig. 79). The cranial cavity is closed in anteriorly by the bony lamina cribrosa or cribriform plate of the ethmoid, which has numerous perforations for the olfactory nerves in all Mammals but Ornithorhynchus. The auditory capsules are ossified from prootic, epiotic, and opisthotic centres, which early fuse together to form the pervotic or petromastoid bone. The denser internal (petrous) portion of this encloses the essential part of the organ of hearing, and a fenestra ovalis and fenestra rotunda are present on its outer surface: the more spongy mastoid portion reaches the surface of _ the skull between the exoccipital and the tympanic bone.! The - latter overlies the petrous portion of the periotic, and gives attachment to the tympanic membrane: in the Placentalia it forms the tubular external auditory passage or meatus, below which it usually expands into a bulla tympani, which encloses the tympanic cavity and communicates with the pharynx by means of the Eustachian tube. The “temporal bone” of human anatomy represents the fused periotic, tympanic, and squamosal. | The cranial cavity is roofed in by frontals, parietals, an inter- parietal, and a supraoccipital : these, like many of the other cranial bones, are united by sutures which usually persist, at any rate for a long time. Many of the bones are more or less spongy internally, and may contain definite air-sinuses. Most of the true Ruminants are provided with horns projecting from the frontal bones ; these are of three kinds :— In the Cavicornia (Bovine, Antelopinz, Caprinze, Ovinze) hollow bony pro- cesses are developed from the frontals, which become enveloped by horn formed from the epidermis. In the Cervide, asolid membrane bone becomes developed in the dermis round each process of the frontal, with which it fuses. This grows out to form the antler, and after attaining its full development, the skin covering it dries up owing to the development of the ‘‘ burr” at its base ; * According to Gaupp, the tympanic corresponds to the “ paraquadrate ” of Amphibia and Reptilia (pp. 85 and 92). H 2 100 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY this constricts the vessels, and the antler, being deprived of nutriment, falls off periodically at the close of the breeding season. In the young animal, the antlers are simple, but year by year they become more complicated and branched. Giraffes possess persistent antlers covered by hair and without any process from the frontal: they do not become anchylosed to the latter bone. The differentiation into horned and antlered forms first began in the Miocene epoch, In the nasal cavity, scroll-like turbinals+ are present: these are preformed in cartilage, and unite with the surrounding bones. The two nasal chambers are separated from one another by a cartilaginous septum nasi, the posterior part of which becomes ossified by a vertical plate (mesethmoid) in connection with the lamina cribrosa. The vomer, which is unpaired in the adult, is situated immediately below the nasalseptum. Cartilage is retained only in the latter region and around the external nostrils (“aliseptal” and “ alinasal cartilages”). The nasal cavities communicate anteriorly with the mouth by means of the incisive or naso-palatine canals as well as posteriorly by the internal nostrils. As regards the structure of the hard palate, Mammals agree essentially with Crocodiles, but the small pterygoids (except, e.g., in Anteaters and some Cetaceans) do not take part in its formation. The palate is very long in Echidna and in certain Edentata and Cetacea, and often (¢g., Marsupialia) presents unossified vacuities. The ‘premaxilla takes an important part in enclosing the nasal cavity : it also contributes to the hard palate, and surrounds the nasopalatine canal. In the lateral parts of the face of most Mammals, the jugal or malar connects the maxilla with a process of the squamosal (instead of with the quadrate, as in Amphibia and Sauropsida): thus a zygomatic arch is formed from these three bones (Fig. 79). In most cases (¢.g., Ungulata and Primates) the jugal is also connected with a process of the frontal, and thus the orbit becomes more or less completely separated from the temporal fossa. The tympanic membrane is connected with the membrane of the fenestra ovalis by an articulated chain of small auditory ossicles, extending across the tympanic cavity and consisting of the malleus, incus (with its orbicular apophysis), and stapes—instead of by a single columella as in Amphibians and Reptiles. The two former of these bones arise in the embryo from the proximal end of the mandibular arch, one portion of which becomes constricted off to form the incus and another the malleus, both portions afterwards becoming ossified. The part of the arch in the lower jaw, distal to the malleus, corresponds to Meckel’s cartilage, and in Fig. 80 the two are seen still in continuity. The stapes, which is stirrup-shaped in all Mammals but Mono- tremes and certain Marsupials and Edentates, plugs the fenestra 1 For details of the turbinals in Mammals and other Vertebrates, compare the section on the olfactory organ. THE SKULL a : - OT ovalis on the one hand and articulates with the incus’ on ‘the’ other, while the malleus articulates with the incus, and its manubrial process is attached to the tympanic membrane. The above facts indicate that the malleus corresponds to the articular element of the mandible of lower Vertebrates, and the incus to the quadrate. The morphology of the stapes is not by any means clear ; phylogenetically it certainly corresponds to the upper end of the hyoid arch (pharyngo-hyal or hyomandibular of Fishes), but its homology with this element has not been . proved ontogenetically. Its basal plate, however, doubtless corresponds to the stapedial plate of Amphibia and Sauropsida (comp. pp. 84 and 92). Fic. 80.—SkULL OF Empryo or ARMADILLO (Tatusia hybrida). (Modified from a drawing by W. K. Parker.) a.ty, tympanic annulus ; au, auditory capsule ; b.hy, basihyal ; c.hy, ceratohyal ; er, ericoid ; d, dentary ; e.hy, epihyal ; e.n, external nostril ; eo, exoccipital ; J, frontal; h.hy, hypohyal; 7, jugal; iz, incus ; /c, lachrymal; mk, Meckel’s cartilage ; m/, malleus; mz, maxilla; n, nasal; oc.c, occipital condyle ; p, parietal ; pa, palatine ; pa, premaxilla ; so, supraoccipital; st, stapes; s.t, superior turbinal ; st.m, stapedius muscle; sq, squamosal ; th, thyroid ; ¢r, trachea; V', V?, foramina through which the first and second divisions of the trigeminal pass out from the orbit ; JJ, optic foramen. Thus the parts of the mandibular arch which form the hinge of the jaw in lower Vertebrates are in Mammals utilised to conduct sound-vibrations to the internal ear. Around Meckel’s cartilage a membrane-bone is developed corresponding essentially to the dentary ; this forms the entire lower jaw of the adult and develops a new articulation with the squamosal: this arrangement is characteristic of and confined to the Mammalia (Figs. 79 and 80). The two rami of the mandible usually unite distally. Teeth, which are only exceptionally wanting (¢.g., Echidna. : 102 “<<. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY obit’ “Raentates), are confined to the premaxilla, maxilla, and mandible. The hyoid ek (Fig. 80) is connected proximally with the auditory capsule and distally with the base of the third visceral (that is, the first true branchial) arch. It becomes more or less ossified, but the greater part is usually reduced to a fibrous band, and may be quite rudimentary; its proximal end forms the styloid process of the periotic, and its distal the lesser (anterior) cornua of the so-called hyoid bone of the adult. The body of this bone represents the basal parts of the hyoid and first branchial arch, the greater (posterior) cornua belonging to the latter. VI. LIMBS The problem of the origin and morphological meaning of the fins and limbs of Vertebrates is one which, in point of interest and importance, is comparable to that relating to the head. During the last thirty years it has been attacked vigorously both from the embryological and the paleontological sides, and has given rise to so many speculations—often of a very contradictory nature—that only the barest outline of some of the more important results obtained can be given in the course of the present chapter. The fins or limbs, which are distinguished from the aaial organs (head, neck, and body), as appendicular organs, serve mainly for locomotion, and may be divided into two groups, the wnpaired and the paired (pectoral and pelvic). A. Unpaired Fins. The unpaired, or median fins, which are mainly chafacteristic of Fishes, arise in the embryo as aridge of the integument (epiblast and mesoblast) extending along the median dorsal line from the anterior part of the trunk backwards to the tail, around the apex of which it is continued forwards for some distance along the ventral side: thus a dorsal, caudal, and ventral portion can be distinguished. In the course of further development, these portions either remain continuous, or else certain parts undergo reduction, so that the ridge only persists in certain regions, where it forms independent dorsal, caudal, and ventral or anal Jins (Fig. 81, A, B): in these regions muscles and skeletal parts be- come developed. - These skeletal parts consist of supporting rays of two kinds. In the base of the fin cartidayinous radii, usually segmented, are * The curious suctorial disc on the dorsal side of the head of the Teleostean Remora (Echeneis), by means of which it attaches itself to foreign objects, arises in the embryo from the anterior portion of the dorsal unpaired fin, and this is indicated throughout life by the arrangement of the blood-vessels, nerves, and skeletal parts. LIMBS 103 formed in all the Fishes proper and in Dipnoans; these, which may conveniently be distinguished as “ pierygiophores,” may unite to form a basipterygiwm, and in bony. Fishes they become ex- tensively ossified: they frequently come into secondary con- nection with the vertebral column (e.g., by means of the so-called “interspinous bones” of Teleostei). The peripheral part of the fin is supported by dermal rays, which may consist of numerous delicate horny fibres (e¢.g., Marsipobranchs, Elasmobranchs, Cartilag- inous Ganoids, Dipnoans), or of bony rods, entire or jointed, often cleft at the base, and - not preformed in cartilage (Teleosts, Bony Ganoids). Median fins are also present in the Amphibia, in which they may persist throughout life (e.g., Perennibranchiata), or may only Fic. 81.—DIAGRAM SHOWING (A) THE UNDIFFERENTIATED CONDITION OF THE PAIRED AND UNPAIRED FINS IN THE EMBRYO, AND (B) THE MANNER IN WHICH THE PERMANENT FINS ARE FORMED FROM THE ContTINuowUsS Forps. D, dorsal fin-fold ; S, S, lateral folds, which unite together at S’ to form the ventral fold; RF, FF, dorsal fins ; SF, tail-fin; AF’, anal fin; BrF, pectoral fin; BF, pelvic fin; An, anus. occur in the larval stage od occasionally also during the breeding season (¢.g. Newt). “They have the form of a continuous in- tegumentary fold extending round the tail and along the back for a greater or less distance, but enclose no skeletal elements. Amongst Reptiles, median fins were present in Ichthyosaurus, and these are comparable to the dorsal fins occurring im the Cetacea amongst Mammals: in both cases they must be looked upon as structures acquired secondarily in connection with ap aquatic existence. B. Paired Fins or Limbs. Embryological researches have shown that lateral fin-folds must have existed in the ancestors. of Vertebrates in addition to the 104 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY median fins, and these can still be recognised in young embryos of Elasmobranchs (Fig. 81, A) and to a less extent in those of Sturgeons, Teleosts, and Amphibians. They extended backwards along the sides of the body from just behind the head, gradually converging towards the anal region, where they became continuous with the ventral part of the median fin-fold (Fig. 81, A), and thus resemble the lateral or metaplewral folds present in the adult Amphioxus. As is usually the case in the median fins (p. 102), certain parts of these lateral folds have undergone reduction, only the anterior and posterior portions remaining to form two paired (pectoral and pelvic) fins or limbs, which must therefore be Fic. 81, A.—TRANSVERSE SECTION THROUGH THE EMBRYO OF A SHARK (Pristiurus melanostomus), 9 MM. LONG, SHOWING THE MODE oF ORIGIN OF THE PEC- TORAL Lims-Bups (ap.). ch, notochord ; co, ccelome; m, myomeres, seen to be growing ventrally ; my, spinal cord. looked upon as the localised remains of a continuous lateral fin-fold on either side of the body, and as being homodynamous (7.¢., serially homologous) structures. Into these paired fins the myotomes extend, and cartilaginous supports (pterygiophores) are formed from the mesoblast, as in the case of the median fins. These radii appear first of all at the base of the fin, gradually extending centrifugally into the latter, and also, becoming fused, centripetally into the body-wall. An articula- tion is then secondarily formed between the fused basal part of the skeleton situated in the free portion of the limb (basipterygiwm) and that which extends into the lateral body-wall and serves as a support for the limb proper: this latter portion constitutes the limb-arch or girdle, Thearch may remain comparatively small and not éxtend LIMBS 105 — far dorsally; but when the limb is destined to perform more im- portant movements in locomotion, or to give a more definite support to the body, the arch may extend upwards so as to come into connection with the axial skeleton as well as meeting with its fellow ventrally, thus forming an almost complete girdle around the body. The limb skeleton may become ossified later. bs. fo. + Fic: 82.—-A, B, C. DtaGRAm or THREE SUCCESSIVE STAGES IN THE DEVELOP- MENT OF THE PELVIC FIN oF A SHARK. rd, primitive radii, which in A are beginning to fuse into a basal plate (bs). In B this fusion has taken place on both sides, and at * the proximal ends of the two basals are approximating to form the arch. In C the process is com- pleted, and at t+ an articulation has been formed between the arch and the free portion of the fin. On the left side in C the radii are becoming second- arily segmented. fo, obturator foramen ; c/, cloacal aperture. In the case of Fishes, the pelvic fin as a rule remains at a simpler and more embryonic stage than the pectoral. The paired limbs are not connected with any particular body- segments, but vary greatly in their relative positions and in the number of nerves which supply them. The essential part of this conception as to the origin of the paired limbs is due to Thacher, Mivart, Balfour, Haswell, and Dohrn.! Gegenbaur had ' A somewhat similar idea was put forward by Goodsir as early as 1856. 106 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY previously put forward the view that the arches and fins correspond to meta- morphosed gill-arches and rays : he supposed that one ray came to exceed the others in size, and that the others then gradually became attached to it instead of to the arch, the result being a biserial form of fin (‘ archiptery- gium”’) which is most nearly retained in Ceratodus (Fig. 101 and p. 124). Pectoral Arch. _ Fishes and Dipnoans.—Paired fins and arches are wanting in the Cyclostomi. In the Elasmobranchii and Holocephali the pectoral arch consists of a comparatively simple cartilaginous bar ———— 3 Wh ; Sa a f 43 “ys = ee Fic. 83.—PEcTORAL ARCH AND FIn oF Heptanchus. SB, SB’, pectoral arch, with a nerve aperture at NL; Pr, Ms, Mt, the three basal elements of the fin—pro-, meso-, and metapterygium ; Ra, cartilaginous fin-rays; a, b, the main fin-ray, lying in the axis of the metapterygium ; +, single ray on the other side of the axis (indication of a biserial type) ; FS, horny rays, cut through. the two halves of which are united ventrally by cartilage or fibrous tissue (Fig. 83), and in embryos of Ganoids and Teleosts it has at first a similar structure. | Later, however, in both the last-named groups, a row of bony structures arises in the perichondrium in this region; so that a secondary or bony pectoral arch may be distinguished from a primary or cartilaginous one, the latter becoming less marked in proportion to the development of the former (Fig. 84). The free extremity, or fin, is always connected with the hinder PECTORAL ARCH 107 and outer circumference of the (primary) arch, convex articulations _being formed on the arch which fit into concave facets on the fin, the point of attachment of which may be taken as separating the arch into an upper dorsal and a lower ventral section. ‘The former, which may exceptionally be connected with the vertebral column (viz., Raiidze), cor- responds to a scapula, and the latter to a coracoid plus — procoracoid of the higher Vertebrata.* In Teleosts and Bony Ganoids the bony (secondary) arch forms the principal support of the fin in the adult, the main element being a large clavicle. primitive relations are thus much altered. The arch becomes secondarily con- nected with the skull. (For further details, compare Fig. 84.) Amphibia.— In this Class the pectoral arch shows no direct connection with that of Fishes, but is © similar in plan to that of all the higher Vertebrates. The . Co ME eg, Fic. 84.—Lerr PecroraL ARCH AND FIN oF THE Trout. (From the outer side.) D, D*, D*, chain of secondary bones of the pectoral arch (clavicle and supra-clavicle), which is connected with the skull by means of the post-temporal (Cm); S and Co(C1), bony scapula and coracoid, which have be- come developed in the cartilage (Kn); LD foramen in scapula ; M1, metapterygium ; Ra, Ra, the second and third, and 4, the fourth basal element of the fin ; Ra!, the second cartilaginous row of radii; HS, bony ray on the border of the fin which is connected with the fourth basal element ; F,S, bony fin-rays, shown cut away from their attachments. C1 Fic. 85A.— DIAGRAM OF THE GrouNnD TYPE oF PEc- TORAL ARCH MET WITH IN ALL VERTEBRATA FROM AMPHIBIA UP TO Mam- MALTA. S, scapula; Co, coracoid ; Cl, procoracoid ; H, hu- merus. It always consists on either side of a cartilaginous or bony dorsal plate (scapula), which curves round the side of the body and becomes continuous ventrally with two processes—an anterior (procoracoid) and a posterior (coracoid) (Figs. 854 and B). The ventral part of the arch becomes con- nected with the sternal apparatus (com- pare Fig. 43). The humerus articulates with a concave glenoid facet at the junc- tion of the scapula and coracoid. The two coracoid plates either overlap one another in the mid-ventral line (Uro- 1 The pectoral arch of Dipnoans is intermediate in character between that of Elasmobranchs and Ganoids. It shows so many special peculiarities as regards form and position that it cannot be fully described here. 108 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY deles and certain Anura—e.g., Bombinator, Fig. 43, C), or else their free edges come into apposition and fuse together (other Anura, ¢.g., Rana, see Fig. 43, D). In Anurans the procoracoids have a more transverse position than in Urodeles, and come into Fic. 858.—PrcroraL ArcH oF THE RIGHT SiIpE oF Salamandra maculosa, considerably magnified, and flattened out. SS, supra-scapula ; S, scapula (ossified); Co, coracoid ; Cl, procoracoid ; a, b, bony processes extending into the procoracoid and coracoid respectively 5 ; O, glenoid cavity, surrounded by a rim of cartilage (LZ). connection with the coracoid in the mid-ventral line, thus giving rise to a fenestra between the two. The whole arch is, moreover, more strongly ossified, the procoracoid being covered by an invest- ing bone—the clavicle. _ Reptilia.—In Reptiles the ossification is still more ‘marked. The simplest condition of the shoulder-girdle is seen in Chelonians (Fig. 86), in which its similarity to that of Amphibians as well as to that _ of Hatteria is at once seen: no clavicle is developed. ' .. In other Reptiles the same general plan is retained with modifications. Thus in Lizards (Fig. 44) the well-— developed clavicle is more indepen- Fic. 86.—PEcToRAL ARCH OF A dent of the rest of the arch and CuELoNIAN. (Ventral view.) becomes ossified directly, forming “a S, scapula; Co, coracoid ; Co!, epi- delicate secondary bony lamella ex- eoracoid 5 cl, procoracoid 5 Bs tending from the scapula to the apex sletnante «Merk sa meee bcaoaee: of the episternal apparatus. But it them ; @, glenoid cavity. must be remembered that the un- differentiated cells of which it at first consists are in direct continuity with those which form the scapula. Unossified spaces are left in the coracoid, giving PELVIC ARCH Te a 2 _ rise to fenestrae closed over by fibrous membrane. In Crocodiles and Chameleons the clavicles are either wanting or rudimentary. The presehce of a pectoral arch in numerous footless Reptiles (certain Skinks, Amphisbzenians) indicates that they formerly possessed extremities ; rudiments of the latter may even be seen in the embryo though they disappear entirely later on (Anguis fragilis). (For the peculiar pectoral -arch of the Stegocephala, see Fig. 46.) Birds.—In Birds, the scapula consists of a thin and narrow plate of bone often extending far backwards, the strong coracoid being bent at a sharp augle with it in all Carinate Birds (Fig. 41). The/lower end of the latter is firmly articulated . . in a groove on the anterior edge of the sternum. In almost all Flying Birds the clavicle is well developed, and _ becomes united with its fellow to form a furcula (comp. p. 63 and Fig. 41). It is formed as a membrane bone investing a band of cartilage present in the embryo in this region. Amongst the Cursorial Birds, the Emeu and Cassowary possess rudimentary clavicles: in the others they are wanting. They have also undergone reduction in some Carinate Birds (¢g., certain _Parrots). Ca a Mammals.—In Monotremes only:amongst Mammals does the coracoid extend ventrally to reach the sternum (Fig. 48) ; in all other members of this Class it characteristically becomes reduced, and simply forms a prominent process on the scapula (coracoid process), which becomes ossified from a separate centre.+ Thus the scapula alone serves to support the extremity; it becomes at the same time greatly broadened ‘out, and gives rise on its outer side—in connection with the highly differentiated muscles of the liimb—to a strong ridge (spina scapulz), which extends downwards to form the so-called acromion. The distal end of the clavicle usually becomes connected with the acromion, its proximal end articulating with the anterior edge of the sternum. In those Mammals in which the fore-limbs are capable of very varied and free movements, the clavicles are strongly developed. In others, such as the Carnivora and Ungulata, they may be en- tirely wanting or only rudimentary, and in the latter case their relations to the scapula become altered. Pelvic Arch. Fishes.—The first rudimentary indications of a pelvis are seen in Cartilagigous Ganoids, amongst which, however, they present considerable variations—-even in individuals of the same species. They consist of two calcified or even ossified pelvic plates, which According to Howes the coracoid process represents an epicoracoid (comp. Fig. 48), the coracoid itself being only occasionally indicated by a small centre of ossification on the glenoid margin of the scapula. 110 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY become segmented off from the basal cartilage (basi- or metaptery-- gvum) of the free fin. In some cases even this segmentation does not take place, and thus the pelvis remains undifferentiated. This simple condition is also met.with in the ancient forms Pleura- canthus and Xenacanthus, and is essentially retained in Lepi- dosteus, Amia, and the Teleostei (Fig. 87). In Polypterus, which most nearly resembles the Devonian — Crossopterygii, the pelvis shows some advance on that of Sturgeons. Owing, doubtless, to the necessity of a firmer connec- tion of the fin with the body-wall, the two pelvic plates become am Bas! Bas ‘ 4 Bas! Fic. 87.— DIAGRAMS ILLUSTRATING THE PHYLOGENY OF THE PELVIS. A, Pleuracanthus—the pelvis is here undifferentiated tt ; B, Scaphirhynchus cataphractus ; C, Polypterus bichir ; D, Necturus (Menobranchus). Bas, basipterygium ; Ap, its cartilaginous apophysis; P,. pelvis; Rad, radii ; Fo, obturator foramen. united together in the mid-ventral line (Fig. 87,C): but even here the basipterygium may remain in continuity with the pelvic plate on one or both sides. In spite, however, of the rudimentary character of the pelvis of Polypterus, the essential form of that of the Dipnoi and Amphibia is already sketched out. The pelvis of the Elasmobranchii and Holocephali indicates that they early branched off from the ‘ancestral stock. Instead of a small and narrow pelvic plate more or less elongated antero- posteriorly, the pelvis forms a transverse bar of considerable extent, developed in connection with the basipterygium (Fig. 82) . / PELVIC ARCH 11k it is perforated. by nerves, and gives rise on either side to an iliac | process (most marked in Holocephali) extending into the lateral . walls of the body (Fig. 88). In all the above © cases we may look upon the pelvic plate as essentially corres- ponding, more or less completely, with the _aschio-pubis of higher forms. Oot Dipnoi. — The small cartilaginous pelvic plate (Fig. 89) is provided with a long and delicate an- terior median, a short posterior median, and two pairs of lateral processes. Of the latter the anterior Fig. 88.—DIaGRAM OF THE ELASMOBRANCH PELVIs.. (From the ventral side. ) BP, Pelvic plate (ischio-pubis) ; J, iliac process ; PP, prepubic process ; Cep, epipubic process ,. Sy, region of the ischiopubic symphysis ; ol, obturator foramen; Bas, Pro, Rad, basiptery- gium, propterygium, and radii of the fin. ~ (prepubic processes) vary much in form and length, being much . longer in Protopterus than in Ceratodus, and each is embedded > iy ae . \ WAYS vA \ SAN VAAN —e ‘ * ~S \ WAY KY \\ V/ I = YH} H Wy We 3 A Ke: Hf {i | {yy 2 \\ Ip LY -~+ HE es \) A \ Wr, // Yea WY \ \\ QA Yy //) S {/ (lj SANS UY pe IWS EMT ie Z 7 Fie. 89.—PeExvis or Protopterus. (From the ventral side. ) a, prepubic process, which may become forked at its distal end ; b, process to which the hinder extremity (HE) is attached ; Gr, sharp ridge, for attachment of muscles ; ¢, epi- bubic process ; M, M, myotomes ; MM’, M’, intermuscular septa. in an intermuscular septum ; with the posterior the skeleton of the free fin is articulated by means of an intermediate piece. The anterior unpaired process must be looked upon as an epipubic process, corresponding with that of Amphibians, Rep- tiles, and Mammals (pp. 113, 115, 121). Amphibia. — Uvodela. — It will be seen by a glance at Fig. 87, D, that the ventral portion of the pelvic arch of Necturus is formed on the same plan as the pelvic plate of the Dipnoi and Crossopterygii, but, as in all Urodela and Amniota, it is perforated by the obturator nerve: this indicates a further lateral extension. Like the pelvis of all Vertebrates, it has a paired origin, and in Proteus and Amphiuma this is indi- cated by the fact that its A tt nat SH (Sy) i Pr Fic. 90.—Prnvis or (A) Proteus ; (B) Amphiuma ; (C) Cryptobranchus ; AND (D) Salamandra maculosa. (From the ventral side. ) JP, JP, IP, ventral pelvic plate (ischio-pubis); ** (in A), ossified region of the ischium; PP, prepubis ; tt (Cep), Hp, epipubis ; ** (in C and D) secondary bifurcation of the epipubis ; z, outgrowth from this bifurcation ; + (in C), hypoi- schiatic process, present in the Derotremata and Necturus ; Sy, symphysis, in which region a strong tendinous area (SH) exists in Amphiuma, the pubic regions only coming together in the middle lire at * ; Yo, /o!, obturator fora- men ; Ac, acetabulum ; J, J', J, J’, ilium ; La/b, linea alba ; My, intermuscular septa ; Cr, (Sy), muscular ridge on the ventral side of the ischio-pubis. PELVIC ARCH 113 Fic. 91.—PELVis or VARious AMPHIBIA. A, Xenopus (Dactylethra), from below ; B, the same from the front ; C, Rana esculenta, from the right side; D and E, Salamandra atra; F and G, Salamandra maculosa; H, Branchiosaurus ; I, Discosaurus, D-I, from the ventral side. (Figs. H and I after Credner. ) I, ilium ; Js, ischium ; P, pubis(P! in Rana, pubic end of ilium) ; JP, fused ischio- pubic ossification; PP, prepubis; Cep, epipubic cartilage ; Yo!, obturator foramen ; J! (in Xenopus), the proximal end of the ilium, which is separated from its fellow and from the pubis bya + -shaped_zone of cartilage,+, *; Ac, acetabulum. 114 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY anterior epipubic process is paired throughout life (Fig. 90, A, B). In the Derotremata and Myctodera, on the other hand, the epipubis is unpaired from the first, owing probably to an abbrevia- tion of development, its anterior end becoming bifurcated secondarily (Fig. 90, C, D). As in Fishes and Dipnoans, the two halves of the ischio-pubic region tend to fuse together in the middle line to form an un- paired pelvic plate, but all kinds of modifications occur in this respect in adaptation to the move- ments of the hind-limb in different forms ; and, as in all cases the median zone of the plate represents the line of least resistance, the lateral halves may eventually become more or less dis- inct from oneanother. The effect of the action of the muscles becomes, however, greater when the pubic region is more distinctly marked off from the ischium, and ossification takes place in it (eg., Salamandra atra and, more rarely, 8. maculata), Thus the typical triradiate arrange- rent of the pelvis (aiwm, wschium, and pubis), such as is further differentiated in certain Stego- cephala (Discosaurus) and in Reptiles, as well as in Xenopus, is already sketched out (Fig. 91). An important difference between the pelvis of Ganoids and Dipnoans and that of Amphibians is seen in the marked development of the diac region in the latter group. The ilium, like the Fic. 92. — Prryie scapula, extends upwards in the lateral walls of es OF FRoG the body (compare the iliac process of Elasmo- pat earulenta). branchs, Fig. 88), and in Proteus and Amphiuma, ; owing to the reduction of the limbs in these fs peach oe forms, does not reach the vertebral column (Fig. laginous pubic 90, A, B). In all other Amphibia, as in the region ; Cr, the Amniota, it comes into connection with the medion ventral ischio-pubic sacrum (p. 45), owing to the necessity for the crest ; G, aceta- hind-limb to act as a support for the body in ea 5 Oc, uro- : z style ; Pt, trans- terrestrial animals, and not merely as an organ Fetteprdcess-bt of propulsion, as in Fishes. sacral vertebra. Anura.—The pelvis of the Anura differs from that of Urodela in the following characteristics. In correspondence with their mode of progression, the ilium of each side becomes extended so as to form a long rod (Figs. 91 C, 92); and the flat pelvic plate, which in Urodeles lies in the plane of the abdominal walls, becomes closely pressed together in the middle line and gives rise to a well-marked ventral keel: it is not perforated by the obturator nerve. The pubic region, moreover, though often calcified, is independently ossified only in the case of Xenopus (Fig. 91, A.B). Reptiles.—The chief characteristics of the Reptilian pelvis as PELVIC ARCH 115 Fic. 93.—Prtvic Arco or Various REPTILES. (From the ventral side). A, Palewohatteria, after Credner ; A!-C, Plesiosaurus : A’, from a restoration in the College of Surgeons; B, from Huxley’s Anatomy of Vertebrated hike 3; C, after D’Arcy Thompson ; D, Labyrinthodon ritimeyeri ; E, atteria. P, pubis ; PP, prepubis ; Cep, epipubic cartilage; Fo!, obturator foramen ; Js, ischium ; J, ilium ; +,7, ischio-pubic foramina ; *, hypoischiatic process, which becomes segmented off from the pelvis in other Reptiles. +2 116 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY * Fic. 94.—Prtvic ArcH oF Various CHELONIANS. (From the ventral side.) but even these may undergo fusion; h distal row of the tarsus, tarsalia 77 and 4 \ r ii ITI are the most constant elements, \% tarsalia JV and V are generally repre- \ I Y sented by a ligament; and tarsale J S 8) usually does not long remain distinct. GS Ui In Anura the metatarsals and XS phalanges, between which the web of ait the foot is stretched, are very long and slender. The femur, as well as the bones of the shank, which are fused together, are also exceedingly long, in correspondence with the mode of pro- Fie. 106.—SKELETON oF *THE gression of these animals. The skeleton SHANK, Tarsus, AND3Foor of the extremities is more strongly — °F SP/erpes fuscus. ossified in Anurans than in Urodeles, %, tibia; fb, fibula; ¢, tibiale ; in which many of the elements remain 2 intermedium 3 (f, fibu- j : d are; c, centrale; 1-5, cartilaginous. tarsalia ; i-v, digits. Traces of an extra toe (prehallux) occur on the tibial side of the tarsus, and in both Urodeles and Anurans indications of an additional pre-axial digit in the manus are occasionaliy met with. The number of phalanges on the individual digits varies in different Amphibians. Rudiments of the extremities can be recognised externally in embryos of the limbless Gymnophiona. Reptiles.—Chelonians and Lizards (and more especially Hat- 1 It is possible that the tibiale and fibulare also include the representatives of other elements. 128 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY teria)! closely resemble Urodeles in the structure of the carpus, although the exact homologies of all the different elements can- not yet be stated with certainty. Five digits are always present in both manus and pes, and in Chelonians traces also of the former possession of an extra finger both on the radial and ulnar side (‘* pisiform’”’) are to be seen (Figs. 107, 108, and 109). The tibia and fibula always remain separate. In Crocodiles, which, like Anurans, possess no trace of an intermedium, the proximal row of the carpus consists of two hour- glass-shaped bones—a larger radiale, and a smaller ulnare (Fig. 110). A rudiment of a sixth ray is present on the outer side of ‘Fic. 107.—Carpus or A, Hatteria (Sphenodon) punctata, anv B, Emydura krefftu. (After Baur.) R, radius; U, ulna; 7, radiale; uw, ulnare; 7, intermedium ; c!, radial centrale ; c’, ulnar centrale; 1-5, carpalia; p, ulnar sesamoid (pisiform); J-V, the metacarpals. the latter. The centrale, as in Anura, comes to be situated in the distal row, which is much less developed than the proximal. In all Reptiles the tarsus undergoes a marked reduction, especially in its proximal portion, and gradually leads to the type seen in Birds. Thus in Chelonians and Lizards the proximal tarsals all run together intoa single mass which corresponds to the tibiale, intermedium, fibulare, and centrale, and the last mentioned element can no longer be recognised in Lizards, even in the embryo. Traces of an extra radial ray are present. In the distal row three or four (five in Paleohatteria) separate tarsals are developed, but these may unite partly with one another ‘In Hatteria and Chelydra serpentina amongst existing Reptiles, a double centrale is present in the carpus, and traces of a double condition of this element are seen in certain other Chelonians. LIMBS 129 (Chelonians), and partly with the corresponding metatarsals (lizards); thus there is an increasing tendency for the move- . ment of the foot to take place by means of an intertarsal articula- tion, as in Birds. | In.Crocodiles there are two bones in the proximal row of the tarsus, one of which corresponds to a tibiale, intermedium, and centrale, the other to a fibulare. The former is spoken of as the astragalus, the latter as the calcaneum, and on it a definite heel (calcaneal process) is seen for the first time in the animal series. ' 3 _f1 a fi Q 2 a THT Fie? 108.—Ricut Carrus or Emys Fic, 109.—Lerr Carpus oF europea. (From above.) ney agilis, (From ; above. R, Radius ; U, ulna ; 7.c, fused radiale and centrale (or centrale 1 and 2, R, radius; U, ulna; wu, ul- Baur) ; 7, intermedium ; wu, ulnare ; nare ; 7, intermedium ; 7, 1-5, the carpalia, of which 4 and radiale, formed by the 5 have become fused together ; t fusion of two elements, (radiale, Baur) and *, elements one of which corresponds on the radial and ulnar side res- to a prepollex ; c, cent- pectively, indications of additional rale; 1-5; carpalia; 7, radial and ulnar (pisiform) rays ; ulna sesamoid (pisiform); I-V, the metacarpals. I-V, the metacarpals. The distal row consists originally of four small cartilages, but these later undergo a partial fusion. The number of phalanges on the fourth and fifth digits in the manus is greater in the embryos of Crocodiles than in the adult. This indicates that the Crocodilia have been derived from forms possessing a fin-like fore-limb. In Ichthyosaurus and Plesiosaurus the limbs are modified to form paddles, the digits consisting of numerous phalanges, and additional rays being present in the former genus. In Pterodactylus and Rhamphorhynchus the fourth finger was produced intoa long jointed rod, which supported a wing-like expansion of the integument. Amongst the Lacertilia, various degrees of reduction of the extremities may occur, and in certain Snakes (e.g., Python) traces of the hind-limbs exist. Birds.—The fore-limb of Birds is considerably modified by adaptation for flight. The manus loses its primitive character and undergoes reduction, while the brachium and antibrachium, as K 130 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY well as the entire pectoral arch and sternum, are extraordinarily developed. In the Ratite, however, the wing has undergone regressive changes in connection with the habits of these Birds. Of the six orseven carpals which may be present in the embryo, the three distal become fused with the corresponding metacarpals, thus forming a carpometacarpus (Figs. 111, 112 A), and in the adult only the two proximal remain separate as a radiale and an ulnare. The three metacarpals themselves become united together proximally, and the second and third distally: they only bear a very limited number of phalanges at their free ends. Claws were present on the terminal phalanges of all three digits in Archzeopteryx. In certain recent Birds the first digit bears a claw, and more rarely the second and even the third also. The tarsus is still more reduced in Birds than in Reptiles, and consists in the embryo of three elements, two small proximal and a broader distal. The former (tibiale’ and fibulare) unite later with the distal end of the tibia, thus forming a ¢zbiotarsus, while the latter, which corresponds to tarsalia I to V, becomes included in the base of the metatarsus. Thus the foot of adult Birds Fic. 110.—Ricut Car- PUS OF A YOUNG Alligator —_lucius. (From above.) f, radius; U, ulna; r, radiale (including, according to Em- ery, a carpal of the prepollex); w, ul- nare; C, centrale ; 1 to 5, the five car- palia, as yet unossi- fied, of which 1 and 2, as well as 3, 4, and 5, have become ~ fused together ; t; pisiform; J to V, - the metacarpals. the first to the fourth digit. no longer possesses any distinct tarsal ele- ments, though, as in Chelonians and Lizards, the foot really moves by an intertarsal articu- lation. Of the original five metatarsals, the fifth soon disappears, while the second, third, and fourth become united with one another and with the distal element of the tarsus to form a single bone, the tarsometatarsus (Figs. 111, 112 B). The first metatarsal remains to a greater or less extent inde- pendent. The number of toes varies between two (Struthio) and four ; t of the phalanges is normally 2, 3, 4, 5, reckoning from the The tibia, even from the first, greatly exceeds the fibula in size, and the two bones become fused to- gether distally. In both limbs the bones are usually pneumatic. (See under Air-sacs.) Mammals.—In Mammals the anterior extremity either re- mains in the condition of a simple organ of locomotion, serving for progression on land; or it may become modified in adaption to an LIMBS 131 aérial (Bats) or aquatic (Pinnipedia, Cetacea, Sirenia) mode of life ; or, again, it may give rise to a prehensile organ. In the latter case (Primates) the radius and ulna, instead of being firmly connected together, articulate with one another, the former being capable Fic. 111.—SkELETON oF THE Limes AND TAIL oF A CARINATE Brrp. (The skeleton of the body is indicated by dotted lines. ) Sch, scapula; R, coracoid ; St, sternum, with its keel (Cr); OA, humerus; Rd, ulna; Ul, radius; HW, carpus; MH, carpometacarpus; /, digits; OS, femur; 7’, tibiotarsus; Fi, fibula ; MF, tarsometatarsus; Z}, Z, digits ; Py, pygostyle. of rotation round the latter: thus the manus can be brought into a position of pronation or of supination. The tibia is the most important bone of the shank, and the fibula often becomes fused with it to a greater or less extent ; the ulna also may unite with the radius. Except in the Cetacea, K 2 132 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Sirenia, Cheiroptera, and certain Marsupialia, a sesamoid bone is developed in the distal tendons of the great extensor muscles of the shank, and is known as the knee-cap or patella, This is already present in certain Lizards and in Birds. The carpus and tarsus most nearly correspond with those of Urodeles and Chelonians, and, as in them, certain of the elements 4-2 carp.+cente, rad Be WY Fie. 112.—A. Forr-ARM AND MANnus oF Empryo PENGUIN (Ludyptes chryso- come). (Fourteenth day of incubation.) (After Th. Studer.) (SB is a sesa- moid developed in the tendon of the triceps in this Bird.) B. SHANK AND Foot or EmMpryo PENGUIN. (At the same stage.) may become fused together. Thus the intermedium and tibiale asa rule unite to form an astragalus, while the fourth and fifth carpals become fused to form the so-called wneiform bone, and the corresponding tarsals give rise to the cuboid. A centrale, varying | much in form and size, is usually present at an early stage in all five-fingered Mammals, but as a rule it becomes fused later with one, or with two, of the neighbouring carpals—generally the LIMBS 133 radiale (eg., the Gorilla, the Chimpanzee, and Man, though it may persist in the human subject throughout life or may fuse with carpale 2 or 3). In the tarsus the centrale (navicular) remains distinct, and usually lies on the inner border of the foot. So much difference of opinion exists with regard to the homologies of the bones of the carpus and tarsus in Mammals, that it is not possible at present to give a satisfactory account of them, or of the additional elements which are often present in the embryo and disappear during development. Thus the pisiform may be a true sesamoid, or may represent an additional ulnar ray, and the caleaneum may or may not be the complete serial homologue of the pisiform. Elements occur occasionally in the carpus and tarsus which are supposed to represent additional radial and tibial rays respectively—the so-called prepollex and prehallux (Fig. 113). There are typically five complete digits on each foot, but this number may be reduced to four, three, or even one (Figs. 114 and oh rate Lure Fig. 113.—A, Carpus, AND B, SKELETON OF THE Foot or Man. (The rudiments of the so-called prepollex and prehallux (+++) are represented diagram- matically. U, ulna; R, radius; 7, radiale; 7, intermedium; uw, ulnare; P, pisiform ; ce, centrale, fused with the radiale ; ce’, second centrale, forming the head of tarsale 3; 1-5, the carpalia and tarsalia, 4 and 5 being united to form the unciform and cuboid respectively ; Cu I-III, the first to third tarsalia ; ce, centrale tarsi (navicular); it, intermedio-tibiale = astragalus (As) ; J+ p, calcanetm (= fibulare and pisiform tarsi?) ; J-V, the metacarpals and metatarsals. 115), the disappearance taking place in the following order— 1, 5, 2, 4: thus in the horse the third is the only complete digit remaining (Fig. 115). The number of phalanges is similar in both hand and foot: in the first digit there are only two, while in the others there are three. An exception to this rule is seen in Cetacea, in which the phalanges are numerous, as in Ichthyosaurus and Plesiosaurus amongst Reptiles. It is interesting to trace the reduction which has taken place in the feet of Ungulates in the course of time. Fig. 115 represents successive stages in the Pvrerler~ 134 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY phylogenetic development of the fore-foot of the Horse, showing how it has been gradually derived from a tetra- or pentadactyle form; and it has Bei oe Fic. Fore-Lims or A, Pic; B, Hyomos- cHus; C, TRaacuLus; D, Rorsuck; Hi, Suerp ; F’, CAMEL. after Garrod. ) 114.—SKELETON OF THE LEFT (From Bell, recently been ascertained that all these stages are passed through in the course of ontogeny. In this case the third digit becomes greatly enlarged relatively (perissodactyle form), and eventually is the only one remaining, while in cloven-footed Ungulates the third and fourth digits are both functional and equally strongly de- veloped (artiodactyle form) and may be united together to form a ‘‘ can- non-bone,” the others becoming gradually reduced. shaped connective-tissue septa or myocommata, between which the fibres run longitudinally. The myotomes have an alternating arrangement on the two sides. On the ventral region of the anterior two-thirds of the body there is a thin transverse sheet of fibres. In Fishes and Dipnoans the myotomes and myocommata are arranged in pairs and consist, on either side of the body, of two portions, a dorsal and a ventral, separated from one another by a connective-tissue septum extending from the axial skeleton to the integument (comp. Fig. 116). The myotomes meet together in the mid-dorsal and mid-ventral lines. This primitive metameric arrangement of the fatéral muscles of the trunk forms a characteristic feature in Vertebrates, and stands in close relation with the segmentation of the axial skeleton and spinal nerves, the number of vertebre and pairs of nerves corre- sponding primitively to that of the myotomes. The lateral muscles largely retain their primitive relations in Fishes and Dipnoans, but on the ventral side of the trunk, where they enclose the body-cavity (comp. Amphioxus), certain differentiations occur which indicate the formation of the recti and obliqui abdominis of higher types. The dorsal portions of these parietal muscles, as well as the ventral portions in the caudal region, retain the more primitive relations. Amphibia.—In Urodeles (Figs. 116 and 117) primary and secondary ventral trunk-muscles can be distinguished, and both of these groups, like the dorsal muscles, are segmented. The former group consists of internal and external obliqui and recti. The secondary muscles arise by delamination from the primary, and give rise to a superficial external oblique, a superficial rectus, a transversalis, and a subvertebralis. These, however, only attain importance in caducibranchiate forms, in which they become marked during metamorphosis, and the primary musculature then 1 This septum is not present in Myxinoids, and is absent in Stabe ep and Lepidosteus posteriorly to the gills. 138 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY undergoes more or less reduction. Thus various conditions of the ventral musculature are found amongst Urodeles. In the Anura, on the other hand, both primary and secondary muscles present.a marked uniformity and relative simplicity; in the adult they give rise to a segmented rectus, an obliquus externus, and a transversalis, as well as to a cutancus abdominis derived from the external oblique. No trace of an internal oblique can be seen in the adult. ) Reptiles.—In Reptiles, the lateral muscles of the trunk attain a much higher grade of development. This is to be accounted —— SF = S: IM; ——p — ——————} bt Se cee eee / Re* Mn'Ce 7 Ma Fic. 116.—THE Muscunature or Siredon pisciformis. (From the side. ) LA, lateral line ; D, dorsal, and V, ventral portion of caudal muscles ; RM, dorsal portion of lateral muscles of the trunk ; O, O, outer layer of the external oblique muscle, arising from the lateral line, and extending to the fascia, J ; at * a piece of this layer is removed, exposing the inner Jayer of the muscle (Ob); at Re the oblique fibres of the latter pass into longitudinal fibres, indicating the beginning of the differentiation of a rectus abdominis ; at Re! the rectus-system is seen passing to the visceral skeleton ; Mc, fibrous parti- tions between the myotomes of the dorsal portion of the lateral muscles ; 7’, temporal ; Ma, masseter ; Dg, digastric ; Mh1, mylohyoid (posterior portion) ; Ce, external ceratohyoid muscle; Lv, levator arcuum branchialium ; *++ , levator branchiarum ; Cph, cervical origin of the constrictor of the pharynx ; Th, thymus; Lt, latissimus dorsi; Ds, dorsalis scapule ; Cu, cucullaris ; SS, suprascapula ; Ph, procoraco-humeralis. . for by the more perfect condition of the skeleton, more especially of the ribs and pectoral arch. The ribs and intercostal muscles now play an important part in respiration, and changes, necessitated by i more important development of the lungs, are thus brought about. The distinction between thoracic and abdominal regions becomes gradually more plainly marked, and distinct external and internal intercostal muscles are now differentiated. In the lumbar region the ribs become gradually withdrawn from the muscles lying MUSCULAR SYSTEM 139 between them; thejmuscles thus lose their. intercostal character, and form connected sheets, extending between the last pair of ribs Za ee Bua} ste; FZ zs: Fic. 117,—THe Muscunature oF Siredon pisciformis. (Ventral view.) O, outer layer of the external oblique, passing into the fascia, which is shown cut through at /’; Ob, inner layer of the same muscle ; Re, rectus abdominis, passing into the visceral musculature (sternohyoid) at Re!, and into the pector- alis major at P ; Mh, Mh’, anterior and posterior portions of the mylohyoid, - which is cut through in the middle line, and removed on the left side, so as to show the proper visceral musculature ; Ce, Ci, Ci, external and internal ~ ceratohyoid : the former is inserted on to the hyoid (Hy); Add, adductor arcuum branchialium ; C, constrictor arcuum branchialium ; Cph, portion of the constrictor of the pharynx, arising from the posterior branchial arch ; Dp, depressores branchiarum ; Gh, genio-hyoid ; Ph, procoraco-humeralis ; Spe, supracoracoideus ; Cbb, coraco-branchialis brevis; Clo, cloaca; La, linea alba. and the pelvic arch (e.9., the guadratus lumborum, which lies close against the vertebral column), 140 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY The rectus abdominis, which is always well developed, but does not extend anteriorly to the sternum, becomes divided into three portions,—a ventral, an internal, and a lateral. While no important differentiation is noticeable in the dorsal por- tion of the lateral body-muscles in Urodeles, a marked subdivision of these muscles is seen in Reptiles. In them may be distinguished a longissimus, an tecostalis, interspinales, semispinales, multifidi, splenit, and levatores costarum, together with the scalenz, certain of which belong to the last- mentioned group, and others to the intercostal muscles, The muscles of the main part of the tail retain primitive rela- tions similar to those seen in Fishes: at the root of the tail and in the cloacal region, however, new muscles become differentiated. Birds.—In Birds the primitive character of the trunk-muscles has disappeared far more than in Reptiles. This is mainly to be accounted for by the excessive development of the muscles of the anterior extremity—the pectoralis major more particu- larly,—and the corresponding backward extension of the breast- bone. External and internal oblique muscles are present, but only slightly developed: this is more particularly true of the internal, which appears to be undergoing degeneration. No trace of a transversalis can be distinguished ; but, on the other hand, a paired, unsegmented rectus is present, External and internal intercostals are well developed, and a triangularis sternt appears for the first time on the inner surface | of the sternal ends of the ribs. The dorsal portion of the trunk cvadculature is only slightly developed in the region of the trunk, though very strongly marked in the neck. All these modifications in Birds seem to be accounted for by the specialisation of the mechanisms for flight and respiration, to assist which the greatest possible number of muscles are brought into play and thereby influence the whole organism: an essential difference is thus brought about between Birds and Reptiles. Mammals.—Three lateral abdominal muscles are always present in Mammals, an external and internal oblique and a trans- versalis. In many cases, more particularly in Tupaia and in Lemurs, the external oblique possesses tedinous intersections, thus indicat- ing its primitive segmental character; but in general all these muscles consist of broad uniform sheets. Towards the middle line they pass into strong aponeuroses, which ensheath the rectus abdominis. The latter consists of a single band on each side and possesses a varying number of myocommata; it is no longer con- nected with the axial muscles of the neck belonging to the same system (sternohyoid, sternothyroid, &c.) as is the case in Urodeles, MUSCULAR SYSTEM 141 for the sternum is always interposed between them, as it is in the Sauropsida. In Monotremes and Marsupials, a strong pyramidalis muscle lies on the ventral side of the rectus abdominis. It arises from the inner border of the “ marsupial bones” (epipubes, p. 121) and may extend forwards as far as the sternum. In the higher Mammals, where the ep:pubes are absent, the pyramidalis usually becomes greatly reduced or entirely lost. Traces of it are, however, commonly to be met with even in the Primates, and always arise from the anterior border of the pubis, right and left of the middle line. f : The external and internal oblique muscles are represented in the thoracic region in Mammals, as in the Sauropsida, in the form of external and internal intercostals. What has been said above as to the differentiation of the dorsal portion of the trunk-muscles in Reptiles applies also essentially to Mammals. The greater number of the muscles in connection with the external genital organs become differentiated from the primitive sphincter cloace: the origin of the others is not known. B. Muscles of the Diaphragm. A complete diaphragm dividing the ccelome into thoracic and abdominal cavities occurs only in the Mammalia. It is dome- shaped and muscular, its muscles arising from the vertebral column, ribs, and sternuni. The diaphragm is of great importance in respiration, as it allows of a lengthening of the thoracic cavity in a longitudinal direction. It is supplied by a phrenic nerve, arising from one or more (8rd to 6th) of the cervical nerves; and usually consists of a central tendon, perforated by the cesophagusrand post- caval vein, and of muscular fibres radiating from this to the periphery and forming dorsally two strong “pillars of the dia- phragm.” In some cases (¢.g., Echidna, Phoceena) the diaphragm is entirely muscular. Amongst the Sauropsida, a partition is present between the pleural and peritoneal cavities in Chelonians, and is still more marked in Crocodiles and Birds!: this is connected with the ribs by muscular fibres. It, however, does not enclose the peri- cardium, which, as in the Anamnia, lies in the general peritoneal cavity. The evolution of the mammalian diaphragm is not yet tho- roughly understood. _ 7 In Birds, two entirely different structures have been described as a diaphragm. (See under Air-sacs.) 142 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY c. Muscles of the Appendages. The most primitive condition of the muscles of the extremities is met with in Fishes and Dipnoans, in which the musculature of each surface of the fin forms a more or less uniform mass which may become differentiated into layers. Everything goes to prove that all the muscles of the appendages are to be looked upon primarily as derivatives of the lateral muscles of the trunk, 7e., of the myotomes; and although in the Amniota they have apparently an independent origin, this is probably only due to an abbreviation of development. Two principal groups of appendicular muscles may always be distinguished: one lying in the region of the pectoral and pelvic arches, dorsally and ventrally, the other in the free extremity. In Fishes and Dipnoans the latter consist essentially of elevators, adductors, and depressors of the fins; while from the Amphibia onwards, in correspondence with the more highly-differentiated organs of locomotion, considerable complication is seen, and there isa much more marked separation into individual muscles corresponding with the different sections of the extremity. Thus elevators, depressors, rotators, flexors, extensors, and adductors are present in connection with the upper arm and thigh, fore-arm and shank, and hand and foot, and the digits are also moved by a highly-differentiated musculature. The number of muscles gradu- ally increases in passing from the Urodela through the Sauropsida to the Mammalia. When, as in the Primates, the anterior extremity is con- verted into a prehensile organ, new groups of muscles appear known as pronators and supinators. The former are derived from flexors, the latter from extensors, oe D. The Hye-Museles. (These will be treated of in connection with the organ of vision.) Visceral Muscles. Fishes.—Considerable differences exist in the visceral mus- culature of Fishes! In Elasmobranchs, Fiirbringer classifies these muscles as follows :— A. Cranial muscles (consisting originally of transverse or circular fibres) supplied by the V, VII, IX‘, and X™ cerebral nerves. 1 In Cyclostomes there is a remarkable transformation of the cranio-visceral musculature in correspondence with their peculiar cranial skeleton (suctorial apparatus) and branchial basket. MUSCULAR SYSTEM 143 ‘1. Constrictor arcuum visceralium, incl. constrictor superficialis dorsalis and ventralis. Innervation. Levator labii superioris Vv ys maxille ,, ‘ », palpebree nictitantis! a rostri a hyomandibularis Bae Sa Depressor rostri a mandibularis and hyomandibularis Interbrahchialeg eS i oe ae ib. e.€ Peapakiea ss rt Sate ee eS eo ae 9: Axcuales dorsales Ao <0) 050 jd Pte 8 LXnX. 3. Adduetores, incl. adductor mandibule. . . . 5's and adductores arcuum branchialium. . . IX, X. B. Spinal museles (originally longitudinal), divided, like the trunk-muscles, into myotomes. Supplied by the spino- occipital (=the ‘‘ventral roots” of X) and _ spinal nerves. (a) Epibranchial spinal muscles, dorsal to visceral skeleton. Innervation. 4, Subspinalis. . . . . . . . Spino-occipital nerves. Spino-occipital nerves, 5. - yterbasalesy 3827 20 ees as well as the first spinal nerve. (b) Hypobranchial spinal muscles, ventral to visceral skeleton. Spinal nerves, and partly the last one or more of the spino- occipital nerves. 6. Coraco-arcuales, incl. coraco-bran- chiales, coraco-hyoideus, and coraco-mandibularis . The structure of the cranio-visceral musculature of Ganoids and Teleosts differs considerably from that roughly sketched out above, so that the different groups of muscles must be arranged in an entirely different manner. Thus in Teleostei the following divisions may be distinguished :—(1) Muscles ‘of the jaw, (2) muscles of the dorsal, and (3) muscles of the ventral ends of the visceral arches. Each of these groups may again be sub-divided, but further details about their arrangement, which is often very complicated, cannot be given here. The visceral muscles of Polypterus are of especial interest, as they show an intermediate condition between those of Elasmo- branchs and Urodeles. Amphibia.—It is to be expected, d priori, that the muscula- ture of the visceral skeleton should be more highly developed in branchiate than in air-breathing Amphibians; we thus find that in the former more primitive relations are met with, connect- 1 This muscle has therefore nothing to do with the cther eye-muscles. 144 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY _ ing them with lower forms, while in the latter a greater modification, or rather reduction, of these muscles takes place. Between the two rami of the lower jaw is situated a muscle with transverse fibres (the mylohyoid), supplied by the third division of the trigeminal and the facial nerve ; this represents the last rem- nants of the constrictor muscle of Fishes. As the elevator of the floor of the mouth, it stands in important relation to respiration and deglutition, and is retained throughout the rest of the Vertebrata up to Man (Figs. 116, 117). : ; A continuation of the trunk-musculature (the omo-, sterno-, and genio-hyoid) provided with tendinous intersections, lies above the mylohyoid (Fig. 117). These muscles, which serve to pull the visceral skeleton forwards and backwards, are supplied by the first and second spinal nerves. In contrast to Fishes, there is in Amphibians a definite differen- tiation into muscles of the tongue, that is, into a hyoglossus and a genioglossus ; but these also must be considered as having been derived from the anterior end of the ventral muscles of the trunk ; they are present in all Vertebrates, from the Amphibia onwards, and are supplied by the hypoglossal (=the first spinal nerve of Amphibians). In the Perennibranchiata and in Salamander larvee the muscles of the hyoid and of the visceral arches may, as in Fishes, be divided into a ventral and a dorsal group; the latter disappears in adult Salamanders and Anurans, only the ventral persisting. Their function is to raise and depress the branchial arches, as well as to draw them forwards and backwards. To these may be added constrictors of the pharynx, as well as (in branchiate forms) levators, depressors, and adductors of the external gill filaments (Figs. 116 and 117). They are innervated by the vagus and glossopharyngeal. | The jaw-muscles include a depressor (digastric, or biventer mandibule, Fig. 116), supplied by the facial nerve, and elevators of the lower jaw (masseter, temporal, and pterygoid muscles), supplied by the third division of the trigeminal. All these muscles, which may be derived from the adductor of the mandible of Elasmobrancks and Ganoids, arise from the auditory region of the skull. Amniota.— With the simplification of the visceral skeleton in Amniota there is a considerable reduction of the musculature belonging to it. All muscles connected with branchial respiration are of course wanting, and the ventral trunk-muscles, as mentioned above, are always interrupted in their forward extension by the sternum and pectoral arch. At the same time, the muscles along the neck and on the floor of the mouth met with in Amphibia are present here also; they are, a mylo-, sterno-, omo-, and genio- hyoid, as well as a hyoglossus and genioglossus, To these may MUSCULAR SYSTEM 145 be also added a sterno-thyroid, from which a thyro-hyoid is con- tinued forwards, The stylo-hyoid, stylo-glossus, and stylo-pharyngeus of Mam- mals, arising from the styloid process and stylo-hyoid ligament and undergoing numerous variations, are peculiar to Mammals. They are supplied partly by the facial nerve, partly by the glossopharyn- geal, and act as retractors of the tongue and levators of the pharynx and hyoid. - The muscles of the jaws resemble those of Amphibia, although, especially in the case. of the pterygoids,| they are much more sharply differentiated, and are throughout more strongly developed. ' For the tensor tympani and stapedius muscules, see under Auditory Organ, D. ELECTRIC ORGANS. ELECTRIC organs are present in certain Fishes, being most strongly developed in certain Rays (Torpedinide, ¢.9., Z'orpedo, Hypnos) found in the Atlantic Ocean and various southern seas, in-a South American Eel (Gymnotus electricus) and in an African Siluroid (Malopterurus electricus). Gymnotus possesses by far the strongest electric power, next to it comes Malopterurus, and then Torpedo. The electric batteries of these three Fishes are situated in different parts of Au the body: in the Torpedinide they > have the form of a broad mass, extending throughout the substance of the part of the body lying be- tween the gill-sacs and the pro- pterygium on either side of the head (Fig. 118); in Gymnotus they lie in the ventral region of the enormously long tail (Fig. 119), that is, in the position usually occupied by the ventral portions of the great lateral muscles; and finally, in Malopterurus, the electric: organ extends between the skin and muscles round almost the entire. circumference of the body, thus enclosing the Fish like a mantle: it is especially strongly developed along the sides. The electric power of those Fic. 118.— Torpedo marmorata, Fishes which were formerly known witH THE ELEcrric Oreans (Z) ag “ pseudo-electric” has now been sata givistut ae fully demonstrated, though it is. S, skull; Sp, spiracle; KK, gills; much feebler than in the forms Au, eye. described above. To this category belong all the Rays, excluding the Torpedinide, the various species of Mormyrus, and Gymnarchus (both the latter genera belonging to the Teleostei). In all these, the electric organs lie on either side of the end of the tail and have a metameric arrangement like that of the caudal muscles; in the 2 — x} I) %, J yf AY ane, o \ ia « ; ‘ ELECTRIC ORGANS 147 Mormyride, for example, there is on each side an upper and lower row of electric organs. | The electric apparatus in all the above-named Fishes is to be regarded from the same point of view both as concerns its mode of development and its anatomical relations : all electric organs are to be looked wpon as consisting of metamor- phosed muscular fibres and the nerve-endings belonging to them as homologues of the motor end-plates which are ordinarily found on muscles, As regards the structure of the elec- tric organs, the same essential arrange- ments are met with in all: the details of - their histology and physiology cannot be entered into here. The framework is formed of fibrous tissue en- closing numerouscells, which, running partly longitudinally, partly transversely through Fic. 119, A and B.—Tue Etxcrric Oran or : . : Gymnotus electricus. (B, from a preparation by the organ, gives rise A. Ecker.) to numerous poly- gonal or more or less H, skin; F!, fin; DM, DM", dorsal portions of the great lateral muscles, seen partly in transverse, rounded chambers or partly in longitudinal, section; VM, VM, compartments. These ventral portions of ditto; H, the electric organ, latter are arranged in seen in transverse section at H# (B), and from : 5 the side at H'; WS, vertebral column from rows, either along the the side, and the spinal nerves, and‘ WS', longitudinal axis of in transverse _— i tea posterior end of ((2 body cavity ; Sep, median longitudinal fibrous the body (Gy mnotus, septum between the left and right electric Malopterurus) or ina organ and lateral trunk-muscles ; A, anus. dorso-ventral direction (Torpedo), forming definite prismatic columns (Fig. 120). Numerous vessels and nerves ramify in the connective-tissue lying between these compartments, the nerves being enclosed in thick sheaths, and having a different origin in the different. forms. In Torpedo, in which the electric organs probably arise in connection with the great adductor muscle of the mandible Li: 148 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY and the constrictor of the gill-arches, the nerves arise from the “electric lobe” of the medulla oblongata, a single branch coming also from the trigeminal nerve; in all pseudo- electric Fishes, as well as in Gymnotus, in which over two hundred nerves pass to the electric organ, they arise from the spinal cord, and are probably in close relation with the ventral cornua of the latter, which are particularly well developed in the last-named Fish. It is remarkable that the electric nerves of Malopterurus arise on each side from a single enormous lens-shaped nerve-cell, which, lying in the neighbourhood of the second spinal nerve, is continued into a very large primitive-fibre which passes towards the end of the tail, dividing as Fic. 120,—Exec- jt goes, This fibre is invested by a thick sheath. TRIC PRISMS OF le (Semi. _ Experiments have shown that all Electric Fishes are diagrammatic. ) proof against the electric current, with the limitation that muscles and nerves—even the electric nerves themselyes— - separated out from the body are capable of being excited by the current. ‘‘ The last and most important question with regard to the Electric Fishes is naturally concerning the mechanism whereby the electric plates become temporarily charged with electricity. The reply to this ques- tion, although probably not so difficult a one as that relating to the mechanism of muscular contraction, is still far from being answered ” (Du Bois-Reymonda). The only thing that can be stated with certainty is, that the electromotive force is under the influence of the will. E. NERVOUS SYSTEM. THE nervous system, as already mentioned in the Introduction (p. 5), arises from the epiblast, and the first parts to become differentiated histolcgically are the nerve-cells (ganglion-cells), from which nerve-fibres arise later and serve as conductors of nervous impulses. The most important constituent of the nerve- fibre is a central axis-cylinder or axis-fibre, and in those nerve-fibres which are spoken of as medullated this is surrounded by a highly refractile, fat-like substance (myelin), which forms the medullary sheath. In certain (non-medullated) nerve-fibres this sheath is wanting, but the two kinds of fibres are not sharply marked off from one another, either locally or genetically: a fibre may be medullated in one part of its course, and non-medullated in another. Externally each nerve-fibre is enclosed by a delicate sheath, the neurilemma. Part of the epiblastic tissue which forms the nervous system of the embryo does not become transformed into nervous tissue, but gives rise to a supporting and connecting framework—the newroglia; and externally, investing membranes as well as blood and lymph- vessels, are formed from the mesoblast. The nervous system consists of central and peripheral portions (Fig. 121). The central part (brain and spinal cord) is the first to arise, and is formed as a direct product of the epiblast; the peripheral portion (cerebral, spinal, and sympathetic nerves) becomes established later. 1. THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. The first indication of the central nervous system is a longi- tudinal furrow (medullary groove, Fig. 6, A) which appears on the dorsal side of the embryo and gradually becomes converted into a tube by the meeting of its edges; this tube, consisting ori- ginally of epithelial cells like the epiblast from which it arises, then becomes separated from the epiblast and gives rise to the hollow medullary cord (Fig. 6, B), in which nerve-cells and fibres soon become differentiated; it comprises a more expanded an- terior and a longer and more slender posterior section. From the former arises the brain, from the latter the spinal cord. 1 The cord is at first solid in Cyclostomes, Teleosts, and bony Ganoids, cavity being formed secondarily. 150 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Frc. 121.—Tux Entree Nervous System oF THE FRoc. (After A. Ecker.) He, From the ventral side. cerebral hemispheres (prosencephalon) ; Lop, optic lobes (mesencephalon), M, spinal cord ; M1 to M10, spinal nerves, which are connected at SM by branches (rami communicantes) with the ganglia (SZ to S10) of the sympathetic (S); No, femoral nerve; Ni, sciatic nerve ; J to X, first to tenth cranial nerves ; G, ganglia of the vagus ; Vg, Gasserian ganglion; 0, eye; N, nasal sac; Vato Ve, the different branches of the trigeminal; /, facial nerve ; Vs, connection of the sympathetic with the Gasserian ganglion; XZ to X4, the different branches of the vagus. Some of the fibres of the sympathetic should be shown accompanying the vagus peripherally. MEMBRANES OF BRAIN AND SPINAL CORD 151 Tn’an early stage of development the lumen of the medullary cord is primitively continuous posteriorly with that of the primary intestine (newrenteric canal). This: connection, however, soon dis- appears, and the cord then consists of a cylindrical or more or less flattened hollow cord with thick walls, the cavity of which is lined by ciliated epithelium and expands in front to form the ventricles of the brain. This cavity becomes greatly reduced later, and in the spinal cord is spoken of as the central canal. Membranes of the Brain and Spinal Cord. The enveloping membranes of the brain and spinal cord arise by the differentiation of a connective-tissue layer lying between the central organs of the nervous system and the surrounding skeletal parts. In Fishes, only two membranes are distinguishable :—one, Bla gw t 7) |i OT OO Le eN Oe, Jan SOIL ONES on a: ZO “aS CO SY, | Fic. 122.—Bra1n MEMBRANES OF Man. (After Schwalbe.) DM, dura mater ; SR; sub-dural (arachnoid) space ; A, sub-arachnoid space ; PM, pia mater ; “PR, gray cortical substance of the brain. the dura mater, lining the inner surface of the cerebro-spinal canal, and the other, or pia mater, investing the brain and spinal cord. The latter represents also the arachnoid of higher Verte- brates, which is not here differentiated as a separate membrane. The dura mater conveys vessels to the walls of the cerebro-spinal canal—that is, to the perichondrium or periosteum, while the pia mater, which is much richer in blood-vessels, has to do with the nutrition of the nervous axis. The dura mater consists of two lamellz, which, however, only remain distinct along the whole central nervous system in the lower Vertebrata. In higher Verte- brates, its double nature persists only in the region of the vertebral column, the two layers becoming fused in the cranial portion. As in most Fishes the brain by no means fills the cranial cavity, a large lymph-space lies between the dura and pia mater; this cor- responds to the so-called sub-dural space of terrestrial Vertebrates. 152 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY A differentiation of the primary vascular membrane of the brain and spinal cord into pia mater and arachnoid takes place from the Amphibia onwards, and these two layers become separated in those places where there are deep depressions be- tween the individual parts of the brain; the deeper of these (pia) adheres closely to the brain, and also penetrates into the ventricles in the form of tele choroidew and plexus choroidei, while the B Fic. 123.—DIAGRAMS OF THE SpinaL CorRD AND ITS Nerves. In A the cord passes to the end of the tail, and at B it ends more anteriorly and passes be- hind into a filum termin- ale (F.t). M.o, medulla oblongata; Pc, cervical nerves ; Pb, bra- chial nerves ; P.th, thor- acic nerves; Pl, lumbo- sacral nerves ; Ce, cauda equina, superficial one (arachnoid) simply bridges over the depressions (Fig. 122). A lymph- sinus (sub-arachnoid space) is thus de- veloped between the two in the Saurop- sida and Mammalia, but this never reaches such an independent differentiation as does the sub-dural (arachnoid) space. 1. The Spinal Cord. The spinal cord is at first of a uniform diameter throughout, but as a richer nerve-supply becomes needed for the extremities, it exhibits in these regions definite swellings—the brachial and lumbo-sacral enlargements (Fig. 123). The cord originally extends along the whole length of the neural canal, but its growth is usually less rapid than that of the vertebral axis, so that eventually it is considerably shorter than the latter. In such cases (¢.g. Primates, Cheirop- tera, Insectivora, Anura, Figs. 121 and 123) it passes at its posterior end into a brush-like mass of lumbo-sacral nerves, the so-called cauda equina, lying within the neural canal. paired manner. Accessory vesicles occur occasionally in young Slow- worms (Anguis), in which as many as two or even three rudimentary vesicles may be present behind the pineal organ. Hiij-—— Cle Fig. 126.—MeEpi1aAn LoneirupInaL SEcTION THROUGH THE HFApD oF A NEWLY- HATCHED LARVA OF Petromyzon planeri. (Mainly after Kupfer.) J.b, fore-brain ; m.b, mid-brain ; h.b, hind-brain ; ep, epiphysis ; hp, hypophysis ; st, stomodzeum ; al, endodermic alimentary cavity ; ch, notochord. The hypophysis apparently represents a glandular organ, the secretion of which formerly passed into the ventricles, and various hypotheses have been put forward as to its first origin. One of the more recent of these theories assumes that it corresponds to the primitive mouth (paleostoma) of the Proto-Vertebrata, which is to a greater or less extent represented by the combined unpaired nasal and pituitary passage of Cyclostomes (see under Olfactory Organ): the mouth of existing Vertebrates must then be distinguished as a neostoma. Both the primary and the secondary fore-brain are situated in the pre-chordal region of the skull, all the other divisions of the brain lying in its chordal portion (comp. p. 67). The mid-brain and medulla oblongata undergo fewer modifi- cations than the fore-brain ; only the anterior part of the thin -e~+1§till more anteriorly a third outgrowth or paraphysis, arising from the eres fore-brain, has been observed in the embryos of various Vertebrates. 156 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY roof of the latter (valve of Vieussens) is nervous, and its floor becomes greatly thickened. The greater number of the cerebral nerves arise from the medulla oblongata, so that its physiological Fic. 127.—DIAGRAM OF THE VENTRICLES OF THE VERTEBRATE BRAIN. V H, cerebral hemispheres containing the lateral (1st and 2nd) ventricles (SV); ZH, thalamen- cephalon, with the third ventricle (J/J) ; a thick- ened vascular part of the pia mater (choroid plexus) roofs over the third and fourth ven- tricles; each lateral ventricle communicates with the third ventricle by a small aperture, the foramen of Monro(/'M); MH, mid-brain, which encloses the aqueduct of Sylvius (Aq), com- municating between the third and fourth vent- ricles; HH, cerebel- lum ; V.H, medulla ob- longata, enclosing the fourth ventricle (JV) ; Cc, central canal of the spinal chord (£). importance is very great. The cerebellum may become more or less distinctly sub- divided into lobes. | . In the course of the development of the brain the walls of the cerebral vesicles be- come more and more thickened, so that their cavities undergo a gradual constriction. A series of unpaired ventricles (prosocele, thalamocele, mesocele, metacele, myelocele, see p. 153), lying in the longitudinal axis of the brain, as well as paired outgrowths from certain of them, can always be distinguished (Fig. 127). When cerebral hemispheres are developed (as is generally the case), the prosoceele gives rise to paired cavities, ex- tending into them, and known as the lateral ventricles (ventriculus 1 and 2); each of these communicates with the thalamocele or third ventricle by means of an opening, the foramen of Monro, and may be continued into the corresponding olfactory lobe as a rhinocele or olfactory ventricle. Each optic lobe also usually contains an optic ventricle, or optocele, communicating with the meso- coele or aqueduct of Sylvius. There may be a distinct metaccele in the cerebellum opening into the myeloceele or fourth ventricle. A so-called fifth ventricle, situated between the corpus callosum and fornix, is found in Mammals, but morphologically it has nothing to do with the ventricles proper, and simply represents a space between the thin internal walls (septa lucida) of the two hemispheres. All five cerebral vesicles lie at first in the same horizontal plane, but in the course of developmenta cerebral flecure takes place, the axis of the vesicles becoming bent down- wards, so that at a certain stage the mesen- cephalon forms the apparent apex of the brain. In Mammals, the parts of the brain become still further folded on one another, so that a parietal, a Varolian, and a cervical bend may be distinguished (Fig. 128): this process is connected with the further development of the skull . and the rapid longitudinal growth of the brain. THE BRAIN | 157 In Fishes and Amphibians the cerebral flexure later becomes practically obliterated, but it persists more or less markedly in the higher types, more particularly in Mammals. In the latter Class, moreover, the original relation of the parts becomes still further complicated by the large development of.the cerebral hemispheres, which grow backwards, and thus gradually come to overlie all the other parts of the brain. This condition of things attains its greatest perfection in Man. Thus instead of the various sections of the brain being situated SB VH ZH: one behind another, they come to lic eventually more wpon one another, the thalamencephalon, mid-brain, cerebellum, and medulla oblongata becoming covered over by the hemispheres, Amphioxus.—The conical and enlarged anterior end of the spinal cord of the Lancelet contains a widened portion of the central canal which must be looked upon as a ventricle. In the larva, this opens freely on to the exterior dorsally by a newropore, which probably represents the last indication of the primitive connection of the central nervous system with the outer skin. It is possible that the anterior enlargement of the cord corresponds to the fore- brain—and perhaps also the mid-brain—of the Craniata, Cyclostomi.—The brain of these forms remains in many respects in an embryonic con- dition : this is particularly the case in the larval Petromyzonor Ammoccete (Fig. 129). Intheadult the individual vesicles lie in an almost horizontal direction one behind the other, and the prosen- cephalon consists of a median part and of small paired hemispheres continuous anteriorly with the larger, rounded olfactory lobes. The median portion of the prosoccele is continued trans- versely outwards into each hemisphere, in which it gives rise to a lateral ventricle: this is con- tinued. forwards for a short distance into the base of the olfactory lobe, as well as backwards into the hemisphere. The roof (pallium) of the median portion of the ventricle is non- Fie. 128.—CEREBRAL FLEXURE OF A MAMMAL. V H, prosencephalon; ZH, thalamence- phalon, with the pituitary body (H) at its base ; MH, mesenceph- alon, which at SB forms the most projecting __ por- tion of the brain, representing the so-called ‘‘ parie- tal bend”; HH, metencephalon ; NH, myelence- phalon, forming the ** cervical bend” (NB): the ‘*Varolian bend” (BB) arises on the ventral cir- cumference, at the junction be- tween HH and NH; R, spinal cord. nervous, and consists of a single layer of epithelial cells, which, together with the pia mater, has been removed in the prepa- ration represented in Fig. 129, A. The mid-brain and medulla oblongata are relatively broad, and the cerebellum is represented by a mere narrow ledge overhanging the fourth ventricle ante- riorly. The roof of the mesocele is formed mainly by a layer of epithelial cells, and, like that of the third and fourth ventricles, i 158 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY covered by a thickened and vascular portion of the pia mater or choroid plexus, | . . 3 Re Se . | B The L.ol; Fic. 129. —Braix oF Larvat Lamprey. (A, from above ; B, from below ; Bt C, from the side.) ; ee ; VH (Bas.G@), cerebral hemispheres, between which, in A, the median portion of the - prosencephalon is seen, with the membranous roof removed ;: L.o/; olfactory . lobe ; ZH, thalamencephalon ; G.p, pincal body; Hyp, hypophysis ; Sv, saccus vasculosus 3; WH, mid-brain ; HH, cerebellum; NA, Paulie oblon- gata ; Med, spinal cord; J-X, cranial nerves; XJJ, first spinal nerve (hypo- glossal), i Ss hee i oaieoek _ The brain of ‘Myxine shows many » special peculiarities : its subdivisions are broader and more closely approximated than in 'THE BRAIN 159 the lamprey, and the thalamencephalon cannot be seen from the dorsal side owing to the larger size of the solid prosencephalon. The mesoccele ends blindly in front, the third ventricle being almost completely obliterated. The cerebellum is relatively larger than in Petromyzon, and no pallium has been recognised in the prosencephalon of the adult. In Petromyzon the pineal apparatus is represented by two vesicles, each connected with the dorsal surface of the thalamen- cephalon (ganglion habenulz) and lying one above the other just beneath the roof of the skull; the integument immediately above these vesicles is pigmentless, The cells on the ventral side of the dorsal vesicle (epiphysis) are arranged radially and contain pig- ment, forming a kind of retina, but they show signs of degenera- tion ; the lower vesicle (parietal organ, p. 155) is without pigment. In Myxine there is only a single pigmentless vesicle. A’ saccus vasculosus (comp. pp. 154, 160, e seg.) is present in connection with the infundibulum, to which a small pituitary body is attached, Elasmobranchii and Holocephali.—The brain of these Fishes, like that of Cyclostomes, is in many respects of a specialised form, characteristic of, and contined to, the group, though the par- ticular regions are much more highly developed than in the Cyclostomi. According to its external form two main types can be distinguished. One of these, seen in Spinax, Scymnus, Noti- danus and the Holocephali, is characterised by its very narrow and elongated form, while in the rest of the Elasmobranchii the indi- vidual parts are more closely compressed and approximated together (Fig. 130). In almost all Sharks the prosencephalon is relatively much larger than any of the other regions. ‘The olfactory lobes arise from the anterior or antero-lateral ends of the prosencephalon, and in some Elasmobranchs remain in close connection with the latter ; in othersin which the olfactory capsules are situated further forwards, they become drawn out into long olfactory tracts each continuous anteriorly with an olfactory bulb from which the olfac- tory nerves arise. = = A division of the prosencephalon into paired halves is hardly indicated at all in Rays, and only slightly so in the commoner Dog- fishes: (e.g., Scyllium, Acanthias), in which, however, lateral and olfactory ventricles are present. Only in Scymnus, and to some extent in the Notidanide, is there a distinct separation of the -pallium into two hemispheres. In Rays there is only a small single prosoccele, the prosencephalon consisting of a_ practically solid mass, and the olfactory lobes are also solid. _ The thalamencephalon is roofed over by a choroid plexus, and the tube-like epiphysis may reach such a length as to extend beyond the anterior end of the brain for a considerable distance, and pass distally into the roof of the skull: no indication can be seen of a parietal organ, A pair of small lobes—the obi inferiores—are 160 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY b.0. 4 ° é h.p. SC. Fic. 130,—Brain oF Scylliwm canicula. (A, dorsal; B, ventral; and C, lateral view. )i f.b, prosencephalon ; 6.0, olfactory bulb; ¢.0, olfactory tract (very short in Scyllium) ; th, thalamencephalon ; ep, base of pineal body ; ¢/, lobi inferiores ; h.p, hypophysis ; sc, saccus vasculosus ; m.b, mid-brain (optic lobes) ; h.b, cerebellum; m.d, medulla oblongata; fr, fourth ventricle; i-z, cranial nerves (the ventral vagus roots are omitted from Fig. B. The epithelial and vascular roof of the third and fourth ventricles has been removed. present on the infundibulum, and an “ infwndibuiar gland” or saccus vasculosus is present on the sides and floor of the infundibulum, which is connected posteriorly with the pituitary body. THE BRAIN 161 The cerebellum is always very large, overlapping the optic lobes and the medulla oblongata to a greater or less extent: itis divided up into several folds lying one behind the other, and usually con- tains a metaccele opening into the fourth ventricle (Figs, 130. and 151). In Sharks the medulla oblongata is an elongated cylindrical body, while in Rays it is more compressed and triangular; at its Fie, 131.— Brain oF Cheilo- scyllium. (From Parker and Haswell’s Zoology. ) Viewed from the dorsal side, the roof of the various ven- tricles removed so as to show ; the relations of the cavities Fic. 132.—Bratn he : OF (semi-diagrammatic). — Lepidosteus. (Dorsal cer, dilatation from which the view.) (After Balfour metaceele is given off; dia, and Parker.) thalamoceele—the reference line points to the opening cbl, cerebellum ; ¢.h, pro- leading into the infundibu- sencephalon ; di, thal- lum ; ier, aqueduct of Sylvius amencephalon; m.o, (mesoccele), into which the medulla oblongata ; optoceeles (opt) open; meta, olf.l, olfactory lobes ; myeloceele ; para, lateral ven- opt.l, optic lobes ; prs, tricle ; pros, median part of lobes of prosencepha- prosoceele ; rh, rhinoccele. lon. ' anterior end are two lateral lobes, the corpora restiformea. In electric Rays (p. 146) a pair of Joli electrici arise from the gray matter of the floor of the fourth ventricle, and these en- close a mass of giant nerve-cells. Ganoidei.—The pallium covering the median - prosoccle consists mainly or entirely of epithelial and connective tissue M 162 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY elements, much as in Cyclostomes. The olfactory lobes are closely applied to the prosencephalon, which gives rise anteriorly to cerebral hemispheres containing lateral ventricles (Fig. 132). = , The well-developed thalamencephalon has a marked ventral flexure and from its roof arises a strong pineal peduncle, the distal end of which extends into a hollow in the cranial roof, but undergoes atrophy, in Amia becoming completely separated off from the brain! Well-developed lobi inferiores are present, and the hypophysis? and saccus vasculosus are voluminous: the latter consists largely of glandular tubules which open into the infundibulum, as is also the case in Elasmobranchs (p. 160). | ‘ The large cerebellum gives rise to a valvula cerebella (comp. Fig. 184) extending forwards into the ventricle of the mid-brain ; the optic lobes are also large. The brain of Amia on the whole most nearly approaches that of the Teleostei in structure. Teleostei.—As is the case in many other Fishes, the brain in most Teleosts by no means fills the cranial cavity, and it is separated from the roof of the skull by a greater or less amount of a fatty and lymph-like fluid. It never attains to so large a relative size as does that of Elasmobranchs. Its form varies greatly, more by far than in avy other Vertebrate group, and only the following essential points can be mentioned here. The palliwm is entirely epithelial in structure (Figs. 133-135), and, moreover, it presents no median involution dividing the anterior part of the prosencephalon into two lateral hemispheres : there is a median prosocele. The lower part of the prosen- cephalon is made up of large paired basal ganglia (corpora striata) connected together by an anterior commissure. The olfactory lobes are either closely applied to the prosencephalon and contain a small rhinoccele, or they become differentiated into olfactory tract and bulb, as in Elasmobranchs (p. 159). The thalamencephalon is very small. The epiphysis (Figs. 133, 134) is plainly distinguishable, but it does not pass into the roof of the skull; an outgrowth arising from the roof of the brain in front of the epiphysis represents the parietal organ, but this becomes constricted off from the brain and disappears during development. Marked lobi inferiores, as. well as a 1 In Polypterus the pineal body gives rise to a peculiar and extremely large epithelial vesicle. In Devonian Ganoids there was a parietal foramen (comp. p. 171). 2 In Polypterus and Calamoichthys the hypophysis communicates with the mouth-cayity by a hollow duct, even in the adult (comp. p. 155). 3 A parietal foramen is, however, often present in the embryo, and persists throughout life in Callicthys. THE BRAIN 3 163 hypophysis and glandular saccus vasculosus are present, but these vary much in the degree of their development.» The saccus 7S jay Lol ok fe Pell | oe eS meee Fic. 133.—BRraIn oF Satmon. (A, dorsal; B, ventral; and C, lateral view.) VA, prosencephalon ; Pall, pallium (in part removed), and BG and Bas.G, basal ganglia (corpora striata) of the prosencephalon ; L.o/, olfactory lobe; G.p, pineal body ; Jnf, infundibulum ; Hyp, hypophysis; Sv, saccus vasculosus ; UL, lobi inferiores ; T’r.opt, optic tract; Ch, chiasma; MH, mid-brain ; HH, cerebellum ; NH, medulla oblongata; Med, spinal cord ; J-X, cranial nerves; 1 and 2, first and second spinal nerves (the first represents the hypoglossal, X JJ). yasculosus opens by several apertures into the infundibulum, and is surrounded by a blood-sinus. M 2 164 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY The mid-brain (Fig. 133) is extremely large relatively, while the thalamencephalon is depressed between it and the prosen- cephalon, | . . The extremely well-developed cerebellum is bent upon itself, te —<——————'/ I» t LD ip Z 7 Fic. 134.—-LonGirupDINAL VERTICAL SECTION THROUGH THE ANTERIOR PART OF THE TELEOSTEAN BRAIN. (Founded on a figure of the Trout’s brain by Rabl- Riickhard. ) T'co, roof of the optic lobes; 77, torus longitudinalis ; Cy, posterior commissure ; Gp, pineal body, with a cavity ((@p") in its interior; Lp, Hp, the epithelium (ependyme), lining the walls of the ventricles ; +, point at which the epithelial roof of the secondary fore-brain (pallium, Pa) becomes continuous with the lining of the anterior wall of the pineal tube ; at f is seen an outgrowth which represents a rudimentary parietal organ ; V.em, common ventricle (prosoceele) of the secondary fore-brain; V.t, third ventricle ; B.ol, N.ol, olfactory lobe and nerve; C.st, corpus striatum, which lies on either side of the middle line ; Ch.n.opt, optic chiasma; Ci, inferior commissure ; Ch, horizontal com- missure; J, infundibulum; H, #H', hypophysis; Sv, saccus vasculosus ; I’, \obi inferiores; Ag, aqueduct of Sylvius (mesoccele) ; ¢, pathetic nerve ; Val, valvula cerebelli. a overlies the medulla oblongata behind, and is prolonged in front into the ventricle of the mid-brain as a valvula cerebelli (Fig. 134), - as is the case in Ganoids. | : The Teleostean brain is of a specialised type. It has no direct THE BRAIN 165 connection with that of Cyclostomes or Elasmobranchs, but has certainly passed through Ganoid-like stages. were, Wee Fic. 135.—TRANSVERSE SECTION THROUGH THE FoRE PART OF THE TELEOSTEAN BRAIN. fr, frontal bone, underneath which the pineal tube, Gp, is visible in transverse sec- tion, and below this the pia mater, Pm; Pa, the pallium, or roof of the sec- ondary fore-brain, formed of a simple epithelial layer ; V.cm, prosoceele; Hp, ependyme; 7’, 7’, olfactory tracts at the base of the corpora striata (C.s¢.). Dipnoi.—Both as regards external and internal structure, med Fic. 136.—Brain oF Ceratodus fostert. Dorsal view. (From Parkerand Haswell’s Zoology. ) aud, auditory nerve ; cb/, cere- bellum ; fac, facial nerve ; g/, glossopharyngeal ; med, me- dullaoblongata;mes,mesence- phalon ; oc, oculomotor nerve; opt, optic nerve ; pros, cere- bral hemispheres ; rh, olfac- tory lobes ; vg, vagus nerve. certain points of resemblance may be seen between the brain of Dipnoans and that of Elasmobranchs on the one hand and Amphibians on the other. This fact probably indicates that though the Elasmobranchii and Dipnoi have arisen from a common ancestral type, they have become differentiated along different lines. The prosencephalon is well de- veloped (Fig. 136): the thin pallium is mainly nervous, and is involuted along the median longitudinal line so as to completely separate the two hemispheres from one another in Protopterus: in Ceratodus they are united together posteriorly by a narrow commissure. Olfactory lobes arise from the prosencephalon anteriorly, and contain ventricles. The thalamencephalon of Pro- topterus presents certain very charac- teristic features, especially as regards its roof. The pineal body has a long stalk, and its distal vesicle perforates the cartilaginous roof of the skull: in the embryo Ceratodus it even’ reaches as far as the integument. The choroid plexus gives rise to a vesicular organ, and as regards its 166 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY network of blood-vessels more nearly resembles that of Elas- mobranchs than that of Amphibians. Lobi inferiores are present. Nervous and glandular portions can here also be recognised in the: hypophysis. The well-marked mid-brain is indistinctly paired in Ceratodus, but is unpaired in’ Protopterus. The cerebellum is relatively much smaller than in Elasmo- branchs and Teleosts, though better developed than in Urodeles: it gives rise to a valvula cerebelli. Amphibia.—The prosencephalon of Amphibians is distin- guished from that of Dipnoans by a higher development of the pallium, which, however, even in the latter group, is differ- entiated into an external layer of nerve fibres and an internal cellular layer. The basal ganglia (corpora striata) are less marked, and merely form a more or less prominent thickening of the wall of each hemisphere projecting into the lateral ventricle. The Amphibian brain does not, however, lead towards that of Reptiles. Although the prosencephalon is more highly differ- entiated than in lower forms, the thalamencephalon and mesen- cephalon are simpler than in Fishes; and, on the whole, the brain of Amphibians is less complicated than that of any other Vertebrates, In Urodeles the individual parts are more elongated and separated from one another than in Anurans, and the thala- mencephalon is therefore more freely exposed. The hemispheres are almost cylindrical and are separated from one another by the pallial fold as far back as the anterior commissure,! as in Pro- topterus; while in the Anura (Figs. 1387 and 138, A) they are fused together for a short distance anteriorly, where they are continuous with the olfactory lobes. The thalamencephalon and optic lobes are much broader in Anurans than in Urodeles. The cerebellum consists simply of a small transverse fold, and is especially rudi- mentary in Urodeles. The infundibulum and hypophysis are well developed, but a saccus vasculosus is no lounger so distinct as in Fishes, though traces. of it can still be recognised. The epiphysis does not extend beyond the skull in Urodeles, but in Anuran larve it reaches the integument, undergoing reduction later, when the bony skull-roof is formed ; indications of its extracranial portion can, however, sometimes be recognised even in the adult (the “ brow-spot” in e.g.. Rana temporaria): thus its intracranial portion does not represent the entire epiphysis. A parietal organ appears to be entirely wanting in all Amphibians with the exception of some few Anura in which traces of it have been described.” In the Gymnophiona the olfactory lobes and hemispheres are 1 The dorsal part of the anterior commissure has been said to represent a rudimentary corpus callosum (comp. note on p. 174, and Fig. 138, A). 2 A parietal foramen was, however, present in the Palaeozoic Stegocephala and other extinct Amphibians. THE BRAIN 167 relatively larger than in other Amphibians, and the hemispheres overlap the posterior parts of the brain to a larger extent. AI (1) HL Tropt I hp Fie. 137.—Brain or Rana esculenta. (A, dorsal; B, ventral; and C, lateral view.) ves cerebral hemispheres ; ZH, thalamencephalon ; WH, aid: brain ; HH, cere- bellant’ : SNA, medulla oblongata ; Med, spinal cord ; I-X, cranial nerves ; Ia, lateral root of olfactory nerve ; X IT (1), ventral root of ‘first spinal nerve (hypoglossal), and 1, its dorsal root ; L.ol, olfactory lobe ; +, space between the two hemispheres ; ; Tr.opt, optic tract; Jnf, infundibulum ; Hyp, hypophysis. Reptiles.— The brain of Reptiles reaches a considerably higher stage of development than that of the forms already described, and the individual parts overlie one another to a greater extent especially in the Agame and Ascalabote. 168 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY | The hemispheres are more highly developed, and the cortex is definitely differentiated and contains the characteristic pyramidal cells. In many cases also a distinct hippocampal lobe (Figs. 139, 140) >, Vy Yy Yj) f L/ o "Uy Uy yy, W/ Wr, , yj ] l : Fic. 138.—LoNGITUDINAL SECTION THROUGH THE Brain or A, Rana, AND B, Hatteria. (A after H. F. Osborn.) VH, MH, HH, NH, prosen-, mesen-, meten-, and myelencephalon ; H in (B), hemisphere, which possesses a furrow on its median face, where it is perforated by numerous vascular foramina (8): this furrow forms the boundary between the hemisphere and olfactory tract, the main root of which is seen at + ; Lol; olfactory lobe; J, JJ, IV, origins of the olfactory, optic, and pathetic nerves ; Hp, **, base of epiphysis, which is not shown ; Ch.opt and Ch, optic chiasma ; Jt, lamina terminalis (the reference line should point to the cut edge below Ba and*), Co.a,* anterior commissure ; Ca, Ba, corpus callosum ; F’.Mo, Mo, foramen of Monro, above which, in A, is seen the folded choroid plexus ; Cos, superior commissure ; Co.p, posterior commissure; V/ and V?", third and fourth ventricles ; 7h. opt and M, optic thalamas ; Lo (in B), aper- ture, and Fu, furrow in the wall of the third ventricle ; Aq, Aq.Syl, aqueduct of Sylvius; Jnf, infundibulum ; Hyp, hypophysis. is present (Hatteria, Chelonia, Crocodilia), and the commissural system between the hemispheres known as the forniz as well as a so-called “corpus callosum” (comp. p. 174) are present in rudiment. BRAIN 169 if ChT Inf Hyp IX XeX) Fic. 139.—Brarn or Hatteria punctata. (A, dorsal; B, ventral; and C, lateral view.) — VH, MH, HH, NH, as in Fig. 138; Med, spinal cord ; J-XJJ, cranial nerves ; Ip, process of the hemisphere representing a hippocampal lobe; N.opt, optic nerve ; Ch, optic chiasma; 7'r, optic tract; Jnf, infundibulum; Hyp, hypophysis ; G.p, pineal body, shown in C continuous with the parietal eye (Pa), and only indicated diagrammatically in A; R1, curved ridge at the base of the optic lobe ; A, small elevation in front of the cerebellum. 170 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY A . Bb os SY Fic. 140.—BraIn oF ALticator. (A, dorsal; B, ventral; and C, lateral view. ) VH, cerebral hemispheres, each of which gives rise postero-laterally to a hippo- campal lobe partially overlying the corresponding or tract, Tr.opt ; ZH, thalamencephalon; MH, optic lobes; HH, cerebellum; NAH, medulla oblongata ; I-X JI, cranial nerves ; 1, 2, first and second spinal nerves ; B.o/, olfactory bulb; 7'ro, olfactory tract ; G.p, pineal body ; Jnf, infundibulum ; Hyp, hypophysis ; Med, spinal cord. THE BRAIN 171 The olfactory lobes may be well marked or entirely invisible externally. In such forms as Anguis, Amphisbena and Typhlops they are closely applied to the hemispheres, while in others (eg., Hatteria, Lacerta, Crocodilus) each consists of a well-marked olfac- tory tract, passing anteriorly into an olfactory bulb from which the nerves of smeli arise. Olfactory ventricles are usually present. The thalamencephalon is always depressed, and is hardly, or not at all, visible from the dorsal side. A distinct hypophysis and iy)! Fic. 141.—LonerrupinaL SECTION THROUGH THE PARIETAL EYE anp Its Con- NECTIVE-TISSUE CAPSULE OF Hatteria punctata. (After Baldwin Spencer. ) cp, connective-tissue capsule ; 7, ‘‘lens;” cv, cavity of the eye, filled with fluid ; ri, retinal portion of the vesicle ; vs, blood-vessels ; ¢.n, cells in the nerve stalk (s.n.). infundibulum as well as an epiphysis are present, and in Lizards the parietal organ retains more or less distinctly, even in the adult, its primitive structure as a median eye. - This parietal eye (Fig. 141) is situated in the parietal foramen of the skull, and is in close connection with the epiphysis, though in the embryo the nerve which supplies it is seen to arise in- dependently from the brain, in front of the pineal outgrowth. The eye has the form of a vesicle, the dorsal wall of which may become thickened to form a transparent lens-like body, while the rest of 172 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY the wall consists of several layers and forms a pigmented retina, with which the more or less rudimentary nerve is continuous. ~The vesicle is surrounded externally by a connective-tissue capsule, and in many cases the integument and connective-tissue immediately overlying the vesicle is pigmentless and transparent, forming a kind of cornea. ‘Traces of a vitreous body have also been observed. Various degrees of reduction of the different parts as they occur e.g., in Hatteria (Fig. 141), are seen amongst Lizards. (See also p. 155). Traces of a parietal eye, with lens and pigment, have also been observed in the embryo of the Viper (Pelias berus). In the mid-brain the two well-marked optic lobes may show indications of a further subdivision into four; from them the optic tracts pass downwards and forwards to the chiasma. The cerebellum is relatively small, except in the Crocodilia (Fig. 140), in which it - consists of a thicker median, and two lateral portions, while in other Reptiles, and more particularly in Lizards, it is not much more highly developed than in Amphibians. The medulla ob- longata has a marked veniral flexure. Birds.—The basal ganglia (corpora striata) of the hemispheres reach a relatively larger size in Birds than in any other Vertebrates, while the differentiation of the cortex and commissures does not show any marked advance on that seen in Reptiles. The different parts of the brain overlie one another much more markedly than in any Reptile, and the hemispheres are much larger relatively, covering over the thalamencephalon and part of the mid-brain (Fig. 142). The olfactory lobes are short and conical. The distal, enlarged end of the pineal body extends as far as the dura mater, and the structure of the internal part of the organ resembles that of a tubular gland, penetrated by fibrous tissue and blood-vessels. There is no trace of a parietal organ. The cerebellum consists of a well-developed and folded median lobe, and of two lateral portions (flocculi), which vary much both in form and size. Posteriorly it completely covers the fourth ventricle. The two optic lobes are separated from one another and pressed downwards, so as to lie on the sides of the brain in the angle between the hemispheres, cerebellum, and medulla oblongata, and they are connected by a broad commissure. The ventral side of the hind- brain shows a marked flexure, bending upwards to the spinal cord. Mammals.—The brain in embryo Mammalia is very similar to that of the Sauropsida, but its later differentiation—more particularly that of the pallium—gives it a very special character. The cortex becomes much more highly differentiated, and in many Mammals is more or less highly convoluted (Figs. 144, 146), giving rise to gyri and sulci (p. 154). In others, again, the surface of the hemispheres remains smooth (Fig. 143), but a subdivision into lobes (frontal, parietal, temporal, &c.) can always be recog-. nised to a greater or less extent, and the hemispheres are relatively so large as to cover over the more posterior parts of the brain ; in some of the lower forms, the mid-brain can still be seen THE BRAIN 173 Fic. 142.—Bratn or Picron. (A, dorsal; B, ventral ; and C, lateral view.) VH, cerebral hemispheres; MH, optic lobes; HH, cerebellum ; NH, medulla oblongata; Med, spinal cord ; I-XJJ, cranial nerves ; 1, 2, first and second spinal nerves ; L.ol, olfactory lobes; T’r.opt, optic tract ; Jnf, infundibulum ; Hyp, hypophysis. from above (Fig. 143) while in the higher types (Primates) even part of the cerebellum is hidden (Figs. 145, 146). The commissures between the hemispheres (corpus callosum and fornix, Fig. 145) are also much more highly developed than in the Sauropsida. The corpus callosum or pallial commissure, though small in the lower Mammalia (e.g., Monotremes and 174 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Marsupials), is usually a large and important structure; its relative size is in inverse proportion to that of the anterior commissure. Jn addition to the anterior and posterior commis- sures, a middle commissure is definitely differentiated from the B J.b. | h.d. ay es, } : I iii| lv |V- |vili}] x xi} i ii p.v Vi. vii ix xii Fic. 143.—BraAin OF Raxpesir. (A, dorsal ; B, ventral ; and C, lateral view. ) f.b., cerebral hemispheres ; m.b., optic lobes; h.b., cerebellum ; c.b’., superior vermis, and c.b"., lateral lobe of cerebellum ; md., medulla oblongata ; ep., pineal body ; h.p., hypophysis ; pv., pons Varolii ; c7., crura cerebri; /,p., pallial fissure ; 6.0., olfactory bulb ; 7-a77, cerebral nerves. base of the brain asa distinct structure connecting the two optic thalami. | : ‘ In correspondence with the division of the hemispheres into lobes, there is a marked differentiation of the lateral ventricles, “1 Recent researches indicate that a true corpus callosum is present only in the Placentalia, and that the commissure which is usually supposed to represent it in lower types may be more correctly described as the hippocampal commissure. THE BRAIN 175 so that an anterior, a posterior, and an inferior cornu can be dis- tinguished in each; the inferior cornu extends into what corresponds to the hippocampal lobe of Reptiles (p. 168), and an eminence on its floor, known as the hippocampus major, is much more marked than in lower forms. The olfactory lobes, in which an olfactory A B Bol | Fic. 144.—Bratn oF Dog (PorntTER). (A, dorsal; B, ventral; and C, lateral view.) VH, cerebral hemispheres; MH, optic lobes; HH, cerebellum, Wu, superior vermis ; HH', lateral lobe of cerebellum ; VH, medulla oblongata ; Med, spinal cord ; Hyp, hypophysis; Po, pons Varolii: Cr.ce, crura cerebri ; fi.p, pallial fissure ; B.ol, olfactory bulb ; J-XJJ, cranial nerves. tract and bulb can be distinguished, usually extend forwards freely from the base of the prosencephalon and each may (e.g., Horse) contain a prolongation of the lateral ventricle ; but in some cases (e.g., numerous aquatic forms and Primates) they are completely covered by the frontal lobes. 176 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY The pineal body is displaced downwards by the hemispheres and lies against the anterior part of the mid-brain, not reaching to the roof of the skull. Its bifurcated peduncle connects it “in Sp BET zg ? : Lr | i i He 1 ig) ag A ae Fie. 145.—Human Brain. (Median longitudinal vertical section. ) (Mainly after Reichert. ) VH, cerebrum ; 70, optic thalamus (thalamencephalon), with the middle commis- sure (Cm); Z, pineal body; 7’, infundibulum; JH, pituitary body; MH, corpora bigemina, with the aqueduct of Sylvius (Aq), anterior to which is seen the posterior commissure (Cp); HH, cerebellum ; NH, medulla oblongata, with the pons Varolii (P); R, spinal cord; B, corpus callosum ; G, fornix, which extends antero-ventrally to the lamina terminalis (Col), in the upper part of which is seen the anterior commissure (Ca), and between the latter and the optic thalami (7’o) the foramen of Monro (7M); T'ch, tela choroidea ; I, olfactory nerve ; JJ, optic nerve. ote 3 Fic. 146.—Convo.uTions oF THE Human Brary. (After A. Ecker.) Lf, frontal lobe ; Lp, parietal lobe ; Lo, occipital lobe Be ie temporal lobe ; a, b, ¢, superior, middle, and inferior frontal gyri; X, 8, anterior and posterior central convolutions, separated from one avother by the fissure of Rolando (R) ; cm, the calloso-marginal sulcus on the dorsal surface ; P, P', superior and inferior parietal gyri separated from one another by the interparietal fissure (I); Po, parietal-occipital fissure ; FS, Sylvian fissure ; 1 to 3, superior, middle, and inferior temporal convolutions ; H, cerebellum ; NH, medulla oblongata ; FR, spinal cord. with the roof of the thalamencephalon and contains nervous substance; its distal end has the form of a rounded or oval sac, consisting of compact epithelial tissue and containing concre- tions. No indication of a parietal organ can be recognised. PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM | 177 Traces of the saccus vasculosus and lobi inferiores still occur, even in Man, in connection with the infundibulum. The mid-brain is of smaller relative size than in other Vertebrates. A transverse furrow across the solid optic lobes sub- divides them into an anterior larger and a posterior smaller pair of lobes (comp. p. 172). The division of the cerebellum into a median and two lateral portions, already indicated in Reptiles, but much more plainly marked in Birds, is carried to a still further extent in Mammals. The median portion gives rise to the so-called superior vermis while the lateral parts form the lateral lobes and floceuli (Figs. 148, 144). The two lateral lobes are connected by a large commissure, the pons Varolit (Figs. 143-145) : this extends round the medulla oblongata ventrally, and is more largely developed the higher we pass in the Mammalian series. Other bands of nerve-fibres connecting the cerebellum with other parts of the brain are spoken of as anterior, middle, and posterior peduncles of the cerebellum. The brain in Cretaceous Birds (e.g., Hesperornis) and in Tertiary Mammals (e.g., Dinoceras, Triceratops) was much less highly developed, and the hemispheres relatively much smaller, than in existing forms. II. PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. Two principal groups of peripheral nerves may be distinguished, viz., spinal and cerebral, that is, those which arise from the spinal cord and brain respectively : by their means a physiological connection is established between the periphery of the body and the central nervous system both in centripetal and centrifugal directions. The spinal nerves retain the more primitive and simple relations, and all show a similar arrangement along both dorsal and ventral regions of the spinal cord, so that each segment of the trunk possesses a dorsal and a ventral pair. The former consists of sensory, the latter of motor fibres (Fig. 14:7). Each dorsal or sensory nerve has a ganglion in connection | with it, while in the ventral nerves a ganglion is wanting, at any rate in the adult. The ventral nerves arise as direct outgrowths from the spinal cord, while the dorsal nerves first appear as outgrowths from their ganglia, coming into connection with the cord secondarily. The ganglia themselves are developed from a neural ridge of epiblast cells lying close to the junction of the medullary cord (p. 149) and outer epiblast. On the distal side of each ganglion, both nerve-roots almost always become bound up in a common sheath, though many facts seem to indicate that in the ancestors of existing Vertebrates the dorsal and ventral N 178 . COMPARATIVE ANATOMY o- ) pins nat Fia. 147.—DIAGRAM ILLUSTRATING THE ORIGIN, COURSE, AND TERMINATION OF THE MoroR AND SENSORY FIBRES OF THE SPINAL NERVES, AS WELL AS THE RELATIONS OF THE SENSORY COLLATERAL FIBRES TO THE POINTS OF ORIGIN OF THE VENTRAL Roots. (After M. V. Lenhossék.) The spinal cord is shown as if transparent. The fibres of the ventral roots arise from the cells of the motor ventral cornua of the gray matter (a) and end in fine branches on the striated muscle fibres (c). The spinal ganglion (d) is shown relatively much larger than in reality, and in it only a single unipolar nerve-cell is represented : the centripetal fibre of the latter is seen entering the dorsal root, and at e bifurcates in the spinal cord into ananterior (f)and a posterior (y) branch, each of which ends freely in the gray substance, rst giving off numerous collateral fibres (h). The centrifugal fibre of the cell in the spinal ganglion forms a peripheral sensory fibre extending to the skin, where part of it is shown ending in fine branches in the epidermis (7), another part forming a coil in connection with a tactile corpuscle (4). roots remained distinct, as, in fact, is still the case in Amphioxus and Petromyzon. The common zerve-trunk formed by the junction of the two _ SPINAL NERVES 179 roots divides up again into a dorsal, a ventral, and a visceral branch. The first of these goes to the muscles and skin of the back, the second supplies the lateral and ventral portions of the body-wall, while the intestinal branch comes into connection with the sympathetic (p. 188). 1. SPINAL NERVES. As a general rale, each corresponding pair of dorsal and ventral roots lies in the same transverse plane: an exception to this is seen, however, in Amphioxus,! Cyclostomes, Elasmobranchs, and Dipnoans, in which the mesoblastic somites of the right and left side are arranged alternately, and thus the points of exit of the nerve-roots also alternate right and left, or each ventral pair alternates with a dorsal pair. In Ganoids also, lateral displace- ments of the nerve-roots are met with. In Fishes the greatest variations are seen as regards the mode of exit of the nerves (which pass through the intercalary pieces of the vertebral column, through the arches, or between them) ; but from the Amphibia onwards the nerves always make their exit on each side between the arches, through the intervertebral foramina. In their primitive undifferentiated condition the spinal nerves have a strictly metameric arrangement, and are equally developed in all regions of the body. As already pointed out in the section on the spinal cord, this condition becomes modified by the development of the appendages, so that a number of spinal nerves unite together to form plexuses, which, according to their position, are spoken of as cervical, brachial, lumbar, and sacral (Fig. 121). The number of nerves composing these corresponds to the number of body- segments taking part in the formation of the appendages, and their relative size is usually directly proportional to the develop- ment of the latter. In contrast to Fishes, the great variation in the plexuses of which renders it impossible to reduce them to a common plan, we find from the Amphibia onwards a typical grouping of the branches of the brachial plexus, from which numerous nerves arise supplying the shoulder and fore-limb dorsally and ventrally (e.g., thoracic, subscapular, axillary, radial, musculo-cutaneous, and ulnar). The lumbo-sacral plexus shows in general, and more particularly in Mammals, much greater variations than does the brachial plexus. The nerves arising from it are also arranged in a dorsal and a ventral series, the larger ones being spoken of as the obtwrator, 1In Amphioxus both the dorsal and ventral nerves innervate muscles, and it appears that in many of the Craniata also the dorsal roots are not purely sensory. N 2 180 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY crural, sciatic, and pudendic. The sciatic divides up in the hind- limb into a tibial and a fibular nerve. 2. CEREBRAL NERVES. The following twelve pairs of cerebral nerves can be distin- guished, and of these the eleventh pair are plainly differentiated only in the Amniota, and the twelfth are represented by the first. spinal nerves in certain Fishes and in all Amphibians :— I. Olfactory. II. Optic. III. Oculomotor. ITV. Pathetic or trochlear. V. Trigeminal. ) VI. Abducent. VII. Facial. VIII. Auditory. IX. Glossopharyngeal. X. Vagus or pneumogastric, XI. Spinal accessory. XII. Hypoglossal. In their mode of early development the cerebral nerves resemble: the spinal nerves in many respects (p.177), and a gradual tran- sition between the two groups is indicated in the lower Vetebrata.. Certain of them, like the motor spinal nerves, arise as direct: ventral outgrowths from the embryonic brain (III, VI, XII, and probably IV’). Others, again (V and VII in part, VIII, IX, and X), arise dorsally, primarily in connection with their indi- vidual ganglia and becoming actually connected with the brain secondarily: these must therefore, so far as they consist of sensory,. centripetal elements, be looked upon as homodynamous with the: dorsal roots of the spinal nerves. But it must be borne in mind’ that all these nerves, with the exception of the olfactory, optic, and auditory, are of a mixed character, containing motor as well! as sensory fibres; and a further difference between them and the dorsal roots of the spinal nerves (comp. note on p. 179) is seen in the shifting of their origin to the ventral side of the brain during development. A study of development shows that portions of the epiblast lying peripherally to the brain take part in the formation of the ganglia of the trigeminal, facial, auditory, and vagus nerves, and that each definitive 1 Tn animals in which the extremities have disappeared, all traces of the corresponding plexuses have also usually vanished: Snakes, however, still retain remnants of them. 2 The fourth nerve is peculiar in appearing from the dorsal surface of the brain, but this is probably a secondary condition p. 184). CEREBRAL NERVES 181 ganglion consists of a primary ‘* spinal” ganglion and of a more peripheral lateral ganglion in connection with the nerve, from which latter an epi- branchial ganglion arises from the epiblast dorsally to the region of the gill- clefts, and takes part in the formation of the terminal branches of the nerve. The presence of an epibranchial ganglion on the trigeminal may indicate the former presence of a gill-cleft in this region. It must be remembered that the head is primitively composed of a series of metameres (p. 66), and it is therefore important to ascertain, as far as is possible in the present state of our knowledge, to which individual metameres the different cranial nerves belong. The olfactory and optic nerves present certain peculiarities which bring them under another category, and they will be treated of later in connection with the corresponding sensory organs. The following general summary gives a scheme of the prob- able primitive relations of the head-segments and cerebral nerves, founded mainly on the conditions existing in Elasme- branch embryos. : TABLE SHOWING THE SEGMENTAL ARRANGEMENT OF THE CEREBRAL NERVES, Ww ITH THEIR RELATION TO THE METAMERES OF THE HEAD. tare Ripe ai Ventral branch. Dorsal branch. Oculomotor (J7Z). | Ramus ophthalmicus pro- — fundus of the trigeminal | (V), together with the | ciliary ganglion. | lst Metamere (superior, in- ferior, and anterior rec- tus, and inferior oblique muscle).! 2nd Metamere (superior Trochlear (JV). | Trigeminal (with its gang- oblique).? lion, minus the ramus ophthalmicus _ profun- dus). 3rd = Metamere (posterior | Abducent (VJ). rectus).+ | Facial (VII), and audi- which are early aborted). | 6th and 7th Metameres(part | Appearstobe | Vagus (X), with its gang- of the most anterior wanting. | lia. region of the large trunk- | muscles). with its ganglion. : |? tory (VIIZ), with their 4th Metamere (muscles Wanting. | | ganglia. which are early aborted). | 5th Metamere (muscles | Wanting. | Glossopharyngeal (JX), 8th and 9th Metameres(an- | Ventralrootsof the) Vestigial dorsal roots of terior part of trunk- hypoglossal. the hypoglossal (XJJ), muscles). usually only present in | the embryo. Figures 148 and 149 illustrate the distribution of the cerebral nerves in adult aquatic and terrestrial Vertebrates respectively (comp. 1 It is possible, however, that these eye-muscles belong, not to the somites, as stated on pp. 133 and 143, but to the visceral muscles. 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The ganglia belonging to the cerebro-spinal system are shown in both figures, those belonging to the sympathetic in Fig. 149 only. Nerves of the Eye-muscles.—The oculomotor (III) trochlear or pathetic (IV) and abducent (VI) nerves (Figs. 148 and 149) supply the muscles which move the bulb of the eye as shown in the table on p. 181. The oculomotor arises from the base of the mid-brain, and comes into secondary connection with an oculomotor or ciliary ganglion which primarily belongs to the sympathetic system. The trochlear nerve, although actually arising in the interior of the ventral part of the mid-brain, appears externally on the dorsal side of the anterior margin of the hind-brain (valve of Vieussens p. 156). Primitively it contains sensory as well as motor fibres, and these in Fishes and Amphibians supply the connective- tissue of the eye and the endocranium.. The abducent nerve, which arises far back on the floor of the medulla oblongata, also probably contains mixed fibres in the Anamnia. In the Anura it becomes closely connected within the skull with the Gasserian ganglion of the trigeminal. Trigeminal Nerve.—This is one of the largest of the cerebral nerves. It arises from the ventro-lateral region of the anterior part of the medulla oblongata by a large lateral sensory and a small ventral motor root, has a large intra- or extra-cranial Gasserian ganglion at the origin of the former and then, in Fishes (Fig. 148), divides into two main branches, an ophthalmic (including a swperjicial and a deep or profundus portion), and a max- illo-mandibular : in most terrestrial forms (Fig. 149) the maxillary and mandibular nerves arise separately. From the presence of these three characteristic branches, often known as the /irst, second, and third divisions of the trigeminal, its name is derived. It passes out from the skull sometimes through a single aperture, and some- times by two or even three distinct ones. The superficial branch of the first division is usually distinct in Fishes and Dipnoans and probably also in Urodeles, and passes dorsally over the eye-ball, the deep branch passing below the supe- rior and anterior recti and superior oblique muscles. In other Fishes and in higher forms the two branches appear to be united. It supplies the integument of the forehead and snout as well as the eye-ball, eye-lids and conjunctiva, branches apparently going to the lachrymal glands when present: it is entirely sensory. A con- section of the profundus with the ciliary ganglion arises second- arily. The second division of the trigeminal, which is also a sensory nerve and with which a sphenopalatine ganglion derived from the sympathetic is connected, extends first along the floor of the CEREBRAL NERVES 185 orbit, supplying the lachrymal and Harderian glands, when present, as well as the roof of the mouth; it then passes to the upper jaw, supplying the teeth; and finally, as the infraorbital branch, per- forates the skull to reach the integument in the region of the upper jaw, snout, and upper lip. The third division of the trigeminal is of a mixed nature; it supplies on the one hand the masticatory muscles and several muscles on the floor of the mouth, and also gives rise, from Amphibians onwards, to the great sensory nerve of the tongue (lingual or gustatory nerve); while another branch, passing through the inferior dental canal, supplies the teeth of the lower jaw, and then gives off one or more branches to the integument of the latter and of the lower lip. Two ganglia, the submawillary and the otic (Fig. 149), derived trom the sympathetic, are connected with its mandibular division (sensory portion). Facial nerve.—This, which is also a mixed nerve, originally possesses two distinct ganglia in connection with its sensory and mixed portion (Fig. 148): these can be recognised up to Urodeles, but in the course of development one of them gradually comes into connection with the ganglion of the trigeminal, and in Anura is indistinguishable from it. The other—known as the geniculate ganglion—is retained in all Vertebrates, in connection with its - mixed root (Fig. 149). The facial nerve consists primarily (in aquatic Vertebrates) of the following main branches (Fig. 148) :— T, A system of sensory branches for the supply of the integu- mentary sense-organs of the head (p. 190),! as follows :—(a) a super- ficial ophthalmic, running parallel to and usually accompanying the corresponding branch of the trigeminal; (0) a buccal, which gives off an otic branch; and (¢) an eaternal mandibular (=part of the hyomandibular, see below). II. A sensory (a) palatine, anastomosing with the maxillary branch of the trigeminal, and (0) internal mandibular or chérda tympani. III. A main trunk, largely motor (=hyomandibular less the elements which give rise to the sensory external mandibular), which passes behind the spiracle, all the other branches passing in front of it. In adult terrestrial Vertebrates (Caducibranchiate Urodeles, Anura, and Amniota) the integumentary sense-organs become re- duced, and the corresponding branches of the facial nerve undergo corresponding reduction (Fig. 149); the parts of this nerve which per- sist are the pharyngeal section (palatine and chorda tympani) and ‘These branches, together with the lateral line branches of the glosso- pharyngeal and vagus (p. 187) appear to form an independent and distinct system of lateral line nerves, having a common internal origin in the brain, for the innervation of the special sensory organs of the integument in Fishes, Dipnoans and Amphibians. The auditory nerve arises from the same centre. 186 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY the main trunk (hyomandibular Jess its lateral line elements). The latter is connected with the glossopharyngeal by the anastomosis of Jacobson, and is distributed, as its name implies, to the region of the first and second visceral arches: thus in Fishes it goes to the parts around the spiracle and to the muscles of the oper- | culum and branchiostegal membrane. A small remnant of this branch in the higher Vertebrates supplies the stylohyoid muscle and the posterior belly of the digastric and the stapedius. In Mammals the facial is mainly a motor nerve. It is chiefly important in supplying the facial muscles, as well as the platysma myoides, which has the closest relation to them (p. 186). The more highly the facial muscles are differentiated (¢.g. Primates, especially Homo), the more complicated are the networks formed by the facial nerve. Auditory Nerve.—This large nerve arises in close connection with the facial, and corresponds to a sensory portion of the latter nerve ; | it possesses a ganglion (Figs. 148 and 149). Soon after its origin from the brain it divides into a cochlear and a vestibular branch. The former passes to the lagena or cochlea, while the latter supplies the rest of the auditory labyrinth. Vagus group.—This group includes the glossopharyngeal, vagus, and spinal accessory, which stand in the closest relation to one another, and are more nearly comparable to the spinal nerves than are the cerebral nerves already described. It consists of both sensory and motor fibres, the former being connected with ganglia (the jugular and petrosal). The distribution of these nerves differs trom that of the other cerebral nerves in not being limited to the head. Thus the vagus supplies not only the pharynx, tongue, and respiratory organs, but also sends branches to the heart, larynx, and a considerable portion of the digestive tract, as well as to integumentary sense-organs of the trunk in Fishes. The spinal accessory nerve appears for the first time in the Amniota, and will be dealt with after the vagus and glossopharyn- geal have been described (p. 187). The origin of both glossopharyngeal and vagus by numerous roots in Fishes (Fig. 148) indicates that these nerves correspond to a number of spinal nerves, and this comparison is further justified by the fact that they give off branches in the region of the pharynx and visceral arches, in which a metameric arrangement can be recognised. . Tn many Fishes and in Dipnoans two or three nerves make their exit from the skull ventrally to the root of the vagus (Fig. 148): these ‘‘spino-occipital” — 1 On the supposition that the auditory organ corresponds to a modified integumentary sense-organ, the auditory nerve would belong to the lateral line system of nerves (see note on p. 185). ‘CEREBRAL NERVES 187 or intracranial spinal nerves, which have been described as “ ventral roots” of the vagus (see p. 143), have nothing to do with this nerve, and perhaps correspond to a part of the hypoglossal of higher Vertebrates. In Fishes and perennibranchiate Amphibians the glosso- pharyngeal leaves the skull through a special foramen, and not along with the vagus, a lateral line branch of which arises separately from and anteriorly to the rest of nerve, dorsally to the glosso- pharyngeal and near the origin of the sensory part of the facial (Fig. 148). This lateral nerve, which may divide into two or even three branches, extends along the side of the body to the tail, either directly beneath the skin, or close to the vertebral column (e.g. Elasmobranchii, Dipnoi), and supplies integumentary sense organs. In Protopterus the vagus also gives off superficial branches which extend along the dorsal, lateral and ventral regions of the body close to the skin. In certain Teleosts (Anacanthini) dorsal and ventral superficial nerves are also present, which have sometimes been described as cutaneous branches of the trigeminal. These require further investigation : they appear to belong mainly to the facial, and from their origin and distribution correspond pre- cisely to the ‘‘ ramus dorsalis recurrens” of Siluroids. The vagus invariably takes part in their formation, and sometimes also the glossopharyngeal and even the first spinal nerves. In tracing the development of the lateral nerves, the nervous elements are seen to be so closely united with the thickened epidermis in the region of the lateral line that it is impossible to say whether the nerve arises in situ or not; and this is also the case as regards all nerves (VII., [X., X.) supply- ing integumentary sense organs in the Anamnia. In branchiate Vertebrates, the glossopharyngeal gives off a pharyngeal branch and forks over the first branchial clett, while the vagus gives rise to branchial branches which are similarly related to the following clefts (Fig. 148): these branchial nerves supply the muscles and mucous membrane of the branchial apparatus. In Chimera each of the three branchial nerves arises independently from the brain. It will be remembered that the facial nerve has similar relations to the spiracular cleft (p. 185). Both glossopharyn- geal and vagus contain mixed fibres, and become connected in various ways with the trigeminal and facial. In correspondence with the reduction of the gills in higher forms, the branchial branches of the vagus can no longer be recognised, and the glossopharyngeal passes into the tongue as the nerve of taste, giving off also a pharyngeal branch (Fig. 149). This condition is first indicated in Dipnoi and Amphibia. The spinal accessory nerve first appears distinctly in Reptiles. It arises some distance back along the cervical portion of the spinal cord, in the region from which the fourth to fifth cervical nerves come off; from this point it passes forwards as a collector, taking up fibres from the cervical nerves as it goes. It extends along the side of the medulla oblongata into the cranial cavity, and * The glossopharyngeal also possesses a lateral line branch in many Fishes. 188 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY leaves the skull through the same foramen as the vagus, to which it gives off motor elements. It supplies certain of the muscles related to the pectoral arch, e.g. the sternocieidomastoid and the trapezius. Hypoglossal.—The hypoglossal corresponds to one or several of the anterior spinal nerves, and its transformation into a cerebral nerve can be traced in passing through the Vertebrate series. In some Fishes and all Amphibia it does not pass through the cranial wall and isa true spinal nerve ; and in most Fishes and in the Dipnoi, its inclusion within the skull can be seen to be due to a gradualassimilation of the anterior part of the vertebral column with the skull (comp. p. 45). In addition to its numerous veutral-roots one or more dorsal, ganglionated roots have been observed in the _ embryos of various Vertebrates (Figs. 148 and 149). Two dorsal roots, each with a ganglion, persist in Protopterus, and the same is apparently true as regards Polypterus and certain Elasmobranchs : even amongst Mammals, these roots can exceptionally be recog- nised subsequently to the embryonic period." In Fishes (Fig. 148) the hypoglossal, like the next following spinal nerves, sends branches to the muscles of the body, the floor of the mouth, and skin of the back, as well as being connected with the brachial plexus. In higher Vertebrates (Fig. 149) it supplies the intrinsic and extrinsic muscles of the tongue. These lingual branches are most marked in Mammals, in which the tongue reaches its highest development. Elements of the cervical spinal nerves also run along with the hypoglossal, and give rise to the so-called ramus descendens with which further cervical nerves are associated; and from the “ansa hypoglossi ” thus formed, branches pass to the sterno-hyoid, sternothyroid, omohyoid, and thyrohyoid muscles. Sympathetic. The sympathetic system arises in close connection with the spinal system, with which it remains throughout life in close connection by means of rami communicantes. It is distributed mainly to the intestinal tract (in the widest sense), the vascular system, and the glandular organs of the body. The sympathetic ganglia, like those of the spinal nerves, show originally a segmental arrangement. They usually become united together later by longitudinal commissures and thus give rise to a chain-like paired sympathetic cord lying on either side of the vertebral column, From its ganglia nerves pass off to the above-mentioned ‘The dorsal root of the first spinal nerve may be reduced or wanting in Mammals —even in Man, so that here the modification of the primary character of the nerves is not limited to those within the skull. SENSORY ORGANS 189 systems of organs, forming numerous plexuses. Peripheral ganglia are also present in the viscera, The sympathetic extends not only along the vertebral column, but passes anteriorly into the skull, where it comes into relations with a series of the cerebral nerves (comp. pp. 184, 185 and Fig. 149) similar to those which it forms further back with the spinal nerves. The original segmental character frequently disappears later on and this is especially the case in those regions where marked modifications of the earlier metameric arrangement of the body have taken place—viz., in the neck and certain regions of the trunk, especially towards the tail: thus there are never more than three cervical ganglia in Mammals. A sympathetic is not known to exist in Amphioxus, and in Petromyzon it appears to be rudimentary. In Fishes proper, it is more highly differentiated, especially in the head region, while in Dipnoans it has not been observed. In Amphibians the sympathetic is well developed, especially in the higher forms (Fig. 121). Inthe Myctodera it extends anteriorly to the vagus ganglion and posteriorly through the trunk and hemal canal almost to the apex of the tail, as is the case also in Teleostei. In the Sauropsida the cervical portion of the sympathetic is usually double, one part running within the vertebrarterial canal alongside the vertebral artery. In all other Vertebrates the whole cord lies along the ventral and lateral region of the vertebral column : it is generally situated close to the latter, and overlies the vertebral ends of the ribs. Ill. SENSORY ORGANS, The specific elements of the sensory organs originate, like the nervous system in general, from the epiblast ; the peripheral ter- minations of the sensory nerves are thus always to be found in relation with cells of ectodermic origin, which become secondarily connected by means of nerve-fibres with the central nervous system. The sensory apparatus was primarily situated on a level with the epidermis and served to receive sensory impressions of but slightly specialised kinds; but in the course of phylogeny parts of it passed inwards beneath the epidermis, and certain of these became differentiated into organs of a higher physiological order, viz., those connected with smell, sight, hearing, and taste. These are situated in the head, and except the last mentioned, become enclosed in definite sense-capsules (p. 68); they must be dis- tinguished from the simpler integumentary sense-organs, which are concerned with the senses of touch, temperature, &ce. In many, and more especially in the higher sensory organs, 190 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY supporting or isolating cells can be recognised in addition to the sensory cells proper ; both kinds, however, being ectodermic. The mesoderm may also take part in the formation of the sensory organs, giving rise’to protective coverings and canals as well as to contractile and nutritive elements (muscles, blood- and lymph- channels). In the sensory organs of the integument of Fishes as weil as in all the higher sensory organs the medium surr ounding the end-organ is always moist. In both cases, we meet with rod-, club-, or peur- shaped sensory cells, but in the former the nerves coming from them do not pass through nerve-cells, as they do in the organs of higher sense. This indicates a lower stage of development, there being no differentiation into sensory cell and nerve cell. In those animals which in the course of development give-up an aquatic life and come on land (Amphibia) the external layers of the epidermis dry up, and the integumentary sense-organs pass further inwards from the surface, undergoing at the same time changes of form. Thus from Reptiles onwards the rod-shaped end-cell no longer occurs, and two kinds of nerve-endings are seen in the skin —terminal cells, and fine intercellular nerve-networks known as free nerve-endings. SENSE-ORGANS OF THE INTEGUMENT. a. Nerve-eminences. In Amphioxus certain rod-shaped or pear-shaped cells can be recognised in the epidermis, especially in the anterior part of the animal : each of these is provided distally with a hair-like process and proximally is in contact. with a nerve. The cells are distributed irregularly, but in the neighbourhood of the mouth and cirri they tend to form groups. It is doubtful whether these structures in Amphioxus are directly comparable to. the integumentary sense-organs of Fishes and Amphibians, but it is important to note that each of the latter always arises in the first instance from a single cell which forms a group by division. These organs always consist of central cells, arranged in the form of a rounded and depressed pyramid, and of a peripheral mass grouped around the former like a mantle. The central cells are surrounded by a network of nerve-fibres ; each of them bears at its free end a stiff cuticular hair, and they are to be looked upon as the sensory cells proper. The others function only as a supporting and slime-secreting mass (Figs 150 and 151). In Dipnoi, aquatic Amphibia and all amphibian larvee these organs retain throughout life their peripheral free position, on SENSE-ORGANS OF THE INTEGUMENT 191 a level with the epidermis,! but in Fishes they may in post-em- bryonic time become enclosed in depressions or complete canals,” which are formed either by the epider- mis only, or, as is more usually the case, by the scales and bones of the head, and which open externally. The organs are thus protected. These sensory organs are situated characteristically along certain tracts, the position of which is very constant: in the head, swpra-orbital, infra-orbital, and hyomandibular tracts can be recog- : : Fic. 150.—TRANSVERSE SEc- nised, and a lateral line (or several— ION OF A FREELY ba Proteus and all Amphibian larve) ex- — sectinc Sramenvat SENsE- tends along the sides of the body to the O84. caudal fin (Figs. 152 and 153). They The cuticular tube and the surrounding epidermic cells are thus often spoken of as segmental 7. nog naueiented “OF sensory organs or organs of the lateral central (sensory) cells; MZ, line.2 The portions-lying in the region 2’, peripheral cells. of the head are innervated by the lateral | line branches of the facial, glossopharyngeal, and vagus (see note on p. 185). | | Freely projecting nerve-eminences are not present in Rays and Ganoids, and are only of minor importance in Sharks. In all these Fishes the integumentary sense-organs are more or less deeply situated, being enclosed in complete or incomplete canals arising as proliferations of the epidermis extending into the dermis, and becoming greatly branched. The so-called Savi’s vesicles of Torpedo, the “nerve sacs” of Ganoids, and the ampulle of Elasmobranchs, correspond to modified nerve-eminences. They are all limited in their distribution to the head and anterior portion of the trunk, being most numerous on the snout: they arise from thickenings of the epidermis which later become invaginated and in which a sensory epithelium is differ- entiated. In Ganoids these organs retain a simple sac-like form, and in Torpedo they become completely separated off from the epidermis, while in other Elasmobranchs they are tubular, each tube giving rise to one or more swellings or ampulle, separated 1 At the time when an Amphibian undergoes metamorphosis and gives up its aquatic habits, these sensory organs sink downwards into the deeper layer of the skin, and, as the epidermis grows together over them, they become shut off from the exterior and reduced, and may finally disappear. (Anura and certain Caduci- branchiata.) In other Urodeles they may, in some cases, be retained throughout life, and are said to come to the surface when the animal returns to tne water during the breeding season; but, more usually, new organs then become developed. 2 This is also the case on the head in Dipnoans. 3 In the Dipnoi they are not limited to the lateral line, and in Marsipobranchii they have no regular arrangement and are not numerous, although a lateral branch of the vagus is present. 192 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Fic. 151.—NERVE ELEVATION oF A URODELE. (Semidiagrammatic. ) a, a, cells of the epidermis, through which the neuro-epithelium, b, b, can be seen ; c, the terminal hairs of the latter (the peripheral cells are not repre- sented) ; R, hyaline tube, formed as a secretion ; NV, the nerve-fibres passing to and surrounding the sensory cells, Fic. 152.—Sensory Canats or Chimera monstrosa. (After F. J. Cole.) The innervation is indicated by the different kinds of shading. (1.) Supra-orbital canal (innervated by superficial ophthalmic of facial—cross- hatched—the black segment is the portion innervated by the profundus) = cranial (C) + rostral (R) + sub-rostral (SR). (2.) Infra-orbital canal (buccal + otic of facial—dotted) = orbital (Ov) + sub- orbital (SO) + portion of angular (A) + nasal (NV.) (3.) Hyomandibular or operculo-mandibular canal (external mandibular of facial —black)= remainder of angular (A) + oral (O) + jugular (J/.) (4.) Lateral canal (lateral line branch of vagus—-oblique shading) = lateral (Z) + occipital (Oc) + aural (Aw) + post-aural (PAvw.) SENSE-ORGANS OF THE INTEGUMENT | 193 off from the rest of the tube by radial folds of connective tissue, and containing the nerve-endings. The tubes are filled with a gelatinous substance. The function of the nerve eminences is doubtful, but it appears that they are concerned with the perception of mechanical stimuli Fic. 153.—DistrrRiBurioN OF THE LATERAL SENSE-ORGANS IN A SALAMANDER LARVA. from the surrounding water, and thus are important as regards the appreciation of the direction of these stimuli. The horny wart-like structures arising periodically during the breeding season in Cyprinoids and known as “‘ pearl organs,” are due to a modification of the reduced nerve-eminences. Similar structures occur in Anura. b. End-buds. The nerve eminences pass through a stage in development in which they clearly resemble end-buds, and the latter may be looked upon as the phyletically older organs, which do not become so highly differentiated as the former. No sharp line of demarca- tion can, however, be drawn between the two, as all kinds of inter- mediate forms are met with: they are here described separately merely for the sake of clearness. In contrast to the nerve-eminences, which tend to sink below the surface, the end-buds usually form a dome-like elevation pro- jecting above the general level of the epidermis. A central sensory epithelium, provided with sensory hairs, and peripheral supporting cells can be recognised, but the former are as long as the latter. In Lampreys and most Elasmobranchs they remain at a primi- tive stage of development, but become of great importance in Ganoids and Teleosts, in which they are scattered irregularly over the whole body and are particularly numerous in the fins, lip- folds, barbules, and mouth. From the Dipnoi onwards they become limited to the oral and nasal cavities. In Dipnoi and Amphibia they occur on the papille of the oral and pharyngeal mucous membrane and tongue. In Reptiles their distribution is somewhat more limited, and this is still further the case in Mammals, in which, however, they are still found on the soft palate, on the walls of the pharynx, and.even extend into the larynx; but here they are most numerous on the tongue, where they occur, situated more deeply, on the circumvallate and fungiform papille as well as on the papilla foliata, and function as organs of taste. O 194 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Fie. 1544.—A TactTie Spot FROM THE SKIN oF THE FrRoc. Semi- diagrammatic. (Modi- — Fie. 154c.—A Tactine CorpuscLe{(ENnp-Buxp)) fied from Merkel. ) FROM THE MARGIN oF THE! CONJUNCTIVA OF Man. (After Dogiel.) N, nerve, which loses its medullary sheath at NV? ; n, medullated nerve fibre, the axis-fibre of’ a, a, neuro-epithelium ; which passes into a closely coiled terminal. b, epidermis. skein ; 6, nucleated fibrous investment. SA EN wt \, a aii lx all) tial > i 1 = Fig. 1548.—-DerMAL PAPILLA FROM THE HuMAN FINGER Fic. 154D.—TRANSVERSE SECTION ENCLOSING A TACTILE Cor- THROUGH A TACTILE CoRPUSCLE: puscLE. (After Lawdowski.) FROM THE BEAK OF A DUCK.. (After Carriére. ) a, fibrous and cellular invest- ment; b, tactile corpuscle, n, nerve, entering the capsule K,. with its cells; , nerve-fibre ; its sheath (S) becoming con- n', the further course of the — tinuous with the latter. The nerve-fibre, showing its nerve passes between the two curves and bends ; »”, termi- covering-cells, DZ, DZ, widen- nal twigs of the nerve-fibres ing out to form a tactile plate: with club-shaped endings. at ni, CLUB-SSHAPED CORPUSCLES | 195 c. Tactile-cells and corpuscles. (Terminal ganglion cells.) In these structures there is no longer any direct connection with the surface of the epidermis, and supporting cells are want- ing. ”« Tactile spots,” consisting of groups of touch cells, are met with for the first time in tailless Amphibians, in which they are situated mainly on small elevations, and are distributed over the skin of the whole body (Fig. 1544). In Reptiles they are found chiefly in the region of the head, on the lips and sides of the face, and on the snout, but in some cases (as in Blindworms and Geckos), they extend over the whole body close to the scales. In Snakes and Birds the tactile cells are confined to the mouth-cavity (tongue) and to the beak (cere), and lie much more closely together, forming definite masses, or tactile corpuscles (Fig. 154D). Each of these is surrounded by a nucleated connective-tissue investment, from which septa extend into the interior, partially separating the individual tactile cells from one another. In Mammals the tactile cells are either isolated—as, for instance, on the hairless portions of the body, or they give rise to oval corpuscles, each consisting of a many- layered and nucleated investment, into which a nerve passes, be- comes twisted up, and comes into relation with one or more ter- minal cells (Fig. 154 b,c). These are most numerous and highly developed on the volar and plantar surfaces of the hand and foot respectively, and on the conjunctiva and snout. d, Club-shaped corpuscles. (Pacinian corpuscles.) From the Reptilia (Lizards, Snakes) onwards, club-shaped corpuscles are present in addition to the above-described tactile- organs. In these Reptiles they occur chiefly in the region of the lips and teeth ; they have an elongated, oval form, and their structure is simple. In the interior of each corpuscle is seen the continuation of the axis-fibre of the nerve which becomes swollen distally, and externally to this is a double column of cells which enclose the club-shaped axis (Fig. 155). It is probable that a fine branch is given off from the axis-fibre to each cell. The column of cells is enclosed externally by an investment consisting of numerous nucleated lamellze in which longitudinal and circular layers can be distinguished. Organs of this kind are universally present, deeply situated, 0 2 19 6 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY in the skin of Birds and Mammals, and in the former they are particularly abundant on the beak and at the. bases of the con- ets tour-feathers of the wings and tail, and are also found on the tongue. They occur, moreover, in various other regions, both in Birds and Mammals (eg. the various organs of the abdominal cavity, the con- junctiva, the fasciz, tendons, liga- ments, vas deferens, periosteum, peri- eardium, pleura, corpus cavernosum and spongiosum, the wing-membrane of Bats, &c.). The tactile cells and tactile and club-shaped corpuscles are all con- cerned with the sense of touch. It is impossible to say definitely what nerve-endings have to do with the perception, of temperature ; 1t 1s not improbable that the touch cells, as Fic. 155.—A Pacrytay Cor- well as the nerve-fibres often pro- PUSCLE. vided with varicose swellings which A, axis fibre; A}, tuftedorknob- end freely in the epidermis, are con- likeend of the same; NS,nuc- cerned in this process. Such /ree wie Laie ps pes oes nerve-endings occur in the skin of - tudinal series of lamelle, 2;Q, all Vertebrates, and consist of an internal, circular layer of the intercellular network, no direct con- external part of the club; JK; nection between nerve and epithelial internal partof the club formed h of the cell-pillars. cell having been observed. OLFACTORY ORGAN, ° The olfactory lobe as already mentioned (p. 153) represents a pro- longation of the secondary fore-brain, the ventricle of which is tem- porarily or permanently continued intoit. In some cases it becomes differentiated into olfactory bulb, tract, and tubercle (pp. 159-175). The olfactory nerves proper are connected with the bulb, and are usually arranged in a single bundle on either side, with more or less distinct indications of a subdivision into two bundles: they ap- parently arise in continuity with the epithelium of the nasal involution (comp. pp. 177, 187) and then grow centripetally, uniting with the olfactory lobe or bulb secondarily. In all Mammals but Ornithorhynchus, as well as in Menopoma, Apteryx, and the extinct Dinornis, the olfactory nerves pass into this nasal cavity separately, through a cribriform plate of the ethmoid (p. 99). OLFACTORY ORGAN 197 The primary origin of the olfactory organs is by no means understood : possibly it may have arisen by a modification of primitive integumentary sense-organs. It is doubtful whether the organ can be said to have a true olfactory function in Fishes and perennibranchiate Amphibians. In its simplest form, the olfactory organ consists of a ventral, paired, pit-like depression of the integument of the snout opening on to the surface by an external nostril. It is lined by an epithelium which is connected with the brain by the olfactory nerves. The olfactory mucots membrane contains sensory cells, or olfactory cells proper—usually provided with sensory hairs, separated by isolating or supporting cells, both kinds having a smilar origin (Fig. 156). These olfactory cells are said to constitute the only true newro-epitheliwm in Vertebrates, as the nerve arises in connection with the cell itself, with which it remains continuous, as in many Invertebrates (primary sensory cell, Retzius). The cell is therefore not merely surrounded by a nerve-network as in other secondary nerve-cells, and the olfactory organ thus probably represents a very ancient structure phylogenetically. It is possible, however, that the central cells of the in- tegumentary sense-organs of Anamnia (e.g. end- buds) may be directly continuous with their nerves, although surrounded by a nerve-network. From the Amphibia onwards glandular : : Fic. 156. — EPITHELIUM elements are present, the secretion of which oe patie’ OnOrey serves to keep the nasal cavity moist. Mucous) MEMBRANE. The olfactory organs of all the true A; of Detromyzon Pan . 43 ; : eri; B, of Salamandra Fishes exhibit the above-described simple aed sac-like form, but from the Dipnoi onwards x th to communicate with the cavity ”, olfactory cells; 2; SREY SONA : wy interstitial epithelial of the mouth as well as with the exterior. cells. : In consequence of this, anterior or external, and posterior or internal nostrils (choance) can be distinguished, and as a free passage is thus formed through which air can pass, the olfactory organ takes on an important relation to the respira- tory apparatus. In Amphioxus, the ciliated pit situated above the anterior end of the central nervous system -probably represents an unpaired olfactory organ. Traces of a structure possibly homologous with this are said to occur in the. embryos of the Lamprey and Sturgeon. Cyclostomes.—In these forms (Fig. 54) the olfactory organ consists of a sac, containing numerous radial folds of the mucous membrane, and wnpaired externally. It lies close in front of the cranial cavity, and opens on the dorsal surface of the anterior part of the head by a longer or shorter chimney-like tube. In 198 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Myxine this tube islong, and is supported by rings of cartilage. In the larval lamprey the organ is at first ventral and unpaired (Fig. 125), but subsequently becomes sunk in a common pit with the pituitary invagination and takes on a dorsal position: it is almost completely divided into two lateral halves internally by the forma- tion of a fold of the mucous membrane. The pituitary sac thus extends backwards from the ventral side of the organ above the mucous membrane of the mouth: in Petromyzon it ends blindly, but in Myxine it opens into the oral cavity, perforating the skull floor from above instead of from below as in other Vertebrates, Fishes.—The position of the olfactory organ in Elasmobranchs (Fig. 157, A) differs from that seen in Cyclostomes in lying on the Fig. 157.—A, VENTRAL VIEW. OF THE HAD or A Doarisn (Scyllium canicula). N, external nostril ; 17, mouth; HSO, integumentary sense-organs. B, LATERAL View oF THE HEAD oF A PIKE (sox lucius). a and b, the anterior and posterior openings of the external nostrils; +, fold of skin separating a and b; Ag, eye. under instead of the upper surface of the snout, and thus retains the more primitive position. From these Fishes onwards the organ is always paired, each sac being more or less completely enclosed by a cartilaginous or bony investment forming an outwork of the skull. ) From the Ganoids onwards it always has a similar position with regard to the skull, being situated between the eye and the end of the snout, either laterally or more or less dorsally: originally, however, it is ventral. In the course of development each external nostril of Ganoids and Teleosts becomes completely divided into / OLFACTORY ORGAN : 199 ‘two portions, an anterior and a posterior (Figs. 157, B, and 158), by a fold of skin. The nostril often lies at the summit of a longer or -shorter tube, lined with ciliated cells, and the distance between the anterior and the posterior aperture varies greatly, according to the width of the fold of skin which separates them. _ The mucous membrane of the nasal organ of Fishes is always vaised up into a more or less complicated system of folds, which may have a transverse, radial, rosette-like, or longitudinal arrange- HSO Fig. 158.—LATERAL VIEW OF THE HEAD oF Murena helena. VR and HR, anterior and posterior tubes of the external nostrils ; A, eye ; HSO, integumentary sense-organs. ‘ment, and which are supplied by the branches of the olfactory nerve. The olfactory organ of Polypterus is more highly developed and compli- cated than that of any other Fish. In certain representatives of the Plecto- gnathi and Gymnodontes amongst the Teleostei, on the other hand, the organ shows various stages of degeneration. Dipnoi.—A nasal skeleton well differentiated from the skull proper is met with for the first time in Dipnoans. In Protopterus it consists of a cartilaginous trellis-work enclosing each olfactory sac and united with its fellow in the median line by a solid septum: the floor is formed mainly by the pterygopalatine and by con- nective tissue. The mucous membrane is raised into numerous transverse folds connected with a longitudinal fold, and the olfac- tory organ in general most nearly resembles that of Elasmobranchs, 200 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY except that, as already mentioned, posterior (enternal) as well as anterior (external) nostrils are present. The latter open beneath the upper lip, and so cannot be seen when the mouth is closed ; the former open into the oral cavity rather further back. The peculiar position of the anterior nares has a physiological significance, at any rate in Protopterus, in connection with its habits (see p. 17) ; during its summer sleep the animal breathes through a tube, passing between the lips, formed from the.capsule or cocoon which encloses it. The necessary moisture for the olfactory mucous membrane during this time is provided by the numerous goblet cells which line the walls of both nostrils. Amphibia.—The olfactory organ of the Peretinibranchiata re- sembles in many respects that of the Dipnoi: it is always enclosed | within a complete or perforated cartilaginous capsule situated laterally to the snout close be- neath the skin, and is not pro- tected by the bones of the skull (Fig. 159). Its floor is largely fibrous, and the mucous mem- brane is raised into radial folds like those of Cyclostomes and Polypterus. In all the other Amphibia it becomes included within the cranial skeleton, and lies directly in the longitudinal! axis of the skull in front of the : cranial cavity. as 159. OMNACtORy ORGAN. | OF The structure of the olfac- Tecturus maculatus. (From the ; Acreal aides tory organ now becomes modified NV, olfactory sac; O/, olfactory nerve ; inet agi ondence withthe change Pmz, premaxilla; F, frontal; P, 12 the mode of respiration; the process of the parietal; PP, palato- nasal chamber becomes. differ- pterygoid ; AV’, antorbital process. entiated into an olfactory and a respiratory portion, and an ex- tension of the olfactory surface takes place by the formation of one or more prominences on the floor and_ side-walls of the nasal cavity. These prominences, which may be compared to the turbinals of higher forms, are present in certain Mycto- dera (Fig. 160), and attain a very considerable development in Anura and Gymnophiona, especially in the latter, in which the nasal chamber is converted into a complicated system of spaces and cavities. A main chamber and a more laterally situated accessory cavity can in all cases be distinguished, even in the Derotremata and Myctodera; the accessory cavity lies in the maxillary bone (Fig. 160 and 165 A—E). In certain Gymnophiona the accessory chamber becomes entirely shut off from the main cavity and receives a special branch of the olfactory nerve, so that in these cases two separate nasal cavities can be distinguished. ' OLFACTORY ORGAN 201 Glands, situated under the olfactory mucous membrane, are now also met with; these are either diffused, or united to form definite masses. They either open directly into the nasal cavity, their secretion serving for the necessary moistening of the mucous mem- brane (effected in Fishes by the external medium), or they pour their secretion into the pharynx or posterior nostrils. The latter always lie tolerably far forwards on the palate, and are for the most part enclosed by the vomer, as well as the palatine. Finally, the naso-lachrymal duct must be mentioned : it passes out from the'anterior angle of the orbit, through the lateral wall Fic. 160.—TRANSVERSE SECTION THROUGH THE OLFACTORY CAVITIES OF Plethedon glutinosus (Myctodera). ¥, S, olfactory mucous membrane ; V, main nasal cavity; K, maxillary cavity ; C, cartilaginous, and S', fibrous portion of the turbinal, which causes the olfactory epithelium (#) to project far into the nasal cavity ; ID, inter- maxillary gland, shut off from the cavity of the mouth by the oral mucous membrane (ZS); F, frontal; Pf, prefrontal; M, maxilla; Vop, vomero- palatine; Sy, nasal septum. of the nose, and opens into the nasal cavity on the side of the upper jaw. It conducts the lachrymal secretion from the conjunc- tival sac of the eye into the nasal cavity, and arises in all Verte- brates, from the Myctodera onwards, as an epithelial cord which is separated off from the epidermis, and, growing down into the dermis, becomes hotlow secondarily. Reptilia.—Owing to the growth of the brain and facial region and to the formation of a secondary palate (p. 92), the olfactory organs, from Reptiles onwards, gradually come to be situated more ventrally, beneath the cranium. The Lacertilia, Ophidia, and many Chelonia possess the sim- plest olfactory organs amongst Reptiles. The nasal cavity of Lizards is divided into two portions, a smaller outer (anterior), and a larger inner (posterior)—or olfactory chamber proper. The latter only is provided with sensory cells, the former being lined by ordinary stratified epithelium continuous with the epidermis and containing no glands. A large turbinal, slightly rolled on itself, arises from the outer wall of the inner nasal chamber, and extends far into its lumen; this is also well developed in Ophidia, in which a distinct outer nasal chamber is wanting; it may be derived from that of the Amphibia. 202 ~ COMPARATIVE ANATOMY A large gland which opens at the boundary between the inner and outer nasal cavities lies within the turbinal. Below the latter is the aperture of the lachrymal duct: this duct in some Reptiles opens on the roof of-the pharynx (Ascalabota), and in others into the internal nostrils (Ophidia). The structure of the nose in Chelonians is very complicated and varied. In marine Chelonians it is divided into two passages, one above the other, and connected by means of a perforation of the septum. The comparative paucity of glands in the olfactory organ of Lizards and Snakes forms a marked contrast to the condition seen in -Chelonians, the nasal organ of which is charac- terised by a great abundance of them. The extension downwards and _ back- wards of the olfactory organ is most marked Fic. 161.—D1acram or tun 1 Crocodiles, in correspondence with the Otractory Orcan or a growth forwards of the facial region and Lizarp. (Longitudinal the formation of the palate ; its posterior vertionl peerem) part thus comes to lie below the brain AN, IN, outer and inner and base oftheskull. Each nasal chamber nasal chambers; t, tube- js divided posteriorly into two superim- like connection between - . them; Ch, internal nos- Posed cavities, the upper of which repre- trils; P, papilla of Jacob- sents the proper olfactory chamber, and is son's organ; Ca, aperture ined by sensory epithelium, while the of communication of the pee Rainchs sh : latter with the mouth; ‘ower functions as a respiratory portion MS, oral mucous mem- only. Certain accessory air-chambers are brane. connected with the nasal.cavity. A large 3 gland is present between the olfactory chamber and its investing bones, and opens into the nasal cavity. As in other Reptiles, there is only a single true turbinal, but ex- ternally to it lies a second prominence, which may be spoken of as a pseudo-turbinal. Birds.—In all Birds, as in Lizards, there is an outer chamber, lined by stratified epithelium, and a proper olfactory chamber, situated above the former. Birds also possess only a single true turbinal—if by this term is understood a free independent projection into the nasal cavity supported by skeletal parts. Two other pro- minences (pseudo-turbinals) are, however, present ; one of which lies, like the true turbinal, in the proper olfactory chamber, while the other, like the pseudo-turbinal of the Crocodile, is situated in the outer portion: these are simply incurved portions of the whole nasal wall (Fig. 162). ; The form of the true turbinal, which is usually supported by cartilage—more rarely by bone, varies greatly. It is either repre- sented by a moderate-sized prominence, or else it becomes more or less rolled on itself. The lachrymal duct opens below and an- / OLFACTORY ORGAN 203 teriorly to it. This turbinal is comparable to that of Urodeles and Reptiles. The so-called external nasal gland of Birds is situated on the frontal or nasal bones, along the upper margin of the orbit. It is supplied by the first and second branches -of the trigeminal, and corresponds to the lateral nasal gland of Lizards. Mammals.—Corresponding to the much more marked development of the facial por- tion of the skull, the nasal cavity of Mammals is proportionately much larger than in the forms yet described, and consequently there is much more room for the extension of the 4. 199 TRansvERSE turbinals: these give rise to a spongy laby- sererront TEE UAE TOE rinth, the cell-like compartments of which = Ricur Nasat Cavity are lined by mucous membrane ; and thus °F 4 SHRIKE (Lanims ; ; ‘ minor. ) variously shaped projections, supported partly by cartilage and partly by bone, are seen ex- O04) UM, ins td tending into the nasal cavity (Fig. 163, a—c). ete P ecual. i _ The normal number of these true olfactory — upper, and b, lower yidges or scrolls varies considerably! They nasal passage; LR, . . air-chamber, which may be arranged in one row (Ornithorhyn- extends into a hollow chus, Cetacea, Pinnipedia, Primates), or in of the superior tur- several rows (other Mammals),in which latter _ Pinal. case the olfactory lobes are largely developed. According to the degree of development of the olfactory appa- ratus, taking specially mto account its cerebral portion (olfactory lobes), we may distinguish between Mammals which are macros- matic (the majority of the mammalian orders), microsmatic (Seals, Whalebone Whales, Monkeys, Man), and anosmatic (most Toothed Whales). The above-mentioned olfactory scrolls belong to the true olfac- tory region, and are generally described as “ ethmoid turbinals,” as in all but the first of the series their skeletal supports usually become united with the ethmoid bone, the first coming into rela- tion with the nasal, and being therefore usually spoken of as the “nasal turbinal.’ It must, however, be borne in mind that these do not correspond to the turbinals of lower Vertebrates. The latter are represented by the so-called “ maxillary turbinal,’ situated in the anterior (lower) portion of each nasal chamber, which com- municates with the pharynx by the internal nostrils, its skeletal portion becoming united with the maxillary bone (Fig. 163, Cc). This maxillary turbinal no longer possesses an olfactory epithelium 1 In most of the Mammalian orders, five olfactory scrolls are typically present ; in Echidna there are six or more; in Ungulates there may be as many as eight ; amongst Edentates, Orycteropus possesses eleven; while in adult Primates there are only from one to three, a greater number being present in the embryo (Fig. 163). 204 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY after the embryonic period, and has plainly undergone a change of function in connection with the perception of the warmth and e H tT pl. Fic. 163, a.—LaTERAL VIEW OF NasaL CHAMBER OF A HuMAN Em- BRYO. I, II, III, the three olfactory ridges ; +, supernumerary ridge which occurs in the embryo; n, tip of the nose; pil, hard palate; cr, base of skull; os, Eustachian aperture. nasal apparatus, but may lose their primary func- tion, often persisting merely as air-sinuses. The nasal glands may be divided into two sets, —numerous small, diffuse Bowman's glands, and a large gland of Stenson. The latter appears early in the embryo, and often: be- comes greatly reduced later on in development ; it is situated in the lateral or basal walls of the nasal cavity, and may extend into the maxillary sinus when the latter is well developed. The appearance of an external nose is very charac- teristic of the olfactory or- gan of Mammals: this must be regarded as a derivative of the outer chamber of the nose of Reptiles and Birds. moisture of the inspired air. When well developed, 1t forms « single or double coil, and may even be more or less ° branched (Fig. 164). Branches of the trigeminal extend over it, and supply its mucous mem- brane. An olfactory and a respiratory region can there- fore also be distinguished in the nasal chamber of Mammals. - The nasal chamber usually communicates with neighbour- ing cavities, such as the maxil- lary, frontal, and sphenoidal sinuses (Fig. 163, B, C): the two last-mentioned cavities arise in connection with the 4 2, re]. Pox? ‘ “3 oy * Fic. 163, 8. —SAGIrTaAL SECTION THROUGH THE NAsAL AND Buccat CAVITIES OF THE Human Heap. I, II, Il, the three olfactory ridges; sn’, frontal sinus; sv”, sphenoidal sinus; os, aperture of Eustachian tube; bc, entrance to the mouth ; /g, tongue; v.7, atlas verte- bra ; v.i2, axis vertebra. 1 This is also true of the anterior (lower) ethmoid turbinal in microsmatic Mammals. OLFACTORY ORGAN : 205 - It is supported by an outward extension of the nasal bones and by the cartilaginous septum nasi which arises from the eth- moid, as well as by other secondarily independent car- tilages (ali-nasals) which were primarily continu- ous with the general carti- Jaginous wall, but become differentiated . from the latter im various ways in accordance with the varied functional adaptations which the outer nose undergoes. Thus it may be provided with a special valvular ap- paratus for closing the nos- trils (aquatic Mammals) ; or may grow out to form a longer or shorter trunk provided with a complicated musculature (Mole, Shrew, Fic. 163, c.—TRANSVERSE VERTICAL SECTION THROUGH THE NASAL Cavity oF MAN. I, II, ITI, inferior (maxillary), middle, and superior turbinal ; a, b,c, inferior, middle, and superior nasal passage; S, septum nasi; J, J, position of rudimentary Jacob- son’s organs, which are situated nearer the Pig, Tapir, Elephant), and, by means of its abundant nerve-supply, serve as a delicate organ of touch and even as a prehensile appar- floor of the cavity than is indicated in the figure ; *, point at which the naso-lachrymal duct opens ; +t, entrance into the maxillary .sinus (C.m); SZ, ethmoidal labyrinth ; HG, hard palate; C.cr, cranial cavity ; M, maxilla ; Or, wall of orbit. atus. A B C D I eae e Fic. 164.—Various Forms oF THE MAXILLO-TURBINAL OF MAMMALS. A, double coil ; B, transition from latter to single coil, Z, /; C, transition from double coil to the dendritic form D. (After Zuckerkandl. ) J ACOBSON’S ORGAN. By the term “ Jacobson’s organ” is understood a paired accessory nasal cavity which in an early embryonic stage becomes differen- tiated from the nasal chamber, and which is supplied by the olfactory and trigeminal nerves; it communicates with the mouth by a special aperture. | . - sy ‘ . ha if \ AXSY er ns a oy ~~ —- ~~ (engine: Ne WW A(Mlh tam 11th lprraftPbiaclionthe IQ LL LL el Fic. 165.—TRANSVERSE SECTIONS OF THE NOSE IN VARIOUS VERTEBRATES. A—D, Illustrating the various ontogenetic and phylogenetic stages of the Jacob- son’s organ of Urodeles. In A its position is median, and in D lateral. E, Gymnophiona, in which the organ becomes separated from the main nasal cavity. F, Lacerta agilis. G, Placental Mammal; I, the same, in longitudinal vertical section. H, Ornithorhynchus. (After Symington. ) N, main nasal cavity; jc, Jacobson’s organ; ¢.j, Jacobson’s cartilage ; g.m, intermaxillary gland ; g.n, nasal gland ; n.o, olfactory nerve ; n.t, trigeminal nerve ; d.n, naso-lachrymal duct ; mx, maxilla ; 0.d, dumb-bell shaped bone. f - EYE 207 A Jacobson’s organ is first met with in Amphibians, In young Triton larve a small gutter-like medio-ventral outgrowth of each nasal cavity arises, witn which the ventral branch of the olfactory nerve comes into relation. This outgrowth later undergves a re- lative change of position, and comes to be situated laterally towards. the upper jaw (Fig. 165 Aa—p). At its blind end a gland is developed. In Siren the primary median position is retained, and in the Axolotl it does not extend so far laterally as in the adult Triton. The acces- sory nasal chamber of Ceecilians?(p. 2C0) is developed in a similar manner (£), and a large gland is in connection with it. There can also be little doubt that this cavity is represented in Anura, although its relative position is somewhat different to that seen in Urodeles. The Jacobson’s organ of the Amniota is also developed in the medio-ventral part of the nasal chamber, close to the septum nasi.. It loses its primary connection with the former, but retains its median position, lying between the floor of the nasal cavity and the roof of the mouth. It is lined by an olfactory epithelium and communicates in front with the mouth through the corresponding naso-palatine canal (p. 100). In Lacertilia and Ophidia a papilla extends into its cavity from the floor (Figs. 161 and 165, F). These organs are not present in Crocodiles, Chelonians, and Birds, but rudiments have been observed in embryos of Crocodilus biporeatus, and certain cartilages on the nasal floor in Birds. appear to correspond with the Jacobson’s cartilages of other forms. - Amongst Mammals, Jacobson’s organ is most marked in Monotremes (Fig. 165, H), in which it is much more highly developed. than in Lizards. It contains a well-marked, turbinal-like ridge, supported by cartilage continuous with that enveloping the organ and covered with ciliated epithelium, and numerous glands are. present in the mucous membrane. In other Mammals (G, 1) it becomes more or less reduced, though often well-marked, consisting of two tubes lying at the base of the septum nasi, usually enclosed by separate cartilages (Marsupials, Edentates, Insectivores, Rodents, Carnivores, Ungulates). A branch of the olfactory nerve enters the tube posteriorly, and anteriorly the cavity of the organ communi- cates with the mouth through the incisive or naso-palatine canals. Rudiments of the organ exist even in Man (Fig. 163, c). The function of Jacobson’s organ may consist in bringing the food taken into the mouth under the direct control of the olfactory- nerve. EYE. As already mentioned (p. 154, Fig. 167, A and B), the optic nerve is developed from the stalk of an outgrowth of the primary 1 A curious apparatus exists in Ceecilians in connection with the nasal cavit and orbit. It consists of a fibrous capsule with muscles and a large gland, . opening near the snout. Its function is not certainly known, ~ 208 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY fore-brain known as the primary optic vesicle. It, therefore, like the _ olfactory lobe, represents a part of the brain. In the adult brain, the optic nerve is seen to arise from the thalamencephalon, and three more or less sharply-differentiated portions of it may-in most cases be distinguished; these are ; spoken of, from the proximal to the distal end respectively, as the optic tract, chiasma, and MTV. : The chiasma, that 1s, the crossing of the two optic nerves, is always present, though not always freely exposed, for,it may retain a primitive position deeply embedded in the base of the brain, (e.g., Cyclostomi, Dipnoi). - In most Teleosts the optic nerves simply overlie one another (Fig. 166, A), but in some of these ‘Fishes (Clupea, Engraulis, Fig. 166, B), one nerve passes through a slit in the © other, and this condition of things is gradu- ally carried still further in Reptiles, until finally the fibres of the two nerves intercross in a very complicated manner (Fig. 166, c, D), giving rise to a sort of basket-work ; this is finest and most delicate in Mammals, where its structure can only be analysed by compar-: ing a series of sections. A more or less complete crossing of the fibres of each optic nerve may also take place more peripherally before they spread out in the retina. In contrast to the eyes of Invertebrates, Fic. 166.—CHIASMA OF THE Optic NERVES. (Semidiagrammatic.) A, chiasma charac- teristic of the greater number of Teleostei ; B, Herring; C, Lacer- ~ ta agilis; D, an Ag- ama; KE, a_ higher Mammal. Chi, chiasma of the bundle of nerves ly- ing centrally; Ce, Ce!, S, S', lateral fibres; Co, commis- sure. the epiblast, the latter which arise by a differentiation of the cells of the superficial epiblast, the sensitive ele- ments of the Vertebrate eye correspond to a peripheral portion of the brain (Figs. 167, A and B). . As the primary optic vesicle srows out- wards towards the outer skin of the embryo, the portion which connects it with the brain becomes constricted and by degrees loses its cavity, giving rise to a solid cord, from which the optic nerve is formed. At the point where the vesicle touches becomes thickened and the outer wall of the vesicle invaginated to form a double-walled cup, the secondary optic vesicle (Fig. 167, B). The inner and outer walls of the cup then become fused together, the former giving rise to the sensory epithelium of the vetina, and the latter to the pigment epitheliwm. The fibres of the optic nerve are first differentiated in its retinal portion, and grow a EYE 209% centripetally towards the brain; centrifugal fibres also arise later. In the course of further development, the epiblastic thickening mentioned above, which is often at first hollow, becomes separated from the epiblast, sinks more and more into the interior of the optic vesicle, and is differentiated to form the crystalline lens (Fig 167,8). The remaining space within the optic vesicle becomes filled by mesoblastic tissue, which grows in from the ventral side of the secondary optic vesicle through the so-called choroid fissure: Fic. 167, A.—DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MopDE oF FORMATION OF THE PRIMARY Optic Vxsicuies (A B/.) VH, fore-brain ; V, V, ventricular cavity of the brain, which communicates freely with the cavities of the primary optic vesicles at ++. B.—SEMIDIAGRAMMATIC FIGURE OF THE SECONDARY OpTic VESICLE, AND OF THE LENS BECOMING SEPARATED OFF FROM THE EPIBLAST. ZB, inner layer of the secondary optic vesicle, from which the retina arises ;: +, point at which the latter is continuous with the outer layer (AB), from which the pigment epithelium is formed; H, remains of the cavity of the primary optic vesicle ; Z, lens, which arises as a cup-shaped involution of the epiblast (#) ; *, point of involution of epiblast to form the lens ; MM, meso- blastic tissue, which at M1, M', grows in between the outer epiblast and the lens as the latter becomes separated off, and which gives rise to the cornea as well as to the iris; C, vitreous chamber of the eye, between the lens and retina, which later becomes filled by the vitreous humour. and gives rise to the vitreows humour (Fig. 167, B), the bulk of which, as compared with the lens, gradually increases. Blood- vessels (vasa centralia nervi optici, arteria hyaloidea, tunica vasculosa. lentis) also extend into the vesicle in the same manner. The secondary optic vesicle is thus plentifully supplied with blood-vessels in its interior, and others arise at its periphery, where: a definite vascular and pigmented membrane, the choroid, is formed from the surrounding mesoblast (Fig: 168). Internally to the lens, the choroid gives rise to the ciliary folds, while more externally it passes in front of the lens to form P 210 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY the zis (Fig. 168), which retains in the centre a circular or slit-like _ aperture, the pupil, through which the rays of light pass. The. amount of light admitted is regulated by the dilator and con- strictor (sphincter) muscles of the iris, which are able to increase or lessen the size of the pupil ; the iris thus serves as a screen to regulate the amount of light which enters the eye. Not only is the size of the pupil inconstant, but the lens is also capable of undergoing considerable change in form, becoming more flattened or more convex, as the case may be. The former con-— dition occurs when distant, the latter when near objects are looked at. This delicate accom- modating apparatus is regulated by a ciliary muscle (tensor choro- idee) supplied by the oculomotor nerve, which arises in a circle all round the eye from the point of junction of the iris and sclerotic and is inserted along the peri- pheral border of the iris (Fig. 168). Externally to the vascular layer of the choroid is a lymph- sinus with pigmented walls (lamina fusca); and externally to this, again, is a firm fibrous, partly Fic. 168.—D1AGRAM OF A HORIZONTAL SECTION THROUGH THE LEFT Human Eye. (Seen from above.) Op, optic nerve ; OS, sheath of optic nerve; M/F, blind-spot ; Fo, yellow spot (fovea centralis); At, retina ; PE, pigment epithelium of the retina ; Ch, choroid, with its lamina fusca (Lj) and vascular layer (GS) ; Sc, sclerotic ; Co, cornea; Cj, con- junctiva ; 17D, membrane of Desce- met; CS, canal of Schlemm (the dotted line should extend further through the sclerotic to the small oval aperture) ; Iv, iris; Lc, ciliary ligament; C, ciliary process; VK, HK, anterior and posterior chamber of the eye; L, lens; H, hyaloid membrane; Z, Zone of Zinn, CP, canal of Petit ; Cv, vitreous humour. cartilaginous, or even ossified layer, the sclerotic. The latter passes internally into the sheath of the optic nerve, which is con- tinuous with the dura mater, and externally into the cornea, the outer surface of which is covered over by an epithelial layer con- tinuous with the epidermis—the conjunctiva. ‘The- sclerotic and cornea together form a firm outer support for the eye, and thus, to- gether with the gelatinous mass of the vitreous humour, guarantee the rigidity necessary for the physiological activity of the nerve end-apparatus. Between the cornea and iris there is a large lymph- space, the anterior chamber of the eye (Fig. 168), its contained fluid being called the aqueous humour. Other lymph-spaces are also present, ¢.g., between the choroid and sclerotic. The deep orbit, formed by the skull, serves as a further pro- tection for the eye, as do alse certain accessory structures, which may be divided into three categories, viz. :— EYE 211 1. Eyelids (palpebrz). 2. Glandular organs. 3. Muscles, serving to move the eye-ball. The eye-ball is thus formed of a series of concentric layers which are called from within outwards retina, choroid and iris (vascular layer), and sclerotic and cornea (skeletal layer). The first corresponds with the nervous substance of the brain, the second with the pia mater, and the third with the dura mater. The interior of the eye contains refractive media, the Jens and vitreous humour. To these, certain accessory structures are added (pp. 216—220). The relative development of the eye varies considerably amongst Verte- brates. It may reach avery high degree of perfection ; or may, on the other hand, undergo more or less degeneration in those animals which live in caves or burrows (e.g., Fishes—Amblyopsis spleleeus, Typhlogobius ; Amphibians —Proteus, Gymnophiona; Snakes—Typhlops: Mammals—Talpa, &c.). In Ammoccetes and Myxine the eye is hidden beneath the integument (see below), and in the Cetacean Platanista gangetica the eyes are extremely minute. The retina will be dealt with after a description of the eyes of the various classes of Vertebrates has been given (p. 214). In Amphioxus a simple pigment spot is present in the front wall of the ‘‘ cerebral ventricle” (p. 157, and Fig. 219). Cyclostomes.—The eye of Cyclostomes remains at a very low stage of development, not only as regards the structure of the retina, but also—in Myxinoids, in the absence of a lens and iris and of a differentiated sclerotic and cornea as well as of eye-muscles, and in the persistence of the choroid fissure. Moreover, the eye in Myxinoids and in the larval Ammoccete lies beneath the skin and subdermal connective tissue. In Petromyzon the skin covering the eye becomes thinned out at metamorphosis, and thus the animal, which was blind, or nearly blind, in the larval state, can see on reaching the adult condition: at the same time the eye becomes more highly organised, though the primary lumen in the lens (Fig. 167, B) does not entirely disappear. Fishes and Dipnoans.—The eyes of all the true Fishes are, with few exceptions, of considerable relative size, and are formed on essentially the same plan as that described in the intro- ductory portion of this chapter. The lens of Fishes, like that of all aquatic animals, is globular, and possesses therefore a high refractive index. It touches the cornea and fills up the greater part of the eyeball, so that only a small space is left for the vitreous humour. It differs from that of other Vertebrates in the fact that,in the condition of rest, it is. accommodated for seeing near objects. In Teleosts accommodation apparently takes place by means of a process of the choroid, the processus faleiformis. This extends into the vitreous humour towards the lens, around which it expands to form the so-called 2 : ro 212 ‘COMPARATIVE ANATOMY campanula Halleri (Fig. 169). In the interior of this structure are nerves, vessels, and smooth muscle-fibres, and the latter possibly exert an influence on the lens, draw- ing it towards the retina. The pro- cessus falciformis is never large in Ganoids and is absent in Cyclo- stomes, Elasmobranchs, and Dip- noans: the question of accommoda- tion in these Fishes is not under- stood. | Externally to the choroid proper, that is, between it and the lamina fusca, lies a silvery or greenish-gold iridescent membrane, the argentea. It extends either over the whole interior of the eye (Teleosts), or is Fic. 169.—Eyz or A Texeostean. limited to the iris (Elasmobranchs). Op, optic nerve; OS, sheath of optic A second layer with a metallic nerve; Rt, retina; PH, pigment lustre, the tapetum lucidum, 1s. epithelium; 7p, tapetum; Lv, present internally to the iridescent. ee tee ae. fo eet ge portion, and within this again is the sclerotic, enclosing cartilage or Chorio-capillaris of the choroid. No: bone (t); Co, cornea ; Jr, Iris; tapetum appears to be present in. VK, anterior chamber ; LZ, Lens ; : OP. sitecies Lvasian's Ee, tes, Teleostei or Petromyzon. cessus falciformis ; Cp, campanula The so-called choroid gland, pre- Halleri. sent only in Teleostei and Amia,. consists of a network of blood- vessels (rete mirabile) which has the form of a cushion, lying near the entrance of the optic nerve, between the argentea and pigment epithelium of the retina : it thus has nothing todo with a “ gland.” The sclerotic is usually extensively chondrified, and not unfre- quently becomes calcified or ossified towards its junction with the cornea. The eyeball is almost always surrounded by a gelatinous tissue, penetrated by connective-tissue fibres, and in Elasmobranchs it is usually articulated on its. inner circumference with a rod of cartilage connected distally with the lateral wall of the skull. Amphibia.—The eyes of Amphibians are proportionately smaller, and their form rounder than those of Fishes, but there are many points of close correspondence between them. This is true, for instance, as regards the more or less distinctly chondrified sclerotic, the slightly convex cornea, and the globularlens. In other important respects, however, the Amphibian eye is simpler than that of Fishes ; thus it is wanting in an argentea,a tapetum, a choroid gland, and a processus falciformis and campanula Halleri. The iris contains smooth muscle-fibres, and a true ciliary muscle is present in the whole series of animals from this point onwards, though not strongly developed in Amphibians. The pupil is usually round, but may be angular, EYE 213 The eyes of Proteus and ‘of the Gymnophiona, as already mentioned, always lie more or less deeply beneath the skin ; they are very small, and are much degenerated. In Proteus the crystalline lens and iris are both wanting, and the vitreous humour is only slightly developed. Reptiles and Birds.—In these also, the sclerotic is in great part cartilaginous, and in Lizards and Chelonians it is provided with a ring of delicate bony sclerotic plates around the external portion (Fig. 170). Many fossil Rep- tiles and Amphibians possessed: similar plates, as do also existing Birds (Fig. 171) ; in Birds horse- shoe- or ring-shaped bony structures are also usually present close to the entrance of the optic nerve. The eyeball of Reptiles has a globular form (Fig. 170), while that of Birds, more especially nocturnal Birds of prey (Owls), is more elongated and tubular, an external larger segment being sharply marked off from an internal smaller one: moreover the whole eye is relatively larger. Fic. 170. — Eyr oF Lacerta mu- ralis, SHOWING THE RING OF Bony ScLERO- TIc PLATES. Fic. 171.—EyrE or AN OwL. Rt, retina; Ch, Choroid; Sc, sclerotic, with its bony ring at t; CM, ciliary muscle ; Co, cornea; VN, point of junction between sclerotic and cornea ; Ir, iris; VK, anterior chamber; L, lens ; Cv, vitreous humour ; P, pecten; Op, OS, optic nerve and sheath. The dotted line passing across the broadest portion of the circumference of the eye divides the latter into an inner and an outer segment. (Fig.171). The outer portion is bounded ex- ternally by the very convex cornea and encloses a_ large anterior chamber as well as a complicated ciliary muscle com- posed of striated fibres. This muscle is also transversely stri- ated in Reptiles, in which— especially in Chelonians, it is always well developed, though not to such an extreme degree as in Birds. In Reptiles (Lizards, for in- stance) a tapetum may be developed, but an argentea and choroid gland are never present; all these parts are wanting in Birds. “A structure which is homologous with the processus falciformis of Fishes is, how- ever, present in most Reptiles and in Birds. Absent in Hatteria and the Cheionia, this so-called pecten is largely developed in Birds’ (Fig. 171), and may extend from the point of entrance of the optic nerve to the capsule of the lens, but 1 In Apteryx the pecten disappears during development. 214 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY as a rule does not reach so far. In Birds it is always more or less folded, and consists mainly of a closely-felted network of capillaries. In both Reptiles and Birds, the pecten appears to be important in the nutrition of the contents of the eyeball and of the retina: it has nothing to do with accommodation. | The iris, which is regulated by striated muscle, by means of which it is able to respond very quickly to visual impressions, is often brightly coloured, and this colour is due to the presence, not only of pigment, but also of coloured fat globules. The pupil is as a rule round, but in many Reptiles and in Owls has the form of a vertical slit. Mammals.—In Mammals the eyeball is always more com- pletely enclosed within the bony orbit than is the case in most other Vertebrates, and this may partially account for the fact that, except in Monotremes, the sclerotic no longer shows traces of cartilage or bone, but is entirely of a fibrous character (Fig. 168). With the exception of aquatic Mammals, in which it is some- what flattened, the cornea is moderately convex, and the whole eyeball is of a more or less rounded form. 7 A tapetum lucidum, consisting either of cells or fibres, exists in the choroid of numerous Mammals, and gives rise by interference to a glistening appear- ance when seen in the dark (Carnivores, Ruminants, Perissodactyles, &c. ). Certain structures homologous with the processus falciformis and pecten are present in Mammals in the embryo only. The ciliary muscle consists of smooth elements. The external surface of the lens is less convex than the internal, which latter lies in the so-called fossa patellaris of the vitreous humour. The pupil is not always round, but may be transversely oval (Ungulates, Kangaroos, Cetaceans), or slit-like and vertical (e.g., Cat). Retina. The fibres of the optic nerve, which pass into the eyeball at a right or acute angle, cross one another at the point of entrance, and are then distributed to the sensitive elements of the retina. The latter is thus thickest at the point of entrance of the nerve, which is known as the “ blind spot” (Fig. 168), and gradually de- creases in thickness towards the ciliary processes, until, at the point of origin of the iris, it consists of a single layer of cells. The retina is bounded externally by a structureless hyaline membrane (limitans externa),! while on its inner side it is covered by the hyaloid membrane, which, strictly speaking, belongs to the vitreous humour. The retina is quite transparent in the fresh condition, and consists of two portions which are _histo- logically and physiologically quite distinct: they are, a supporting 1 The membrana limitans encloses the entire retina externally in the embryo, but later the rods and cones come to project through it (see Fig. 172). RETINA 215 part and a nervous part. The former is stretched as on a frame between the limitans externa and hyaloid membrane. The nervous elements are arranged in the following concentric layers :— I. Developed from the internal layer of the secondary optic vesicle. A. Cerebral layer. 1. Layer of nerve-fibres (of optic nerve). 2. Layer of ganglion-cells. 3. Inner reticular layer. 4. Granular layer (inner). 5. Outer reticular or prbepithobak layer. B. Epithelial layer. 6. Layer of visual ceils (outer granular layer with the rods and cones). II. Developed fromthe external layer of the secondary optic vesicle. 7. Pigment epithelium (retinal epithelium). It seems probable that the various nerve-cells of the retina are not directly connected with one another, but are only contiguous. Rods and cones. Fibrous §— ~——--—- Membrana basket-work. ~~ jimitans. Outer granular layer. Concentric Outer recticular supporting-cells layer. (nucleated). Sub-epithelial ganglion-cell. Concentric supporting-cells (non-nucleated). Star-shaped ganglion-cell. Radial fibres. _—~ Bipolar ganglion-cell. Multipolar ganglion-cell. . = Inner recticular layer. Centrifugal nerve fibres. Radial fibres::=—2 Multipolar ganglion-cell. ° Layer of nerve fibres. Fic. 172.—DIAGRAM OF THE ELEMENTS OF THE RETINA. (Supporting elements on the left, and nervous elements on the right.) After Ph. Stohr. These layers are so arranged that the nerve-fibres lie next to the vitreous humour, that is, internally, while the rods and cones 216 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY are situated towards the choroid, or are external. Thus the terminal elements of the neuro-epithelium are turned away from the rays of light falling upon the retina, and the rays must therefore pass through all the other layers before they reach the rods and cones. Fishes possess the longest, Amphibians the thickest rods, so that in the latter there are only about 30,000 to a square millimetre, while in Man there are from 250,000 to 1,000,000. In Fishes the rods far exceed the cones in number, while in Reptiles and Birds the reverse is the case. The cones of many Reptiles and all Birds are distinguished by the presence of brightly coloured oil-globules, which are ~ also present in those of Marsupials. In the centre of the retina of higher Vertebrates there is a specially modified region of most acute vision, called the yellow-spot (fovea centralis or macula lutea). It is due to the thinning-out of all the layers except that of the rods and cones, and even the rods disappear, only the cones persisting (Fig. 168). Accessory Organs in Connection with the Eye. (a) EYE-MUSCLES. The movement of the eyeball is always (except in Myxinoids, comp. p. 211) effected by six muscles, four of which are known as the recti (superior, inferior, anterior or internal, and posterior or external), and two as the obligui (superior and inferior). The former, which arise from the inner portion of the orbit, usually from the dural sheath of the optic nerve, together circumscribe a pyramidal cavity, the apex of which lies against the inner portion of the orbit, while the base surrounds the equator of the eyeball, where the muscles are inserted into the sclerotic. Both the oblique muscles usually arise from the anterior or tiasal side of the orbit, and as they respectively pass from this region dorsally and ventrally in an equatorial direction round the eyeball, they constitute a sort of incomplete muscular ring. A deviation from this arrangement is seen in Mammals, in which the superior oblique has gradually come to arise from the inner part of the orbit, and then passes forwards towards its anterior (internal) angle, where it becomes tendinous, and passes through a fibro-cartilaginous pulley (trochlea) attached to the upper border of the orbit, on the frontal bone. Hence it is sometimes called the trochlear muscle. From this point it changes its direc- tion, and becomes reflected obliquely outwards and backwards to the globe of the eye. Besides these six muscles, others are usually present which are known as the retractor bulli (best developed in Ungu- lates), the guadratus (bursalis), and the pyramidalis. The last two are connected with the nictitating membrane (see p. 217), and are present in Reptiles and Birds. All three are supplied by | the abducent nerve (comp. p. 184). : ) GLANDS 217 (b) EYELIDS (PALPEBRZ). In Fishes and other lower aquatic forms the upper and lower eyelids are usually very rudimentary, having at most (¢.g., Elasmo- branchs) the form of stiff folds of the skin; and in all Verte- brates below the Mammalia they never reach a very high stage of development. They are lined on the surface looking towards the eyeball by a continuation of the epidermis, the conjunctiva (p. 210), and in the Ichthyopsida and Sauropsida are usually not sharply _ marked off from the rest of the skin, being capable of no, or only of very slight, movement. In Mammals, the eyelids, more particularly the upper one, are extremely movable, and are provided with hairs (eyelashes) on their free margin. In their interior a hard body, the so-called “lid-cartilage” is developed, and they are closed by a circular muscle which surrounds the whole slit between the lids; a levator is also present in the upper eyelid. In Sauropsida and many Mammalia (e.g., Ungulates) there is a depressor of the lower lid. The want, or comparatively slight development of upper and lower eyelids in Vertebrates below the Mammalia is compen- sated for in certain forms, at any rate to a certain extent, by the - presence of a nictitating membrane. This “third eyelid” differs from the others in having nothing to do with the outer skin proper, consisting simply of a reduplicature of the conjunctiva, and being | regulated by special muscles (see p. 216). The nictitating membrane, which is represented in certain Elasmobranchs (e.g., Carcharias, Galeus, Zygzena, Mustelus, comp. p. 143) and which often encloses a cartilage, is situated within the lower eyelid, or it may lie more towards the anterior angle of the eye. The former condition is seen, ¢g., in Anurans, and the latter in Birds, in which a third eyelid is so largely developed as to be capable of covering the whole freely exposed portion of the eyeball. In Reptiles and Mammals it always lies in the anterior angle of the eye; in Primates it becomes reduced to a small, half-moon-shaped fold (plica semilunaris), but in Monkeys and certain races of Mankind traces of the cartilage are present. (¢) GLANDS. The glands in connection with the eye are: (1) the lachrymal, (2) the Harderian, or gland of the nictitating membrane, and (3) the Meibomian glands. The secretions of all these serve to keep the free surface of the eyeball moist, and to wash away foreign bodies. In Fishes and ‘In many Reptiles and Birds the upper eyelid, is supported by a membrane- bone or fibro-cartilage. In Geckos, Amphibznians and Snakes the two eyelids grow together to form a transparent membrane overlying the eye, and this comes away with the rest of the outer part of the skin when the latter is shed. 218 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Dipnoans,' the outer medium appears to suffice for this purpose, but the first attempt of a Vertebrate to exchange an aquatic for an Fie. 173. — HarRpDERIAN GLAND (H, #1!) anp LACHRYMAL GLAND (7h) oF Anyuis fragilis. M, muscle of jaw ; B, eye- ball. aérial existence necessitated the develop- ment of a secretory apparatus in connection with the eye. Thus in Urodeles a glandular organ is developed from the conjunctival epithelium along the whole length of the lower eye- lid; in Reptiles this becomes more developed in the region of the anterior and posterior angles of the eye, and the original connecting bridge gradually dis- appears: thus two glands are developed from the primitively single one, each of which becomes further differentiated both histologically and physiologically. From one is formed the Harderian gland, which always lies at the anterior angle of the eye, sur- rounding to a greater or less ex- tent the antero-ventral portion of the eyeball, while the other gives rise to the lachrymal gland? © (Figs. 173 and 175). The latter retains throughout life its primi- tive position at the posterior angle of the eye, and even in Birds lies in the region of the lower eyelid; it is supplied by the second division of the trigeminal. In Mammals it be- comes gradually further sub- divided, and extends into the region of the upper eyelid, so that its ducts open above the eye into the upper conjunctival sac (Fig. 175, A & B). Never- theless, even in the , Primates, more or fewer ducts are present which open into the lower con- junctival sac, and thus the primi- tive position of the lachrymal gland is indicated. A well-differentiated Har- derian gland is present from the Fria, 174. —DIAGRAMMATIC TRANSVERSE VERTICAL SECTION THROUGH THE Eyre or A MAMMAL. Op, optic nerve ; B, eyeball; Fo, Fo, upper and lower conjunctival sac ; LH, LH, outer skin of the eyelids, which at the free edges of the latter at + becomes continuous with the conjunctiva ; 7’, the so-called tarsal fibro-cartilages, in which the Meibo- mian glands (MD) lie embedded, the latter opening at *; H, H, eye- lashes. tailless ” Amphibia to the Mammalia, but is very rudimentary in the Primates. * Comp. p. 17. ap bachiyinel gland is absent in Croccdiles and Snakes. GLANDS 219 The Meibomian glands, belonging to the group of sebaceous glands, are confined to the Mammalia, and lie embedded in the Fic. 1754.—DIAGRAM TO ILLUSTRATE THE SHIFTING OF THE LACHRYMAL GLAND WHICH HAS» TAKEN PLACE IN THE COURSE OF PHYLOGENY. The gland shifts in the direction of the arrows; a, its position in the-Amphibia ; b, in Reptiles and Birds, and occasionally in Man, in which case it may be regarded as atavistic ; ¢, normal position in Man. substance of the eyelids in the form of branched tree-like tubes -or-clustered masses. They open on the free edge of the lid, and produce a fatty secretion. Certain modified sweat-glands known as Fic. 1758.—DIAGRAM OF THE LACHRYMAL APPARATUS OF MAN. TD, \achrymal gland, divided up into several portions ;**, ducts of the lachrymal gland ; tt, puncta lachrymalia ; 7'R, 7'R', upper and lower lachrymal canals’; S, lachrymal sac ; D, naso-lachrymal duct. the glands of Moll are also present immediately within the eyelids of Mammals. ; The naso-lachrymal duct, which conducts the lachrymal secretion into the nose, has already been referred to (p. 201). 220 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY In the Cetacea, the lachrymal and Meibomian glands, as well as the naso- lachrymal duct, are wanting, and alachrymal duct is absent in the Otter, Seal, and Hippopotamus. -In the two last-mentioned animals the lachrymal gland is much reduced : in Manis javanica there are no Meibomian glands, and in the Mole the entire lachrymal apparatus has undergone reduction. AUDITORY ORGAN. Tt is very probable that the auditory organ, like the organs of smell and taste, has been derived primitively from a modified integumentary sense-organ. It is developed from an invagination Fic. 177.—SEMIDIAGRAMMATIC FIGURE OF THE MEMBRANOUS LABYRINTH OF VERTE- Fic. 176.—HEAD AND ANTERIOR BRATES. (Seen from the outer side. ) PorTION oF Bopy OF A CHICK. ; ee : (In part after Moldenhauer. ) u, utriculus ; rec, recessus utriculi ; sp, sinus posterior utriculi; s, sacculus ; /, recessus RG, olfactory pit; A, eye; J to sacculi (lagena); cus, utriculo-saccular IV, first to fourth visceral canal ; de, se, ductus and saccus endolym- arches ; +t, point at which the phaticus, the former arising from the external auditory passage begins sacculus at +; ss, sinus utriculi superior ; to be formed; LB, primitive ass, apex of the same ; ca, ce, cp, anterior, auditory vesicle seen through external, and posterior semicircular canals; the wall of the head. aa, ae, ap, the corresponding ampulle. of the ectoderm on either side of the primary hind-brain: this be- comes separated off to form a vesicle (Fig. 176), and its epithelium is differentiated into elongated cells of sensory epithelium pro- vided with hair-like processes (Figs. 178 A and B) separated by supporting cells. The sensory cells are surrounded by a nerve- network, and are not continuous with the nerves as in the case of the olfactory cells (p. 197). ) Like the other higher sense-organs, the paired auditory organ ; ‘AUDITORY ORGAN ; 221 of Vertebrates is situated in the region of the head, between the origins of the trigeminal and vagus nerves. After the vesicle of each side has become separated off from the epiblast and connected with the brain by means of the auditory nerve (which arises in connection with a peripheral ectodermic ganglion and then grows. centripetally to the brain), it sinks deeper and deeper into the mesoblastic tissue of the skull: it then loses its original pyriform or rounded shape, and becomes divided into two parts, called re- spectively the wtriculus and sacculus (Fig. 177). From the former cY Fic. 178a.—IsoLaATED ELEMENTS OF THE MEMBRANOUS LABYRINTH OF VARIOUS VERTEBRATES. (After G. Retzius. ) _ A, from the macula acustica communis of Myzine glutinosa ; B, from the macula acustica neglecta of Raia clavata ; C, from the crista acustica of an ampulla of Linedon (Amblystoma) mexicanus ; D, from the crista acustica of the anterior ampulla of Roma esculanta. - hz, hair-cells with auditory hairs (h) ; fz, thread-like cells; n,n, dividing nerve. On the left side of D the auditory hair has become broken up into its con- stituent fibres. the semecircular canals become developed, while from the latter the tube-like ductus endolymphaticus and the lagena (cochlea) are formed. | The whole of this complicated apparatus constitutes the internal ear or membranous labyrinth. It becomes surrounded secondarily by mesoblastic tissue, with which it is at first in close contact. A process of absorption then takes place in the innermost layers of the mesoblast, and thus a space is developed which closely 222 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY repeats the form of the membranous labyrinth, as does also the mesoblast which encloses this space and which later becomes _ chondrified, and often also ossified. A membranous and a bony laby- vinth can thus be distinguished, and between them is a cavity (cavum perilymphateewm) filled with a lymph-like fluid (perilymph). The cavity within the membranous labyrinth, which also contains a fluid (endolymph), is spoken of as the cavum endolymphaticum. Kxcept in Cyclostomes, three semicircular canals are always present, and these lie in planes at right angles to one another. They are distinguished as the anterior vertical, the posterior vertical, and the horizontal (external) canals (Fig. 177). ‘The first and last-named arise from the portion of the utriculus known as the recessus utriculi, and each has a vesicle-like swelling or ampulla Fic. 1788.—LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF AN AMPULLA OF Gostus.. (The exact form of the epithelium of the crista is not indicated.) After Hensen. nm, the nerve passing into the connective-tissue of the crista; a, base of semi- circular canal ; b, point of opening of the ampulla into the utriculus ; c, the epithelium on the free wall of the ampulla ; d, the auditory hairs. at its origin. The posterior canal also arises with an ampulla from a prolongation of the utriculus (sinus posterior). The other end of the horizontal canal opens by a funnel-shaped enlargement into the utriculus, while that of the anterior and of the posterior canal fuse together to form a common tube, the so-called canal commissure (sinus superior), which also opens into the utriculus. Concretions composed mainly of carbonate of lime are present in the regions of the various nerve end-plates of the auditory organ in all Vertebrates. These oftoliths present the greatest variety both in form and size. The largest and most massive ones are seen in Teleosts. They either consist of a single mass, or are arranged in groups in different regions of the labyrinth. AUDITORY ORGAN 223 The sensory epithelium, to which the branches of the auditory nerve are distributed, is situated in the following parts of the membranous labyrinth: (1) the three ampulle of the canals, in each of which the auditory cells are situated on a ridge (crista acustica) projecting into the lumen (Fig. 1788) ; (2) a large macula acustica in the utriculus : this is continued into the recessus utriculi We KL@ Fic. 179.—DIAGRAM OF THE ENTIRE AUDITORY ORGAN OF MAN. External Ear.—M, M, pinna; Mae, external auditory meatus ; O, wall of latter ; Mt, tympanic membrane. Middle Ear.—Ct, Ct, typmanic cavity ; O', wall of same ;SAp, sound-conducting apparatus, indicated by a rod, representing the auditory ossicles, the end of the rod marked + corresponds to the stapes, which closes up the fenestra ovalis ; M, fenestra rotunda ; 7'b, Eustachian tube ; 7'b', its opening into the pharynx; O”, its wall. Internal Ear, with the greater part of the bony labyrinth (KZ, KZ") removed. — S, sacculus; a, 6, the two vertical canals, one of which (b) is shown cut through ; c, Co, commissure of the canals of the membranous and bony laby- rinths respectively ; S.e, D.e, saccus and ductus endolymphaticus ; the latter bifurcates at 2; Cp, cavum perilymphaticum; Cr, canalis reuniens; Con, membranous cochlea, which gives rise toa blind sac at -+ ; Con', bony cochlea ; Sv and St, scala vestibuli and scala tympani, which at * pass into one another at the cupula terminalis (Ct); D.py, ductus perilymphaticus, which arises from the scala tympani at d, and opens at D.p'. The horizontal canal is seen between 2 and S. as well as into the sacculus and lagena, or rudiment of the cochlea, which arises from the sacculus; (3) the rudimentary macula acustica neglecta, which in Fishes, Birds, and Reptiles is situated on the floor of the utriculus close to the sacculo-utricular canal. In Amphibians it lies on the inner side of the sacculus, and in’ Mammals undergoes a gradual reduction and may even become 224 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY obliterated. The several portions of the sensory plate or macula acustica, which are originally continuous, become later disconnected from.one another, and except in Cyclostomes are seen as separate maculz acusticz. The higher we pass in the Vertebrate series, the greater share loes the mesoblast take in the formation of the auditory organ. At first—that is, in Fishes—the membranous labyrinth or internal ear lies close under the roof of the skull, and is thus easily accessible to the waves of sound, which are conducted partly through the operculum (when present), and partly through the gill-slits or spiracle. As we pass to the higher animals, however, the auditory organ gradually sinks further and further inwards from the surface, so that a new method for conducting the sound-waves becomes necessary, and certain accessory structures are developed (Fig. 179). A canal, the external auditory passage or meatus, passes inwards from the surface; this opens into a spacious chamber, the tympanic cavity, in which are situated the auditory ossicles, and which is connected by the Hustachian tube with the pharynx. The whole of this canal, which is divided into outer anc inner portions (external and middle ear) at the junction of the external auditory passage and tympanic cavity by a vibratory membrane, the tympanic membrane, lies in the position of the first embryonic visceral (hyoid or spiracular) cleft. From Reptiles and Birds onwards the first indications of a pinna (that is, the part of the external ear which projects from the head) are seen, but this only reaches a full development in Mammals. Cyclostomes.—Jn Petromyzon there are only two (the vertical) semicircular canals, and in Myxine only one canal is present, which, as it possesses two ampulle, probably represents the two fused together (Fig. 1804). Fishes and Dipnoans.—The auditory organ of all the true Fishes (Fig. 18041—c) follows the general plan given above, and the same may be said for all higher Vertebrates. Almost without exception we meet with a division into a pars superior—represented by the wtrieulus and semicircular canals, which remains essentially much in the condition already described, and a pars inferior— constituted by the sacculus and lagena, which gradually becomes more differentiated, and attains to a higher and higher degree of development and functional perfection. In Fishes the lagena consists simply of a small knob-like appendage of the sacculus, which opens freely into the main cavity of the latter by means of the sacculo-cochlear canal: it is absent in Chimera. The utriculus and sacculus also communicate with one another by the sacculo-utricular canal. In Elasmobranchs the ductus endo- Jymphaticus opens dorrally on the posterior part of the head, and is thus in free communication with the sea-water. Fia. italy se xe LABYRINTH OF VARIOUS FISHES foker G. Baten: A, Myzxine glutinosa, from the inner side. sc, saccus communis ; a@@, ap, anterior and posterior ampulla. ;_ ec, canalis com- munis ; de, ductus endolymphaticus ; se, saccus endolymphaticus ; mc, macula acustica communis; cra, crista acustica of the anterior, and crp, of the posterior ampulla ; ra, rp, anterior and posterior branches of the auditory nerve , Acivenser — outer side; B, Chimera monstrosa, inner side; C, Perca fluviatilis, inner side. u, utriculus; ss, sp, sinus utriculi superior and posterior ; ass, apex of the sinus superior ; vec, recessus utriculi; aa, ae, ap, anterior, external, and posterior ampulla ; c&, cp, ce, anterior, posterior, and horizontal (external) semicircular canals ; s, sacculus ; cus, utriculo-saccular canal ; de, ductus endolymphati- cus, which in B opens externally through the skin ha at ade; sé, saccus endolymphaticus ; /, lagena ; mu, macula acustica of the recessus utriculi ; cr, crista acustica of the ampulle ; ms, macula acustica of the sacculus ; mn, macula acustica neglecta ; pi, papilla acustica of the lagena; ac, auditory nerve ; 7aa, rae, rap, ru, rs, rl, rn, the various branches of the same ; o (in C), otoliths (in the recessus utriculi, sacculus, and lagena. ) Q 226 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY In Chimeroids, Ganoids, Teleosts and Dipnoans, the auditory capsules are not completely surrounded by cartilage or bone, the perilymphatic and peania) cavities only being separated bya fibrous partition, In certain Teleosts (Siluroidei, Gymnotide, Characinidee, Gymnarchidse, Cyprinoidze) the auditory organ comes into relation with the air-bladder by means of a chain of bones (‘‘ Weberian ossicles ’”’) derived from certain parts of the four anterior vertebrze and corresponding pairs of ribs, and by this means the relative fulness of the air-bladder can be appreciated by the Fish. Connections between processes of the air-bladder and the internal ear are also met with in several other Teleosts. The auditory organ of the Dipnoi most nearly resembles that of Elasmobranchii, and more particularly that of Chimera. Amphibia.—The membranous labyrinth of Amphibians re- sembles that of Fishes and Dipnoans in many respects, but impor- tant differences are seen, more particularly as regards the lagena, which, especially in the Anura, becomes further constricted off from the sacculus and reaches a higher stage of development. Traces of a papilla acustica lagen lying within the lagena are met with in the Myctodera, and even in Menopoma and Siredon. In the Anura (Fig. 181) a higher condition is seen in the presence of a small ridge-like outgrowth in the interior of the thickened lagena on which a definite region, supported by cartilage, corresponds to the basilar membrane of higher types; this bears another patch of nerve endings—the papilla acustica basilaris. The ductus endolymphaticus, as in certain Teleosts, may give rise to large sac-like enlargements containing calcareous matter and lie close to its fellow, either on the dorsal surface only, or on both dorsal and ventral sides of the brain. The latter is the ease in Anura, for instance, in which the.sac extends as an unpaired structure along the whole vertebral canal dorsally to the spinal cord, giving rise to paired outgrowths extending through the inter- vertebral foramina and forming the characteristic calcareous bodies situated close to the spinal ganglia. These are lined by pavement epithelium and are plentifully supplied with capillaries: they are not glandular, as was formerly supposed. A further advance in structure as compared with Fishes is seen in the gradual differentiation of a middle ear. In the outer wall of the auditory capsule is a membranous space, the fenestra ovalis, which is plugged by a cartilaginous stapedial plate ; and from the latter a rod-like cartilage or “bone, the columella, usually extends outwards towards the quadrate (p. 84). A tympanic cavity, with a tympanic membrane supported by a ring of cartilage lying on the level of the skin, and a Eustachian tube opening into the pharynx and corresponding phylogenetically to the hyoid cleft of Fishes, are met with in most Anura, in which also the colu- mella is more perfect, consisting of a bony and cartilaginous rod AUDITORY ORGAN 927 expanded distally to fit against the tympanic membrane. The columella is wanting in certain Urodeles (e.g. Triton). A mem- branous fenestra rotunda in the outer wall of the auditory capsule is present in most Amphibians and in all higher Vertebrates in addition to the fenestra ovalis. The ear of the Gymnophiona resembles that of the Urodela, but the membranous labyrinth shows further complications. Fic. 181.—Ricgur Mermpranous LAbyrintH oF Rana esculenta, from the inner side. (After G. Retzius.) wu, aperture of utriculus ; 7, lagena cochlee; pb, pars basilaris cochlez ; cus, utriculo-saccular canal; mu, ms, mn, macula acustica recessus utriculi, sacculi, and neglecta ; p/, ppb, papilla acustica lagene and basilaris ; rua, rap, rs, rn, rl, rb, branches of auditory nerve to the anterior and posterior ampulle, sacculus, macula neglecta, lagena, and pars basilaris. (Other letters as in Fig. 180, A1—C.) Reptiles and Birds.—In Chelonians, the auditory organ shows many points of resemblance to that of Urodeles; and in all Reptiles and Birds the chief modifications are confined to the lagena or cochlea, which gradually shows a higher condition of development in passing from Chelonians and Snakes to Lizards and Crocodiles.: In Chelonians, the cochlea grows out in the form of a short canal ; in Crocodiles and Birds this canal is considerably — longer, and at the same time it becomes slightly coiled (Figs. 182 and 183). A more marked differentiation also gradually takes place in the membrana basilaris and the papilla acustica basilaris. Both become more and more elongated; and, at the same time, distinct indications of scale tympani and vestibuli are seen. (Com- pare the description of these parts on p. 232.) In the Lacertilia the most varied types of auditory organ are met with ; in many (Phrynosoma, Pseudopus, Anguis), the membrana basilaris is hardly more highly developed than in Ophidia. In Iguana, an advance towards Lacerta and the other higher Lizards is to be noticed: the membrana basilaris is longer, though the lagena with its papilla is not so prominent. In Acantias and Platydactylus this state of things is carried still further, and finally the more highly developed auditory organ of Plestiodon and Egerina o-.2 298 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY leads up to that of Crocodilia. Thus there isa continuous and an unbroken series from the lower forms to the higher. : i The structure of the auditory organ of Hatteria shows many striking peculiarities : it thus, like that of Chameeleo, occupies an isolated position. While the cochlea gradually becomes more independent of the sacculus, the latter shows the greatest variety both as to form and size in the different types. Thus, for instance, it is usually very small in Birds, while in Lizards (e¢.g., Lacerta) it is of considerable size Fic. 182.—Ricgur Mempranovus Lasyrintu or A, Lacerta viridis, AND B, Alligator mississipiensis, from the outer side. (After G. Retzius.) ade, aperture of the ductus endolymphaticus ; csc, sacculo-cochlear canal; /rt, foramen recessus scale tympani; tv, tegmentum vasculosum; sc, septum cruciatum ; mb, membrana basilaris. (Other letters as in Figs. 180 and 181.) The aperture of communication between the utriculus and sac- culus persists, though it gradually becomes narrowed, as does also that between the sacculus and cochlea. The connection between these latter may be drawn out to form a canal (canalis reuniens), and this is particularly the case in Birds; in Crocodiles an_ inter- mediate condition between Birds and Lizards is seen. The mem- branous labyrinth of Birds, however, is always specially characterised by the peculiar arrangement of the anterior and _ posterior canals, which are greatly arched, and the position of their openings. into the sinus superior (canal commissure) is reversed. In lower types (Swimming Birds) this peculiarity is less marked than in the higher forms, and it would be interesting to ascertain the condition of these parts in the Struthionidz, as one would expect to find in them important points of connection with Reptiles. AUDITORY ORGAN | 2.29 In many Reptiles the free end of the ductus endolymphaticus is situated close under the roof of the skull beneath the parieto- occipital suture, and in the Ascalabota the duct even leaves the cranial capsule, passes back between the muscles of the neck, and in the region of the pectoral arch becomes swollen to form a large folded sac, from which finger-shaped processes extend to the ventral surface of the vertebral column and to the sub-mucous tissue of the pharynx. These processes may also branch out in a labyrinthic manner into the orbit, and they are always filled with a white semi- solid mass of calcareous substance, as in Anura: calcareous matter is present in the ductus endolym- phaticus of all Vertebrates, at any rate in the embryo. In Birds, the duct does not pass out of the cranial cavity. A tympanic membrane is present in Birds and all Rantilas “sacant : Hattecn Fic. 183.—RicHt MEMBRANOUS LABYRINTH Pp Pp ; : oF Turdus musicus, from the inner side. Snakes, and Amphisbee- (After G. Retzius.) Letters as before. nians; and in the two last- ) mentioned groups the tympanic cavity and Eustachian tube are also wanting. In Crocodiles the tympanic cavity is very complicated, and in them as well as in Birds, the two Eustachian canals open by a single median aperture into the pharynx. The osseo-cartilaginous columella is well developed in the Sauropsida, and is not distinct from the stapedial plate ; in Hatteria it is continuous distally with the hyoid (p. 92). In certain Lizards (¢.g., Ascalabota, Monitor), an indication of the development of an external auditory passage is seen, the tympanic membrane being partially covered posteriorly by a small fold of skin, usually enclosing the anterior border of the digastric muscle ; and in Crocodiles there is a definite integumentary valve moved by muscles. In certain Birds also (¢.9., Owls), there is a moveable valve. Mammals.—The auditory organ of Mammals reaches a much higher stage of development (Fig. 184), but in Monotremes it shows many points of resemblance to that of Reptiles and Birds. The cochlea now reaches its highest development, and grows into along tube which becomes spirally coiled on itself In this 1 In Man it forms nearly three coils, and in other Mammals from one and a half (Cetacea) up to as many as four or more. Thus in the Rabbit there are two and a half, in the Ox three and a half, in the Pig almost four, and in the Cat three coils. The cochlea, as well as the sacculus and all parts of the pars superior of the membranous labyrinth, vary considerably both in form and arrangement in the various types. 230 : COMPARATIVE ANATOMY respect, as well as in the more highly-specialised histological struc- ture of the cochlea, lies the characteristic peculiarity of the auditory organ of Mammals. The auditory nerve forms the axis of the spiral. In consequence of this development of the cochlea, the papilla Fic. 184.—Ricgut MremMBrANovus LABYRINTH OF RasBsit (Lepus cuniculus.) A, from the inner, and B from the outer side. (After G. Retzius.) sus, sinus utricularis sacculi ; csc, canalis reuniens Henseni ; vb, basilar branch of the auditory nerve (ac); f, facial nerve ; mb, basilar membrane; /is, spiral ligament. (Other letters as Figs. 180-183.) acustica, or, as it is called in Mammals, the organ of Corti, is drawn out to a considerable length, and the part of the wall of the cochlea on which it lies is called the basilar membrane, while the opposite wall is spoken of as the membrane of Reissner (Fig. 186): this is already represented in Crocodiles and Birds. AUDITORY ORGAN 231 The aperture of communication between the pars superior and pars inferior of the membranous labyrinth—that is, between the sacculus and utriculus, is entirely obliterated in Mammals, the two parts being only indirectly connected with one another by means of the ductus endolymphaticus. This bifurcates at its point of in- sertion into the membranous labyrinth, one limb being connected with the utriculus and the other with the sacculus (Fig. 179) ; while its upper end perforates the inner wall of the cartilaginous or bony auditory capsule, passes into the cranial cavity, and terminates by an expanded extremity (saccus endolymphaticus) in the dura mater. Osmosis can thus occur between the lymph contained in the en- dolymphatic and epicerebral lymph-spaces respectively. 7 The tympanic membrane is secondarily situated deep down in the external auditory meatus, and thus an important difference is seen between the Amphibia and Sauropsida on the one hand, and the Mammalia on the other. The tympanic cavity and Eustachian tube are well developed, and in place of the single bony columella of the Sauropsida there is a chain of three auditory ossicles, articulating with one another and extending between the tympanic membrane and the fenestra ovalis. These are—the malleus, the incws with its orbicular apophysis, and the stapes." The stapedius muscle arises from the wall of the tympanic cavity, and is inserted into the stapes, serving to keep the membrane of the fenestra ovalis stretched. It is supplied by the facial nerve and corresponds toa specialised portion of the hinder belly of the biventer, and can be traced back as faras Fishes. A tensor tympani supplied by the mandibular division of the trigeminal and derived from the internal pterygoid muscle (primarily from the masticatory muscles of Fishes) also arises from the wall of the tympanic cavity, and is inserted into the manubrium of the malleus, serving to keep the tympanic membrane stretched. Both these muscles are. composed of striated fibres. wa) As already mentioned, the form of the membranous labyrinth is repeated by its enclosing cartilaginous or bony capsule, which forms, so to speak, a sort of cast around its individual parts. Thus it is usual to speak of a cartilaginous or bony labyrinth as distin- guished from the membranous labyrinth enclosed within it, the two being separated by the perilymphatic cavity. In Mammals the skeletal labyrinth becomes ossified before any other part of the skull, and is incompletely divided into two parts enclosing the utriculus and sacculus respectively. With the latter part is connected the bony cochlea, the axis of which lessens in size from base to apex (Fig. 185), and round it a bony lamella (Jamina spiralis ossea) winds in a spiral manner; this extends into the cavity of the coils of the cochlea without quite reaching the opposite wall (Figs. 185 and 186), being continued outwards by two laterally-diverging lamelle, mentioned above as the basilar 1Cp. p. 100 and Figs. 80 and 233, in which the mode of development of these parts is shown. There is often also a bony (interhyal) rudiment in the tendon of the stapedius muscle. 232 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY membrane and membrane of Reissner ; these lie at an angle to one another and correspond to the inner walls of the membranous cochlea or scala media, which is approximately triangular in transverse section. ~ The outer wall abuts against a portion of the peripheral part of the bony cochlea (the region between Zs and . the peripheral end of & in Fig. 186). It is apparent therefore that pul , ZB ; << EB Vin TTT a ti0 TID —— mm De "Nig > Fic. 185.-—Bony CocuLEa oF Man. (After A. Ecker.) A, axis; Lso, Lso', lamina spiralis ossea, the free edge of which, perforated by the fibres of the auditory nerve, is visible at +; H, hamulus. Fic. 186.—DIAGRAMMATIC TRANSVERSE SECTION OF THE COCHLEA OF A MAMMAL. KS, bony cochlea; Lo, Lo', the two layers of the lamina spiralis ossea, between which at NV the auditory nerve (together with the ganglion, left of L)isseen ; L, limbus lamine spiralis; B, membrana basilaris, on which the neuro-epithe- lium lies ; R, Reissner’s membrane ; Sv, scala vestibula ; St, scala tympani ; Sm, scala media (membranous cochlea); C, membrane of Corti; Ls, liga- mentum spirale. the scala media does not by any means fill up the lumen of the bony cochlea, but that a cavity is left on either side of it, corresponding to those we have already met with in the auditory organ of Birds and known as the scala vestibult and scala tympant (Figs. 179 and 186). Both of these are continuous with the perilymphatic cavity, and, following the direction of the scala media, open into one another at the blind end of the latter (Fig. 179). The scala vestibuli is shut off from the tympanic cavity by the membrane of the fenestra ovalis, to which the stapes is applied externally ; the scala tympani is closed by the membrane of the fenestra rotunda. On the floor of the bony cochlea, not far from the fenestra rotunda, is an opening leading into a narrow canal, the ductus perilymphaticus, which serves as a communication between the perilymphatic cavity and the peripheral lymphatic trunks of the head (Fig. 179). The fibres of the auditory nerve running along the axis of the bony cochlea extend in their course laterally outwards, between the two plates 1 A ductus perilymphaticus can be plainly made out from Reptiles onwards. “AUDITORY ORGAN 233 of the lamina spiralis ossea (Figs. 186, 187). On the free border of the latter they pass out, and break up into terminal fibrille on the inner surface of the basilar membrane. The fibrillee extend to the sensory or auditory cells, and these are stretched as in a frame between the firm supporting and isolating cells or bacilli. From the surface of the bacilli a resistant net-like membrane (membrana reticularis) extends laterally, and through the meshes of the latter the hairs of the auditory cells project. The number of the outer hair-cells may be estimated at about 12,000. The auditory cells are covered by a thick and Fic. 187.—THE OrGAN oF Corti. (After Lavdowsky. ) Lo, Lo‘, the two plates of the lamina spiralis ossea; NV, auditory nerve with ganglion ; N14, N*, the nerve branching up into fibrille and passing to the auditory cells (G, @); Ba, Ba, bacilli, or supporting cells; Mz, membrana reticularis ; C, membrane of Corti ; Ls, ligamentum spirale, passing into the basilar membrane ; Sm, scala media; #, membrane of Reissner ; B, B, basilar membrane. firm membrane—the membrana tectoria s. Corti—which perhaps acts as a damper, and which arises from the labium vestibulare of the lamina spiralis ossea. The whole extent of the basilar membrane consists of clear thread- like shee very elastic fibres, of which about 16,000 to 20,000 can be made out in Man. A true pinna or auricula (Fig. 188), attached to the border of the external auditory meatus and projecting freely from the head, occurs in Mammals only (comp. p. 229). It is supported by cartilage, and the intrinsic and extrinsic muscles in connection with it are supplied by the facial nerve. The pinna arises from a series of rounded eminences on the first and second visceral arches, around the hyoid (spiracular) cleft, the lower part of which closes up, while the upper part gives rise to the external 234 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY auditory meatus. These auricular eminences unite to form a nearly con- tinuous ring, on which are later formed the characteristic protuberances. known as the helix, antihelia, tragus, and antitragus. The variations in the form of the pinna which are seen in various Mammals concern essentially the later formed portion which projects upwards and backwards from the head. (Fig. 188). Fic. °88.—THE Pinna ofr VARIOUS PRIMATES. In A, the shaded portion (b) represents the zone of the auditory eminences of the- embryo, the unshaded that of the later formed auditory fold. B, Man, Baboon and Ox, drawn to the same scale-and superposed : s’, s,” s, spina or- tip of theear. C, Macacus rhesus, with upwardly directed tip ; and D, Cerco- pithecus, with backwardly directed tip. EE, Man: the muscles are indicated as follows—m.a, attolens auricule ; m.a’, antitragicus ; m.t, tragicus ; m.t’, inconstant muscle, extending from the tragicus to the margin of the helix ; m.h’, helicis major ; m.h” helicis minor ; s, tip of the ear rolled over. A-)), after Schwalbe ; E after Henle. F. ORGANS OF NUTRITION. ALIMENTARY CANAL AND ITS APPENDAGES. The alimentary canal consists of a tube which begins at the aperture of the mouth, passes through the body cavity (ccelome), and ends at the vent or anus. Its walls consist of several layers (Fig 214,), of which the mucous membrane, lining the cavity of the tube, and the muscular layer external to this, extend throughout the canal. The mucous membrane consists of a superficial epithelium and a deeper connective-tissue layer, the outer part of which, or swb-mucosa, forms a loose network extending to the muscular layer. The epithelium is derived from the hypoblast, with the exception of that lining the mouth and anus (stomodeuwm and proctodeum*) which is epiblastic in origin (p. 5). The con- nective tissue and muscular layers arise from the splanchnic layer of mesoblast of the embryo; and the muscular coat, consisting almost entirely of unstriated fibres, supplied with nerves from the sympathetic system, is, as a rule, divided into two layers, the inner being constituted by circular, and the outer by longitudinal fibres. These serve for the contraction or peristalsis of the wall of the gut, and thus fulfil the double function of bringing the nutritive con- tents of the latter into the closest possible relation with the whole epithelial surface, and at the same time of removing from the body the substances which have not been absorbed. Striated (voluntary) muscular fibres, supplied by cerebral or spinal nerves, occur only at the anterior and posterior ends of the canal. An outer accessory serows coat, the peritonewm, encloses the gut externally in the region of the ceelome. _ This is covered on its ‘In embryos of many Vertebrates (e.g., Elasmobranchii, Amphibia), a pig- mented ridge of cells is formed on the dorsal side of the gut in the head and trunk, and gives rise to a rod lying close beneath the notochord. In certain cases it remains for a time in connection with the gut by a series of segmental canals which later disappear. The meaning and subsequent fate of this swb-notochordal rod or hypochorda are not known. * Phylogenetically the proctodzum is older than the stomodeum, and in many Vertebrates it is derived directly from the blastopore. 236 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY free surface by pavement epithelium, and, dorsally to the alimentary canal, is reflected round the entire body-cavity, converting the latter into a large lymph-sinus. A parietal layer, lining the body- cavity, and a visceral. layer, reflected over the viscera, can thus be distinguished in the peritoneum (Fig. 7). The part where one passes into the other, which is thus primitively double, is called the mesentery,! and this serves not only to support the alimentary canal from the dorsal body-wall, but also to conduct the vessels and nerves passing from the region of the vertebral column to the viscera. With the lengthening of the alimentary canal during development, the mesentery may give rise to a more or less com- plicated system of folds in which the viscera are enveloped. The most anterior section of the primitive alimentary tract of the Ichthyopsida functions as a respiratory cavity as well as a Jood-passage. A row of sac-like outgrowths, lying one behind the other, are developed from the mucous membrane and eventually unite with the ectoderm, apertures being formed to the exterior (Fig. 189, A). Between the channels thus formed, the visceral | arches (p. 69) are situated, and along the latter certain vessels are formed by means of which a continual interchange of gases can take place between the blood and the air contained in the water passing through the sacs. In this manner the gills or branchie (p. 273) arise. Even in the Amniota, although gills are not developed, the larger portion of the cavities of the mouth and pharynx lying behind the internal nostrils serves as a common air- and food-passage until a proper palate (pp. 92, 202) is formed (Fig. 189, C). With the formation of a definite palate (most Amniota), the primitive mouth-cavity becomes divided into an upper respiratory, and a lower nutritwe portion—that is, into a nasal and a secondary or definitive mouth-cavity. The separation, however, is not a com- plete one, the passage being common to both cavities for a certain region (Fig. 189, D). This region, in all Vertebrates, is called the pharynx, and in Mammals it is partially separated from the mouth by a fibrous and muscular fold, the velwm palati, or free edge of the soft palate? The alimentary canal of Vertebrates is typically divisible into the following principal sections (Fig. 190):—Mouth or oral cavity, pharynx, gullet or esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. The large intestine may communicate with a cloaca, into which the urinary and genital ducts also open, or it may open directly to the exterior. The small intestine may be further differentiated into dwodenwm, jejeunum and ilewm, and the large intestine into colon and rectum. 258 ‘gonp USOT, Areyuoupna ‘prurd § ‘oes-unzeds ‘s‘ds ¢ stpeulutos VINIISOA “Wlas'sa ¢ suauayop sea ‘Yap'a ‘snudprpide ‘pide ‘ stys0y qo ‘s7 f snuts yeyruesourm ‘s"h-n : Koupry jo gonp ‘un £ Aoupty ajo ‘py “ ; arteriosus; Ba, bulbus side, and there form the right and left roots arteriosus, from which the of the dorsal aorta; this extends back- main artery arises. wards along the ventral side of the ver- tebral axis into the tail as a large unpaired trunk, which gives off numerous branches—-including paired vitelline or omphalo-mesenteric arteries to the yolk-sac, and (except in Fishes and Dipnoans) allantoic. arteries to the embryonic urinary bladder or allantois (pp. 9 and 337, and Figs. 8, 9, 242, 24-4). Primarily, the blood becomes purified in the vessels which branch out over the yolk-sac, from whence it is returned by the vitelline or omphalo-mesenteric veins (Fig. 244). These join with the allantoic veins and veins of the alimentary canal to form what eventually becomes the hepatic portal vein, which divides up into capillaries in the liver. These capillaries then unite to form the hepatic veins, which open into the sinus venosus. Into the sinus venosus there also opens on either side a pre- caval vein or anterior vena cava, which receives an anterior cardinal or jugular vein from the head, and a posterior cardinal vein from the body generally (not including the alimentary canal). The caudal vein which lies directly below the caudal aorta, is con- nected with the posterior cardinals, usually indirectly, through the renal portal veins (comp. Fig. 264). The further development of the embryonic vessels may take place in one of three ways. The embryo may either leave the egg, and take on an aquatic 302 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY existence (Anamnia), making use of its branchial vessels for pur- poses of respiration, the entire allantois, in the case of the Am-~ Fie. 242.— DIAGRAM OF THE EMBRYONIC VASCULAR SYSTEM. (The portal systems are not shown. ) A, A, dorsal aorta; RA, RA, right and left roots of the aorta, which arise from the branchial vessels, Ab, = means of the collecting trunks, S, S'; ¢, c!, the carotids; Sb, subclavian artery ; KUL, gill-clefts; Sz, sinus venosus ; A, atrium; V, ventricle; B, truncus arteriosus; Vm, vitelline veins; Am, vitelline arteries ; Jc, Jc, common iliac arteries ; #, H, external iliac arteries ; All, allantoic (hypogastric) arteries ; Acd, caudal artery ; VC, HC, anterior and posterior cardinal veins ; Sb', subclavian vein ; D, precaval veins (ductus Cuvierii), into which the anterior and posterior cardinals open. phibia, giving rise to the bladder. In the Amniota, which from the first breathe by means of lungs, a modification and reduction of / VASCULAR SYSTEM D Fic. 243.—DIAGRAM OF THE ARTERIAL ARCHES OF VARIOUS VERTEBRATES. (After Boas.) A, embryonic condition; B, Fish; C, Urodele; D, Reptile (Lizard) ; Z, Bird ; F, Mammal. The parts which disappear are dotted. i and h, the two first embryonic arches, which almost always disappear ; 1—4, _ the four more posterior arches ; 1! and 3}, first and third afferent branchial arteries ; 1” and 3”, the corresponding efferent branchial arteries ; 2 in D and F,, second arch of the left side ; 2'in D, H and F, second arch of the right side ; a, b, c, the vessels into which the ventral arterial trunk is divided in Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals ; ao, dorsal aorta ; ca, carotid ; /, pulmonary artery ; s (in /), left subclavian artery ; st, ands (in B), ventral aorta. 304 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY the branchial vessels and allantois takes place, and the latter may even disappear entirely (see under Urinary organs). In the third case, the embryo undergoes a longer intra-uterine existence, the allantois coming into close connection with the walls of the uterus by means of the chorionic villi: the allantoic vessels extend into the wall of the uterus and come into more or less close relations with Ml A a 3 4g fh Ud, roy S>—y3 E-YIAN LZ NX ZB ZA Fic. 244.—DIAGRAM OF THE CIRCULATION OF THE YOLK-SAC AT THE END OF THE THIRD Day or INCUBATION IN THE CHick. (After Balfour.) H, heart ; AA, the second, third, and fourth aortic arches: the first has become obliterated in its median portion, but is continued at its proximal end as the external carotid, and at its distal end as the internal carotid; Ao, dorsal aorta; L.Of.A, left vitelline artery; R.Of.A, right vitelline artery; S.7, sinus terminalis; L.Of, left vitelline vein; R.Of, right vitelline vein; S.V, sinus venosus ; D.C, ductus Cuvieri; S.Ca.V, anterior cardinal or jugular vein; V.Ca, posterior cardinal vein. The veins are marked in outline, and the arteries are made black. The whole blastoderm has been removed from the egg, and is supposed to be viewed from below. Hence the left is seen on the right, and wice versa. the maternal vessels, thus serving for the respiration and nutrition of the foetus. In this way a placenta and a placental circulation arise (comp. Fig. 9, and pp. 9 and 337). On the appearance of pulmonary respiration, important changes take place in the branchial vessels and heart. The formation of a septum in both the atrium and ventricle leads to the presence NASCULAR SYSTEM 305 of two atria or auricles, and two ventricles, and the conus arteriosus and sinus venosus become eventually more or less incorporated in the ventricles and right auricle respectively. Thus a right (venous) and a left (arterial) half can be distinguished; and a new vessel, the pulmonary artery, arising from the last arterial arch, becomes connected with the right ventricle : this conveys venous blood to the lungs, while special vessels (pulmonary veins) return the oxygenated blood from the lungs to the left auricle, from which it passes into the left ventricle and so into the general circulation of the body. The branchial vessels never become functional as such, in any period of development either in Sauropsida or Mammalia ; but those which persist give rise, as already mentioned, to important vascular trunks of the head, neck (carotids), anterior extremities (sub- clavians), and lungs (pulmonary arteries), and also to the roots of the aorta, one or both of which may remain (comp. Fig. 243). The primitive number of arterial arches is six, the first two of which (belonging to the mandibular and hyoid arches respectively) almost always disappear early: in caducibranchiate Amphibia (including Anura) and in Amniota, the fifth arch also disappears. The third gives rise to the carotid arch; the fourth of both sides (Amphibia, Reptilia), or of one side (Aves, Mammalia), to the aortic or systemic arch, and the sixth to the pulmonary arch (Fig. 243). From the Dipnoi onwards, the posterior cardinals become more or less completely replaced functionally by a large unpaired vein, the postcaval or posterior vena cava, which opens independently into the right auricle. THE HEART, TOGETHER WITH THE ORIGINS OF THE MAIN VESSELS. Fishes (including Cyclostomes).—The heart in Fishes is situated in the anterior part of the body-cavity, close behind the head. It is formed on the same general plan as that described on p. 300, consisting of a ventricle with a truncus arteriosus or merely a bulbus (Cyclostomi, Teleostei), and an atrium or auricle, the latter receiving its blood from a sinus venosus, and being laterally expanded to form the appendices auricula (Figs. 245 and 246). In correspondence with the work which each portion has to perform, the walls of the atrium are thin, while those of the ventricle are much stronger, its muscles giving rise in the interior to a network and usually toaseries of large trabecule : this holds good through- out the Craniata. Between the sius venosus and atrium, and also between ventricle and atrium, membranous valves are present ; there are primarily two atrioventricular valves, but they may be further sub- divided. Numerous valves, arranged in rows, are present in the x 306 | COMPARATIVE ANATOMY muscular conus arteriosus (Fig. 246, A): these are most numerous in Elasmobranchs and Ganoids. There is a tendency, however, for the posterior valves, or those which lie nearest the ventricle, . BAS. Fie. 245.—Heart or A, Zygena malleus, FROM THE VENTRAL SIDE; B, oF Acan- thias vulgaris, FROM THE DORSAL SIDE, WITH THE ATRIUM CUT OPEN (after Rose); C, or A TELEosT (Silwrus glanis). A, A, atria; a, a, auricular appendages; V, ventricle ; tr (in B) and Ba (in C), bulbus arteriosus ; ¢7 (in A) and co (in B), conus arteriosus, ¢7 (in C), ventral aorta. D.C.d and D.C.s, right and left precavals; V.a.d. and V.a.s, right and left valve of the sinus venosus; O.a.v, atrio-ventricular aperture; 1l,a—4,a, afferent branchial arteries. gradually to undergo reduction (B). The most anterior row always persists, and corresponds to the single row of valves between the ventricle and bulbus in Teleosts (c) and Cyclostomes. Together with the reduction of these valves, the conus arteriosus also be- comes reduced in the last-mentioned forms, so that the non- / VASCULAR SYSTEM 307 contractile bulbus arteriosus usually lies close against the ventricle (Fig. 246, c). The heart of Fishes contains venous biced only, which it forces t TOT: \ \ A B C Fig. 246.—DIAGRAMMATIC LONGITUDINAL SECTION THROUGH THE HEARTS oF - Various Fisues. (From Boas’s Zoology.) A, Fish with well developed conus anteriosus (¢.g., Elasmobranch); B, Amia; C, a Teleost. In Band C the sinus venosus and atrium are not indicated. a, atrium ; b, bulbus arteriosus ; c, conus arteriosus ; /, valves ; s, sinus venosus ; t, ventral aorta; v, ventricle. through the afferent branchial arteries (Figs. 243, B, 245, c, and 264) into the capillaries of the gills, where it becomes oxygenated, to pass thence into the efferent branchial arteries, and so into the aortic roots. 3 Dipnoi. far forwards, near the head. In correspondence with the double mode of respiration, by lungs as well as by gills, it reaches a stage of development mid-way between that seen in Elasmo- branchs and in Amphibians (Figs. 247 and 248). The atrium becomes divided into a left and a right chamber by a septum, as does also the ventricle to some extent, owing to the presence of a cushion composed of muscular fibres and connective-tissue (Fig. 247) situated between the atrium and ventricle, and extending into both of these chambers: this acts as a valve, ordinary atrio- ventricular valves being absent. The sinus venosus, from the Dipnoi onwards, opens into the right atrium. The conus arteriosus is twisted spirally on itself (Fig. 248) : Ceratodus it is provided with eight transverse rows of valves, a : x2 308 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY rpost.car tpostcar Lant.car rantcar, > Laur 7 LJUgGy : Le —t.brv % weg --L.56C.V ~Le iy L Fic. 247. peulvetir Lpostcarad Luc La Fic. 248. Fic. 247.—HEartT oF Protopterus annectens. From the left side, part of the wall of the left atrium being removed. (After Rose.) W, fibrous cushion extending into the ventricle; Si.v, sinus venosus, within which the pulmonary vein (Lv) extends to open into the left auricle by a valvular aperture; L.Vh and R&.VA, left and right atria; S.a, septum atriorum ; Co, conus arteriosus. Fic. 248.—Ceratodus forstert. DIAGRAMMATIC VIEW OF THE HEART AND MAIN BiLoop VESSELS AS SEEN FROM THE VENTRAL SuRFACE. (From Parker and Haswell’s Zoology, after Baldwin Spencer. ) aff. 1, 2, 3, 4, afferent branchial arteries; 1 br, 2 br, 3 br, 4 br, position of gills ; c.a, conus arteriosus; d.a, dorsal aorta; d.c, ductus Cuvieri; epz.1, epi.2, epi.3, epi.4, efferent branchial arteries ; hy.art, hyoidean artery ; 7. v. c, post- caval vein ; /.ant.car, left anterior carotid artery ; /.aur, left auricle; /.br.v, left brachial vein ; /.jug.v, left jugular vein ; /.post.car, left posterior caro- tid artery ; /.post.card, left posterior cardinal vein ; /.pul.art, left pulmonary artery ; /.sc.v, left sub-scapular vein ; 7.ant.car, right anterior carotid artery ; r.aur, right auricle ; r.br.v, right brachial vein ; r.jug.v, right jugular vein ; r.post.car, right posterior carotid ; 7.pul.art, right pulmonary artery ; 7.sc.v, right sub-scapular vein ; vent, ventricle. begins to be divided into two chambers. In Protopterus this divi- sion is complete, so that two currents of blood, mainly arterial and VASCULAR SYSTEM 309 mainly venous respectively, pass out from the heart side by side. The former comes from the pulmonary vein, from which it passes into the left atrium, thence into the left side of the ventricle, and so to the two anterior branchial arteries. The venous current, on the other hand, passes from the right side of the ventricle into the third and fourth afferent branchial arteries and thence to the corresponding gills, where it becomes purified ; it reaches the aortic roots by means of the efferent branchial arteries. The paired pul- monary artery arises from the fourth efferent branchial in Ceratodus (Fig. 248), and from the aortic root in Protopterus and Lepidosiren, that of the right side bifurcating to supply the dorsal surface of the lung or lungs (p. 288), while that of the left side supplies the ventral surface. The two pulmonary veins unite to form a median trunk which becomes closely connected with the sinus venosus, so as to appear sunk within its walls (Fig. 247). Thus the blood becomes once more purified before it passes into the left ventricle. A posteaval vein, present from the Dipnoi onwards, opens into the sinus venosus posteriorly to the precavals, and with it the hepatic veins communicate (Figs. 248 and 267). Amphibia.— With the exception of the Gymnophiona, in which it is situated some distance back, the heart in all Amphibians lies far forwards, below the anterior vertebrae. A septum atriorum is well developed, but in Urodelaand Gymnophiona it is more or less fenes- Fic. 249.—DIAGRAM SHOWING THE COURSE OF THE BLOOD THROUGH THE HEART IN Urodela (A) AND Anura (B). A, right atrium; A’, left atrium ; V, ventricle ; #r, conus arteriosus, divided:in Anura (B) into two portions, tr, tr’: through ¢7 venous blood passes into the pulmonary arteries, Ap', Ap‘, while through fr! mixed blood goes to the carotids, ci—ce, and to the roots of the aorta, RA ; /7, /v, pulmonary veins ; v, v, pre- and post-cavals (only one precaval is indicated). ~~ trated (Fig. 250). There are always two fibrous, pocket-like atrio- ventricular valves, which are connected with the walls of the ventricle by cords. The two pulmonary veins unite before opening into the left atrium. 310. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY The cavity of the ventricle is unpaired, and neither in Urodela nor Anura shows any trace of a septum, so that the blood passing out from it must. have a mixed character (Fig. 249). The ven- tricle is usually short and compressed, but is more elongated in Amphiuma, Proteus, and the Gymnophiona. It is continued an- teriorly into a conus arteriosus, as in Elasmobranchs, Ganoids, and Dipnoans; this has usually a slight spiral twist, and possesses a transverse row of valves at either end, as well as a spiral fold ex- tending into its lumen.! This holds good for the Axolotl, Amblystoma, Fig. 250.—Hnart or Cryptobranchus japonicus. From the ventral side. (After Rose.) Tz left atrium is cut open. S.a, septum atriorum, perforated by numerous small apertures ; L.v, L.v!, the two pulmonary veins, opening by a a aperture into the left atrium ; O.av, atrio-ventricular aperture ; 1%, 4%, the four arterial arches; P.d. and P.s, left and right pulmonary arteries; ¢, truncus arteriosus; L.Vh, R.Vh, left and right atria ; V.s.d and V.s.s, subclavian veins ; V.j.d and V.j.s, jugular veins ; V.c.d, V.c.s, posterior cardinal veins ; V.c.7, postcaval vein. Salamandra, Amphiuma, and Siren. In others (e¢g., Necturus, Proteus, Gymnophiona), retrogression is seen in a lengthening of the conus, the disappearance of the spiral fold, and the presence of only a single row of valves. In Anura, the fold lying within the conus extends so far back that no undivided portion of the cavity is left. The consequence of this is that the blood passing into the hindermost pair of the arterial arches—that from which the pulmonary arteries arise—is mainly venous, while the others contain more or less mixed blood (Fig. 249, B) ; for, owing to the spongy nature of the ventricle, there 1 This spiral fold corresponds to a series of fused valves. VASCULAR SYSTEM 311 is no time for its contained blood to get thoroughly mixed before it is forced into the conus. _As in the Dipnoi, four afferent branchial arteries (Fig. 250) arise on either side from the short conus in the Amphibia, which —taking as a type the larva of Salamandra—have the follow- ing relations (comp. Fig. 243, c). | _ The three anterior arteries pass to numerous external gill-tufts, in which they break up into capillaries (Fig. 251). From the latter three efferent vessels arise, which pass to the dorsal side, and there unite on either side to form the aortic root. The fourth afferent Fic. 251.—THE ARTERIAL ARCHES OF THE LARVA OF A SALAMANDER. (Slightly diagrammatic.) (After J. E. V. Boas.) tr, truncus arteriosus ; 1 to 3, the three afferent branchial arteries ; J to IJJ, the corresponding efferent arteries ; 4, the fourth arterial arch, which becomes connected with the pulmonary artery (Ap); a, a, direct anastomoses between the second and third afferent and efferent branchial arteries; ce, external carotid ; cz, internal carotid ; +, net-like anastomoses between the external carotid and the first afferent branchial artery, which give rise later to the ‘‘carotid gland”; RA, aortic roots ; Ao, dorsal aorta. The arrows show the course which the blood takes. branchial artery, which is smaller than the others, does not pass to a gill, but to the pulmonary artery, which arises from the third efferent branchial. The pulmonary artery, therefore, contains far more arterial than venous blood, and thus the lungs of the Sala- mander larva, like the air-bladder of Fishes, can only be of secondary importance in respiration. The internal carotid arises from the first afferent branchial artery, towards the middle line, the external carotid coming off further outwards (Fig. 251). The latter, as it passes forwards, becomes connected with the first afferent branchial by net-like anas- tomoses, and these give rise later to the so-called “ carotid gland” } 1The ‘‘carotid gland” loses its character as a rete mirabile (comp. p. 333), and in the adult consists simply of a muscular vesicle with septa in its interior. 312 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY of the adult, which probably functions as an accessory heart. Direct connections exist between the second and third afferent and efferent arteries. Towards the end of the larval period, the second efferent bran- chial artery increasés considerably in relative size, and the fourth ‘arterial arch also becomes larger. By a reduction of the anasto- mosis with the‘ third arch, the fourth carries most of the blood for ‘the pulmonary artery, and the latter thus now contains more venous than arterial blood. When branchial respiration ceases, the anasto- moses between the afferent and etferent branchial arteries no longer consist of capillaries, but a direct connection between them be- comes established (Fig. 252). Finally, the connection between the ce (ea ‘ LU 2 —- BA 4 ; tr ~Ap Fic. 252.—ArreRIAL ARCHES OF AN ADULT Salamandra maculosa, SHOWN SPREAD ouT. (After J. E. V. Boas.) co, tr, truncus arteriosus ; 1 to 4, the four arterial arches ; ce, external carotid ; cd, ‘* carotid gland” ; cz, internal carotid. The fourth arterial arch, which gives rise to the pulmonary artery (47), has increased considerably in size relatively, and is only connected by a delicate ductus Botalli (+) with the second’and third arches ; RA, root of the aorta; @, cesophageal vessels. first and second branchial arches disappears, the former giving rise to the carotid and the latter forming the large aortic root ; an anastomosis remains throughout life, however, between the fourth arch, which forms the pulmonary artery, and the second and third arches. This is usually spoken of as the ductus Botalli. The third arch varies greatly in its development ; it may be present on one side only, or may even be entirely wanting. In the larve of Anura there are also four afferent branchial arteries present on either side, but these are connected with the corresponding efferent vessels by capillaries only, there being no direct anastomoses (compare Fig. 251). The consequence of this is that all the blood becomes oxygenated. In the adult Frog the third arterial arch becomes entirely VASCULAR SYSTEM 313 obliterated, and there is no ductus Botalli: the other vessels re- semble those of the Salamander. In lungless forms (p. 290) a correlative reduction of the pulmonary vessels occurs. Reptiles.—As in all Amniota, the heart of Reptiles arises far forwards in the neighbourhood of the gill-clefts, but on the forma- tion of a neck it comes to lie much further back than is the case in Fig. 253. Heart or A, Lacerta muralis, AND B, oF A LARGE Varanus, SHOWN CUT OPEN; C, DIAGRAM OF THE REPTILIAN HEART. V, V1, ventricles ; A, A’, atria ; tr, Trea, innomi- nate trunk; 1, 2, first and second arterial arches; Ap, Ap', pulmonary arteries; Vp, ; pulmonary vein; + and *, right and left aortic arches ; RA, root of aorta; Ao, dorsal aorta ; Ca, Ca!, carotids ; Asc, As, subclavian arteries. J, jugular vein; Vs, subclavian vein ; Ci, postcaval : these three veins open into the sinus venosus, which lies on the dorsal side of the heart, above the point indicated by the letter S. In the diagram C the pre- and postcavals are indicated by Ve, Ve, only one precaval being represented. the Anamnia.! The carotid arteries and jugular veins are thus. correspondingly elongated. : The principal advance in structure as compared with the Am- phibian heart is seen in the appearance of a muscular ventricular _ 1 It is situated furthest forwards in the majority of Lizards and in Chelonians : in Amphisbeenians, Snakes and Crocodiles it lies much further back. 314 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY septum, which may be incomplete, as in Lizards (Fig. 253, B), Snakes, and Chelonians, or complete, as in Crocodiles. : The conus arteriosus now becomes practically absorbed into the ventricular portion of the heart, and each aortic root may be made up at its origin of two arches, anastomosing with one another (Lacerta, Fig. 243, A), or of one only (certain Lizards, Snakes, Chelonians, and Crocodiles, Figs. 253, B, 255), from which the carotid artery arises directly. The left and right aortic arches cross at their base, so that the left arises on the right side, and vice versa.1 The most posterior arterial arch gives rise to the pul- monary artery (comp. Fig. 243, D). The blood from the right ventricle passes into the pulmonary | artery as well as into the left aortic arch, and, according as the septum A NSE al aoe | oabd. Fie, 254.—HEART or Cyclodus boddaertet. From the dorsal side: (After Rise). The sinus venosus is almost entirely absorbed into the right atrium. D.C.s, D.C.d, precaval veins; V.c.i, postcaval vein; V.j.d, jugular, V.s.d, sub- clavian, and V.C.d. posterior cardinal vein of the right side. L.v, pulmonary vein; P.s, P.d, pulmonary arteries ; An.s, An, innominate arteries ; Ao.abd, dorsal aorta ; Sp.7, spatium intersepto-valvulare (comp. Fig. 257). ventriculorum is complete or incomplete, is either entirely venous (Crocodiles) or mixed (other Reptiles, Fig. 253, c). The valves of the heart have undergone a considerable reduction in Reptiles: at the origin both of the aorta and of the pulmonary artery there is only a single row; this is also the case in all other Amniota. In Crocodiles the right atrio-ventricular aperture is guarded by a large muscular valve on the right (outer) side of the aperture. The sinus venosus, which even in the Amphibia—especially Anura—shows indications of becoming sunk into the right atrium, is now usually no longer recognisable as a distinct chamber ex- - | A small aperture of communication between the two aortic roots, the foramen Panzze, exists in Crocodiles. VASCULAR SYSTEM 315 ternally (Figs. 254—256). It becomes partially divided into two portions by a septum ; and the left precaval, opening on the left of Fig. 255. Fig. 256. Fie. 255.—Heart or a Youne Crocodilus niloticus. From the dorsal side. (After Rése). .Tr.cc, common carotid ; S.s, S.d, subclavian arteries ; A.s and A.d, left and right aortic arches ; A.m, mesenteric artery ; L.V.h, R.V.h, left and right atria ; V.c.c, coronary vein. Other letters as in Fig. 244. . af Fie. 256.—Hxart oF Crocodilus niloticus. From the right side. (After Rése). Part of the wall of the right atrium is removed. O.a.v, atrio-ventricular aperture ; Va.d and Va.s, the two sinu-auricular valves, the white line between which is the margin of the sinu-atrial septum. Other letters as in Figs. 244 and 245. this septum, may appear to enter the right atrium independently (e.g., Snakes.) The pulmonary veins unite into a single trunk before entering the left atrium. Birds and Mammals.—lIn these Classes, the atrial and ventri- cular septa are always complete, and there is no longer any mixture 316 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY of the arterial and venous blood. The muscular walls of the ventricle are strongly developed and very compact. This is particularly the case in the left ventricle, on the inner wall of which the papillary muscles are well developed : the left ventricle is partially surrounded by the right, the cavity of the latter having a semilunar transverse - section, and its walls being much thinner than those of the former (Fig. 258). In both Birds and Mammals the blood from the head and body passes by means of the precavals and postcaval into the right. Fic. 257.—Heart or Goose (Anser vulgaris), DISSECTED FROM THE RIGHT SIDE. (After Rése.) The right atrium and ventricle are cut open, and their walls reflected. S.a, septum atriorum ; L. Vi, limbus Vienssenii—a ridge arising from the ventral wall of the right atrium ; the space between this and the septum atriorum is known as the spatium intersepto-valvulare (comp. Figs. 254 and 255). V.a.s, V.a.d, the two sinu-auricular valves, situated at the entrance of the postcaval ; MK, MK’, muscular right atrio-ventricular valve ; Ao, aorta; V.c.s.d, right precaval ; V.c.c, aperture of coronary vein. atrium, as docs also that from the walls of the heart through the coronary vein! (Figs. 257, 259, 260, B), and the sinus venosus— especially in Mammals—is scarcely recognisable (Figs. 257, 260) : the right atrium is separated from the right ventricle by means of a well-developed valve. In Birds (Fig. 257) this valve resembles that of Crocodiles, and is very large and entirely muscular, while in most Mammals it consists of three membranous lappets (tricuspid 1 Coronary veins are present in most of the lower Vertebrates also (comp. ¢.g., Fig. 255), and the heart is supplied with arterial blood by coronary arteries, usually arising in Fishes from a hypobranchial artery connected with the efferent branchials. or subclavians, and in higher forms from the base of the aorta. VASCULAR SYSTEM mary, valve) to which are attached tendinous cords,! arising from the papillary muscles. In Birds the left atrio-ventricular aperture is provided with a valve consisting of three membranous folds : in Mammals there are only two folds, and the valve is therefore known as the bicuspid or mitral ; three semilunar pocket-like valves are also present at the origins of the pulmonary artery and aorta in both Birds and Mammals. As regards the origin of the great vessels, Birds are distinguished from Mammals by the fact that in them the right, while in Mammals Fic. 258. Fic. 259. Fic. 258.—TRANSVERSE SECTION THROUGH THE VENTRICLES OF Grus cinerea. Vd, right, and Vg, left ventricle ; S, septum ventriculorum. Fie. 259.—HEaART oF Ornithorhynchus paradoxus. From the dorsal side. (After Rose. ) V.c.s.8, V.c.s.d, precaval veins; V.c.i, postcaval ; V.c.c, coronary vein; V.c.s.s, coronary sinus; L.v, pulmonary veins; Ao, aorta; P.s, P.d, pulmonary arteries; R.V.L, right atrium ; S.p.7, Spatium intersepto-valvulare. the left aortic arch persists (Fig. 243, E, F); the corresponding arch of the other side in both cases gives rise to part of the subclavian artery. Thus in both Birds and Maminals there is only a@ single aortic arch. As in Amphibians, the posterior arterial arch gives rise to the pulmonary artery. The pulmonary veins, two from each lung, open close together into the left atrium (Fig. 259). Amongst the more important points in the development of the heart may be mentioned the fact that in the embryo the two atria communicate with one another secondarily by means of the foramen ovale, through which the blood from the postcaval passes into the left ventricle (Fig. 260). This foramen closes up when the lungs - 1 There are no chord tendinee in Monotremes, the heart of which in many respects resembles that of the Sauropsida. 318 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY come into use, but its position can still be recognised as a thin area (fossa ovalts) in the atrial septum, surrounded by a fold (annulus ovalis). Extending from this to the base ofthe postcaval and right precaval respectively are two folds, known as the Eustachian and A Fic. 260.—Herart or HumAN Fatus (8tH Month). A, From the right, and B, from the left side. (After Rése.) The walls of the atrium and ventricle are partly removed in each figure. Va.s, left sinu-auricular valve, fused with the septum atriorum (S.a, V.a./) ; Va.Th, Thebesian valve, in direct connection with the Eustachian valve (Va.#); L.V, left atrium ; /.0.v, foramen ovale ; V.c.s, left precaval ; V.c.i, postcaval ; A.o, aorta; P, P.d, P.s, pulmonary artery ; DB, ductus Botalli (ductus arteriosus); L.v. pulmonary vein; V.c.c, coronary vein, Thebesian valves (Fig. 260, A); these represent the remains of the right sinu-auricular valve, and serve in the embryo to. conduct the blood from the right atrium into the left. Great variations are seen in the mode of origin of the carotids and subclavians from the arch of the aorta in Mammals. Thus E é C Cee s the . OS Fic. 261.—Fivre DIrrFerRENt Mops oF ORIGIN OF THE GREAT VESSELS FROM — THE ARCH OF THE AORTA IN MAMMATIS, | D & Ao, aortic arch ; tb, the, brachiocephalic trunk ; ¢, carotids ; s, subclavians. there may be a brachiocephalic or innominate irunk on either side (Fig. 261, A); or an unpaired common brachiocephalic, from which the carotid and subclavian of one or both sides arise (B, C, E); or, , ARTERIAL SYSTEM 319 finally, a common trunk of origin for the carotids, the subclavians arising independently on either side of it (D). ARTERIAL SYSTEM. The essential relations of the carotid arteries, dorsal aorta, and pulmonary arteries, as well as the embryonic vitelline arteries, have already been dealt with (pp.301—-305, Figs. 242, 264, &c.). An external carotid and an internal carotid arise on either side independently from the anterior efferent branchial arteries in Fishes and Dipnoans, but from the Amphibia onwards these vessels are formed by the bifurca- tion of each common carotid. In these higher types, the internal carotid passes entirely into the cranial cavity, and supplies the brain with blood, while the external carotid goes to the external parts of the head (face, tongue, and muscles of mastication). The origin of the subclavian artery, which supplies the anterior extremity, is very inconstant, being sometimes symmetrical, some- times asymmetrical. It arises either in connection with the posterior efferent branchial vessels, or from the roots or main trunk of the aorta (Figs. 262-264, &c.). Extending outwards towards the free extremity, the subclavian passes into the brachial artery, from which a dorsal and aventral branch arise, and these subdivide again in the limb. | From the dorsal aorta, in which a thoracic and an abdominal portion can be disiinguished in Mammals in addition to the caudal portion, arise parietal (intercostal, lumbar), and celiac, mesenteric, and urinogenital arteries, supplying the body-walls and viscera re- spectively. ‘These all vary greatly both in number and relative size ; thus, for instance, there is sometimes a single caliaco-mesen- teric artery (Fig. 262), sometimes a separate’ coeliac, and one or more mesenteric arteries (Fig. 264);! the renal and genttal arteries -also vary in number and arrangement. All the branches of the dorsal aorta, however, present primarily an approximately metameric character, their number becoming more or less reduced owing to a concentration of the vessels, which is more marked in short-bodied than in long-bodied Vertebrates. The aorta is continued posteriorly into the caudal artery, which usually lies within a ecelomic canal enclosed by the ventral arches of the vertebre (Figs. 262-264); the degree of its development is naturally in correspondence with the size of the tail. In cases where the latter is rudimentary, as in Anthropoids and Man for instance, the caudal aorta is spoken of as the median sacral artery, and the aorta here appears to be directly continued, not by it, but 1 The celiac typically supplies the stomach, liver, and spleen ; one or more anterior mesenterics the whole intestine with the exception of the rectum, as well as the pancreas ; and a posterior mesenteric the rectum. 320 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Fic. 262.—TuHr ARTERIAL SystEM OF Salamandra maculosa. RA, roots of the aorta ; Ao, Ao, dorsal aorta; Sc, subclavian artery, from which the cutaneous artery (Cw) arises: the latter anastomoses posteriorly with the epigastric artery #; Ov, ovarian arteries; Cm, cceliaco-mesenteric ; H, hepatic artery ; J, J, Z, anterior mesenteric arteries passing to the small intestine ; M, M, posterior mesenteric arteries; R, AR, renal arteries; Jc, common iliac; Cr, crural artery; Hy, hypogastric artery; A, A, vesical (allantoic) arteries; Aoc, caudal aorta; P, pharynx and cesophagus; m, stomach ; », pancreas ; /, liver; d, d, small intestine ; e, rectum ; B/, urinary bladder ; CZ, cloaca. 321 Fic. 263.—Tue ARTERIAL System oF Hmys europea. Tr, trachea ; Br, Br, the two bronchi; m, stomach; d, d, small intestine ; e, large intestine ; Ap, pulmonary artery ; Cac, common arotids, with tracheal and cesophageal branches (7, Oe); Sc, subclavian artery; Ver,vertebral artery ; RA, roots of the aorta; Ao, dorsal aorta ; Co, Co, and Me, cceliaco- mesenteric artery, which here arises as a bundle of separate vessels; UG, urinogenital arteries; Cr, crural artery ; H#, epigastric artery; Js, sciatic artery ; MWB, ‘posterior mesenteric arteries ; C’, caudal aorta. x 322 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY by the common iliac arteries, which pass outwards into the pelvic region. Each common. iliac artery becomes divided into an internal iliac, or hypogastric, supplying the viscera of the pelvis, and derived from the~proximal portion of the embryonic allantoic artery, and an external iliac, which is continued into the crural or Jemoral and supplies the hinder extremity (Fig. 262). In some cases the internal and external iliacs come off separately from the aorta (Fig. 263). The function of the femoral may be largely taken by a sciatic artery arising separately from the aorta (Birds). The main vessels again branch out in the limb. VENOUS SYSTEM. Fishes.—Taking the Elasmobranchii more particularly into consideration, a few of the more important facts as regards the development of the veins must first be considered (comp. p. 301). The first veins to appear in the embryo are the paired omphalo- mesenteric veins, which bring back the blood from.the surface of the yolk and from the walls of the gut (Fig. 265, I, II). The vessels from the former region are known as vitelline veins, while those from the latter give rise to swbintestinal veins (IJI—VII), ° running beneath the embryonic intestine, which primarily extends into the caudal region as the post-anal gut. On the disappearance of the latter, the posterior part of the subintestinal vessels gives rise to the caudal vein, which now lies directly beneath the caudal aorta and loses its direct connection with the anterior part (VITI— XIT). As the liver is gradually developed, the main trunk of the left omphalo-mesenteric vein breaks up into capillaries within this organ, and these again unite anteriorly, opening into the proximal ends of both omphalo-mesenteric veins. The latter thus give rise to the hepatic veins, which open into the sinus venosus (or precaval, e.g., in Cyclostomes). New vessels from the various parts of the alimentary canal (gastric, splenic, and mesenteric veins) are gradually developed, the pre-caudal portion of the subintestinal vein becoming of minor -importance ; all these vessels unite to form what is now known as the hepatic portal vein, and thus pour their blood through the capillaries of the liver (Figs. 270, 264—268). Anteriorly to the heart, a paired precaval vein (ductus Cuvieri) is developed (Figs. 264268), and opens into the sinus venosus. This isformed,on either side, by the confluence of ananteriorand a posterior cardinal vein, the former bringing back the blood from the head (external and internal jugular veins),' and the latter from the body, 1 A single or paired inferior jugular from the ventral part of the head. may also be present (Fig. 266). : 323 VENOUS SYSTEM ‘UIOA [R10}eT fa°70) § UIOA OVI ‘a°ze f UIOA WeLAvpoqns ‘ajo's fsurea oryedoy ‘ary £ uroa [eqiod oedoy ‘a'd-y ‘eavoord ‘a‘aa'ud { sutea oryeutoeds ‘a-ds ¢]wuIpavo aotioysod ‘a*puo {suloA TeUet quoYoAod ‘a*u f [eqyaod Jwuer ‘a'd'w fuIOA Jepneo ‘a*po f UleA ([eUTpAvO JOLIOJUR) aepnsnl ‘al ‘Aaoqre pepneo ‘n*po { K1041e OBIT ‘v"72 £ SoTIOqZAV [RUDI “D'u £ SoTIEqIe OTVeUIIEds ‘mds § (yds d “(ud d < , Aiddns ‘& er) Cayemayy "6 nds § (jds) uoojds pure ‘(ud) svorourd ‘(7u2) ourysoqut oy Sutdyddns ‘A10jav ofsequosewt “w'sw { (47) JoatT pure (7s) YoRuroys o4y Surdjddns ‘Kaoqae ovo ‘v'7o § Lroqae uvravpoqns ‘ojos $ piyoavo “v9 { ey10e [esIop ‘on*p f solIoyIe PeIyYOURIG YUaJao “M°ug"a {soLloqie TVIpouvsq Yuoseye ‘o'ug'y ¢Vq10ON [RAqUOA ‘on'a S SNSOLoJIe snouNIy “vp'o ¢ epolaqueA ‘a f uINLIye “nM f snsOUdA SNUIs ‘a's (‘Abojoug hanjuowayy 8,1oyaieg *f¢ “J, Woig) ‘“HSIapod V 40 WHELSAG UVIAOSVA FHL JO MATA ACIGTOMVNNVADVIGINAG—"F9Z “OLA 2'798 a, ape L pe yale : : , y ees . — . aadimaie ss ————— a ————— . ‘ : i : < ; y, BuZe in which it runs on either side of the aorta; between it and the A subclavian vein from the pectoral fin also opens into kidneys. ¥-2 324 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Fic. 265.—D1aGrRam oF STAGES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE VEINS IN ELASMO- BRANCHS. (I—XI after Rabl, XII after F. Hochstetter. ) Ca, Cp, anterior and posterior cardinal veins; Cdv, caudal vein; D,D, vitelline veins ; DC, precaval vein or sinus; Cl, region of the cloaca; H, sinus venosus of heart ; J, subintestinal vein; J7.V, interrenal vein; Lb, hepatic veins ; **, hepatic sinus; Np/, renal portal system; VP, hepatic portal vein ; Vpo, capillaries of the hepatic portal system; +, cardinal sinus; Sbc, sub- clavian vein ; Os, Od, left and right omphalo-mesenteric veins. the precaval sinus or proximal end of the posterior cardinal vein. The caudal vein usually bifurcates posteriorly to the cloaca, each branch passing along the outer side of the corresponding kidney, VENOUS SYSTEM 325 Fic. 266.—For description see next page. 326 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Fic. 266.— DIAGRAM OF THE VEINS OF AN ELASMOBRANCH. H, heart ; Duct.Cuv, precaval sinus ; Card.ant (Jug), anterior cardinal (jugular) ; the inferior jugular is seen nearer the middle line ; Subc/, subclavian ; Sect. V, lateral vein, which arises from a venous network in the region of the cloaca (Ven.Cl.B), from one or more cutaneous veins of the tail (Cut. V), from the veins of the body-walls, and from those of the pelvic fins (HEV) ; Caud.v, caudal vein, which divides into two renal portals, A, A}, at the posterior end of the kidneys (N): from these arise the adve- hent veins of the renal portal system (V.adv); V.rev, revehent renal veins, from which the posterior cardinals (CV) arise; Card.V.S, cardinal sinus, communicating with its fellow in the middle line; V.port, hepatic portal vein, receiving its blood from the intestine (HD), stomach (Mg), and cesophagus (Oes.V), and anastomosing with the lateral vein posteriorly, and with the cardinal sinus anteriorly ; Gen.V, genital veins; L.V.S, hepatic sinus ; Leb, liver. and giving off advehent vessels into the latter (Figs. 264, 265, IX —XIT, 266-268). These divide up into capillaries, forming a renal portal system, the capillaries again uniting to form revehent veins which open into the posterior cardinals. ‘Thus the typical condition of the veins seen in adult Fishes is reached, and only a few of the more important modifications can be mentioned here. In Cyclostomes and Elasmobranchs, the anterior part of the subintestinal vein still persists as a small vessel running within the spiral valve of the intestine. In the latter Order, many of the veins (¢.g., precavals, anteriorand posterior cardinals, inferior jugulars, hepatic and genital veins) enlarge to form capacious sinuses, and a large lateral vein (Figs. 264, 266), running in the body-walls either close to the skin or just external to the peritoneum, opens into each precaval or posterior cardinal. This probably corresponds to the vein of the primary lateral-fin folds (p. 104). A renal portal system is said to be absent in Cyclostomes, and is inconstant and very variable amongst Ganoids and Teleosts: in many instances the caudal vein communicates directly with one or with both posterior cardinals, and in the former case the other cardinal shows a tendency to become reduced in size: a similar reduction occurs in many of the forms to be described next. Dipnoi.—The chief point of interest as regards the veins of Dipnoans (Fig. 267) is the presence of a large unpaired postcaval vein, derived in part from the posterior cardinal, and comparable to that of the Amphibia and Amniota. A renal portal system is present, and the blood from the kidneys is collected into two veins having the relations of posterior cardinals. Only the left of these however, opens anteriorly into the corresponding precaval, the right, which is much the larger of the two, passing along the dorsal border of the liver to open independently into the sinus venosus in the middle line. The renal portion of this vein is evidently homologous with the corresponding part of the posterior cardinal, the anterior portion of which can no longer be recognised. VENOUS SYSTEM 327 Vicaua Fic. 267.—DIAGRAM OF THE VENOUS SysTEM oF Protopterus annectens, (After W. N. Parker.) v, ventricle; at, atrium ; p, pericardium; ca, conus arteriosus ; Ji, Je, internal and external jugular ; Vsbe, subclavian ; DC, DO’, precaval veins ; Cp, post- caval; Vh, Vh, hepatic veins; L, liver; G.B, gall-bladder ; G.G, bile-duct ; M, “stomach”; Da, intestine; L.G, lymphoid organ in the walls of the stomach, the blood from which passes into the hepatic portal veins (Vpo, Vpo'); par.v, parietal veins, from the body-walls; Ov.v, ovarian veins ; N, N, kidneys; BV, pelvic vein; V.caud, caudal vein; V.ren.port, renal portal vein ; ws, cesophageal vein ; V.card, left posterior cardinal vein, which is connected by anastomoses (ans) with the postcaval (Cp) in the region of the kidneys. 328 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Thus the postcaval is made up of a posterior or renal portion, and of an independently developed anterior or hepatic portion. In Ceratodus, the. posterior cardinal and postcaval are directly continuous with the caudal vein, and the renal portal, receiving branches from the posterior end of the body, arises from the iliac vein, which also gives off a pelvic branch. The latter unites with its fellow in the middle line to form a median abdominal vein, com- parable to that of the Amphibia, and opening into the sinus venosus. | The two pulmonary veins unite into a single trunk before opening into the left atrium (p. 309). Amphibia.—A large postcaval vein arises in essentially the same manner as in the Dipnoi, its renal section being formed by the fusion of the two posterior cardinals in this region. The hepatic portion apparently arises in part from the right omphalo- - mesenteric vein, and in part independently, while the hepatic portal vein is developed from the left omphalo-mesenteric. The postcaval receives blood from the kidneys and generative organs, as well as indirectly from the posterior extremities, body-walls, and tail (when present). The anterior part of doth posterior cardinals persists in Urodeles and in Bombinator as the paired azygos vein, and this may exceptionally be present on one or both sides in other Anurans. It communicates with the corresponding precaval (Fig. 268). A renal portal system is present, and is formed, as in Fishes, by the bifurcation of the caudal vein, which is wanting in adult Anura; into the renal portal open the veins from the hind-limb, and vessels from the body-wall often also communicate with it. The blood from the kidneys passes into the postcaval. Connecting the right and left renal portals (or femorals) is a transverse pelvic vein, from which, in the medio-ventral line of the body, an abdominal or epigastric vein arises,as in Ceratodus: this is primitively paired,and corresponds genetically with the lateral veins of Elasmobranchs ; it extends forwards in the ventral body-wall into the liver, in which it breaks up into capillaries, becoming secondarily connected by anastomoses with the hepatic portal vein (Fig. 268). The ab- dominal vein receives blood from the cloaca, bladder, and body- walls. In Urodeles remains of the subintestinal vein also open into the hepatic portal system. The arrangement of the anterior cardinals (external and inter- nal jugulars) is essentially similar to that seen in Fishes and Dipnoans. Amniota.—The section of the right posterior cardinal vein in the region of the embryonic kidney (mesonephros, p. 341) gives rise, as in the Dipnoi, to the hinder part of the postcaval: the hepatic section of the latter arises asin Amphibia. In the Saur- opsida, the anterior portions of both posterior cardinals disappear, Duct.Cuv. ---Card. ant.(Jug) H ! { t ' ! t ‘ ! ! t ! { { ! ! ! ! ! ‘ Subel s s 4 Card.post. (Axygos.) V Cava inf- pars anter: so - V.Cavainf~___, c ars post. en $ 34 SS ; S \ Wiest ‘ ‘\ ‘. \, .. ~~ % ‘. Wier Pft.Kr: ‘ ‘, Cand. V. Fic. 268.—DIAGRAM OF THE VENOUS SysTEM OF Salamandra maculosa. Caud. V, caudal vein, which bifurcates at the posterior end of the kidneys (V, V) to form the renal portal system (Nier.Pft.Kr); V.adv, V.rev, advehent and revehent renal veins ; V,i/iaca, femoral vein, which divides into an anterior (++) and a posterior (+) branch: the latter opens into the renal portal, and the former (pelvic vein) unites with its fellow to form the abdominal vein (Abd. V), and also receives vessels (*) from the cloaca, bladder, and posterior part of the intestine. V.Cava inf. pars anter, and V.Cava inf. pars poster, anterior and posterior sections of the postcaval ; Card.ant (Jug), and Card. post (Azyg), anterior and posterior cardinal veins (7.e., the jugular and azygos). Subel, subclavian vein ; Duct.Cuv, precaval; H, heart ; D, D, alimentary canal, from which the hepatic portal vein (V. port) arises; Lg, longitudinal vein of the intestine; Lpft.Kr, hepatic portal system; L.V, hepatic vein. 330 | COMPARATIVE ANATOMY and are replaced by vertebral veins, while in Mammals they persist as the azygos veins. An anastomosis is formed between these, and eventually the anterior part of the left disappears, the blood from both sides passing into the right azygos (hemiazygos), which opens into the right precaval (Figs. 269 and 270). _ The anterior cardinals give rise, as in lower Vertebrates, to the jugulars, which, as well as the subclavians and vertebrals or azygos, RHE Nv} Ni TT ee ee S ooSy His uM ee a st Ses fo" wea NN N y A) ) iy IH SS SEN Vepd---- g --WVe jue Fein Vrde "A '%--Tns, SS SES HNL SS Sy EE SAS wey hal asee f, rt ASS a pt Fic. 269.—DIAGRAM SHOWING THE RELATIONS OF. THE POSTERIOR CARDINAL AND PosrcavAL VEINS IN A, THE RapBit, AND B, Man. (After Hoch- stetter). V.r.d, V.r.s, renal veins ; V.cl.s.e, common iliac vein; V/.I, lumbar vein; V.c.i, postcaval ; V.c.p.d, V.c.p.s, right and left posterior cardinals ; V.i/.int.comm, common internal iliac vein. open into the precavals. In Reptiles, Birds, Monotremes, and Marsupials, as well as in many Rodents, Insectivores, Bats, and Ungulates, both precavals persist throughout life; but in other Mammals the main part of the left disappears, all the blood from the head and anterior extremities passing into the right. The coronary veins open into the base of the left precaval (coronary sinus, Fig. 259). VENOUS SYSTEM 331 A renal portal system occurs in connection with the embryonic kidney in all Sauropsida, and traces of it can also be recognised in embryos of Echidna. In adult Reptiles, renal portal veins give off branches into the permanent kidney (metanephros, p. 346): in —<—_—_—_— ————— ’ Ww, a : | Fie. 270.—DIAGRAM ILLUSTRATING THREE STAGES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE Hepatic PortaL System. (See next page for c.) H, heart ; Sv, sinus venosus ; DC, DC, precavals ; Ci, postcaval; L, liver; Om, Om’, Om, the three sections of the omphalo-mesenteric vein (the first still shows its originally paired nature at ++: instage B, the second section of this vein, which passes through the liver, disappears, so that Om and Om? are only connected by capillaries: in stage C, the first section (Om) has quite disappeared, and the umbilical vein (Umb) has become developed); DA, ductus venosus ; *, connection of the umbilical vein with the capillaries of the liver; Vr, revehent veins; Vad, advehent veins; Mes., mesenteric vein, which later gives rise to the hepatic portal (V.port), receiving a from the alimentary canal (D); Az., azygos; Ji, iliac vein; N, kidney. Birds only a slight indication of such a renal portal system exists, and in Mammals it is entirely wanting. As in Fishes, the first veins to appear in the embryo are the omphalo-mesenteric veins (Fig. 270, A), bringing back the blood from 332 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY the yolk-sac, and uniting into a single trunk before opening into the heart. As the liver becomes developed, a portal circulation arises, and the main trunk of the vein, where it passes through the liver, disappears. In the meantime, the celiac and mesenteric veins have become developed, and all the blood from them, as well as from the vitelline veins, now passes through a common trunk, the hepatic portal vein, into the capillaries of the liver, whence it De Fic, 270, c.—Reference to lettering on previous page. reaches the sinus venosus through the hepatic veins. The vitelline veins gradually disappear as the yolk-sac becomes reduced. In addition to these vessels, the umbilical vein must also be mentioned. This vessel is originally paired, and corresponds genetically to the lateral veins of Elasmobranchs and to the abdominal or epigastric vein of Ceratodus and Amphibians. It is situated originally in the body-walls, and comes into rela- tion with the allantois (pp. 9 and 337), opening eventually into the LYMPHATIC SYSTEM 333 postcaval: as the allantois increases in size, it brings back the oxygenated blood from this organ (7.¢., from the placenta in the higher Mammalia). The right umbilical vein, however, early be- comes obliterated, and the left comes into connection with the capillaries of the liver, its main stem in this region disappearing (Fig. 270, B). Thus the blood from the allantois has to pass through the capillaries of the liver before reaching the heart. In the course of development, however, a direct communication is formed be- tween the left umbilical vein and the remains of the fused vitelline veins, and this trunk is known as the ductus venosus (Fig. 270, Cc). On the cessation of the allantoic (or placental) circulation, the ductus venosus becomes degenerated into a fibrous cord, so that all the portal blood has to pass through the capillaries of the liver. The intra-abdominal portion of the umbilical vein persists throughout life as the epigastric vein in Reptiles and in Echidna, but disappears in Birds and in other Mammals. The mode of development of the veins of the extremities is essentially similar in all the Amniota, and at first resembles that occurring in Amphibia, though later on considerable differences are seen in these two groups, more especially as regards the veins of the digits. Retia Mirabilia. By this term is understood the sudden breaking-up of an arte- rial or venous vessel into a cluster of fine branches, which, by anastomosing with one another, give rise to a capillary network ; the elements of this network may again unite to form a single vessel, The former condition may be described as a unipolar, the latter as a bipolar rete mirabile. If it is made up of arteries or of veins only, it is called a rete mirabile simplex; if of a combination of both kinds of vessels, it is known as a rete mirabile duplex. The retia mirabilia serve to retard the flow of blood, and thus cause a change in the conditions of diffusion. They are extremely numerous throughout the Vertebrate series, and are found in the most varied regions of the body, as, for instance, in the kidneys (glomeruli, p. 345)—wheré their above-mentioned function is most clearly seen; on the ophthalmic branches of the internal carotid ; on the vessels of the air-bladder in Fishes (p. 280); along the intercostal arteries of Cetacea; on the portal vein; and along the caudal portion of the vertebral column in Lizards, LYMPHATIC SYSTEM. In Fishes, Amphibians, and Reptiles, but more particularly in the first-named Class, lymph vessels (p. 299) are often not plainly differentiated, and occur mainly along the great blood- 334 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY vessels, as well as on the bulbus arteriosus and ventricle, lying in the connective-tissue surrounding these structures. Numerous independent lymphatic vessels may, however, also be present, arising from a capillary network under the.skin, and extending into the intermuscular septa; the intestinal tract and the viscera are also generally provided with definite lymph-vessels in the Amphibia and Amniota. Contractile /ymph-hearts may be present in connection with the vessels. They occur in Fishes, but are much better known in Amphibians, Reptiles, and Bird-embryos. Thus, in Urodeles, nume- rous lymph-hearts are present under the skin along the sides of the body and tail, at the junction of the dorsal and ventral body- muscles; in other Amphibians they are either confined to the poste- rior end of the body (pelvic region), or, as in the Frog, are present also between the transverse processes of the third and fourth vertebree. In Reptiles posterior lymph-hearts only are present, and are situated at the boundary of the trunk and tail regions, close to the transverse processes or ribs. Similar structures are not known to be present in Mammals. Large lacunar /ymph-sinuses are present under the skin of tail- less Amphibia, and the skin is thus only loosely attached to the un- derlying muscles. These subcutaneous lymph-sinuses are connected with those of the peritoneal cavity. Amongst the latter, the sub-. vertebral lymph-sinus is of great importance in Fishes, Dipnoans, and Amphibians; it surrounds the aorta and is connected with the (mesenteric) sinus lying amongst the viscera, into which the lymphatic vessels of the intestine open. In Fishes and Dipnoans there is also a large longitudinal lymphatic trunk lying within the spinal canal. As already mentioned, the higher we pass in the animal series the more commonly are lymphatic trunks with independent walls to be met with. From Birds onwards a large longitudinal subverte- bral trunk (the thoracic duct) is always present. In Mammals this arises in the lumbar region, where it is usually dilated to form the cisterna or receptaculum chyli; it receives the lymph from the posterior extremities, the pelvis, and the urinogenital organs, as well as the lacteals, or lymphatics of the intestine. In Mammals it communicates anteriorly with the left, and in Sauropsida with both left and right precaval veins. The lymphatics of the head, neck, and anterior extremities open into the same veins. The lymphatic vessels of Birds and Mammals are, like certain of the veins, provided with valves, the arrangement of which allows the lymph stream to pass in one direction only, 7.¢., towards the veins. The lymph, as already mentioned (p. 299), consists of two elements, a fluid (plasma) and cells (lymph-corpuscles, leucocytes) ; and similar cells are present in the lymphoid or adenoid tissue which occurs beneath the mucous membrane in various parts of the body LYMPHATIC SYSTEM 335 (e.g., alimentary canal, bronchi, conjunctiva, urinogenital organs) and. is particularly abundant in Fishes, Dipnoans, and Am- phibians (pp. 267, 352, 363). The migration of the amceboid leucocytes to the surface (p. 267) is due to various causes. It may simply result in getting rid of superfluous _ material, or may be of considerable importance in removing broken-down substances and harmful bodies (e.g., inflammatory products, Bacteria), the particles being ingested by leucocytes (hence often called phagocytes) before the latter are got rid of. : The mass of lymphoid tissue on the heart of the Sturgeon, and possibly also the so-called fat-bodies (corpora adiposa) of Amphibia and Reptilia (pp. 368, 370), and the ‘‘hibernating gland” of certain Rodents, may be placed in this category ; they consist of lymphoid and fatty tissue, and serve as stores of nutriment. The agglomeration of a number of lymphoid follicles gives rise to those structures which are spoken of as “lymphatic glands” or adenoids. ‘these are always interposed along the course of a lymphatic trunk so that afferent and efferent vessels to each can be distinguished. They probably appear first in Birds, and are most numerous in Mammals, where they are present in abundance in various regions of the body; they differ greatly in size. The spleen which is present in almost all Vertebrates, is closely related to these structures. It corresponds to a specially differentiated portion of a tract of lymphoid tissue primarily extending all along the alimentary canal, and in Protopterus it still remains enclosed within the walls of the stomach (Fig. 209). In other Vertebrates it is situated outside the walls of the canal, but even then may extend along the greater part of the latter (¢.g., Siren). Usually, however, either the proximal or the distal portion of it undergoes reduction, and the organ is generally situated near the stomach, though it is occa- sionally met with in other regions of the intestinal iract, as, for instance, at the commencement of the rectum (Anura, Chelonia). In some cases (¢g., Sharks) it is broken up into a number of smaller constituents. The tonsils are also adenoid structures. They are most highly developed in Mammals, where they give rise to a paired organ lying on either side of the fauces—that is, in the region where the mouth passes into the pharynx, and usually also to a mass situated more posteriorly on the walls of the pharynx itself (pharyngeal tonsils); the latter are phylogenetically the older organs and are present in Reptiles, Birds, and most Mam- mals... The tonsils consist of a retiform (adenoid) connective- tissue ground-substance enclosing a number of lymph-corpuscles, which are arranged in so-called follicles, and are capable of mi- grating to the surface. | 1 Tonsil-like organs are also present in Amphibians, 336 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY New leucocytes are continually formed in the marrow of the bones, as well as in the lymphatic glands and spleen; the spleen is apparently also of importance in absorbing the broken-down remains of the red blood-corpuscles. MODIFICATIONS FOR THE INTER-UTERINE NUTRI- TION OF THE EMBRYO: F@ITAL MEMBRANES. I. ANAMNIA. In several Blasmobranchs the oviduct gives rise to glandular villi which secrete a nutritive fluid, and in an Indian Ray (Ptero- platea micrura) there are specially long glandular villiform pro- cesses which extend in branches through the spiracles into the pharynx of the embryos, of which there may be as many as three in each oviduct. The gill-clefts of the embryos are in close appo- sition, and there are no gill filaments (see p. 278). In certain viviparous Sharks (viz., Mustelus levis and Carcha- rias) the walls of the vascular yolk-sac become raised into folds or villi, which fit into corresponding depressions in the walls of. the oviduct, the latter becoming very vascular. A kind of wmbilical placenta is thus formed, by means of which an interchange of nutri- tive, respiratory, and excretory matters can take place between the maternal and foetal blood-vessels. Amongst viviparous Teleosts (comp. p. 360) various arrange- ments for the nutrition of the embryo occur. In Zoarces viviparus (and probably also in the Embiotocidez), the embryos are retained in the hollow ovary, the empty follicles (corpora lutea) of which give rise to extremely vascular villi, from which a serous fluid containing blood- and lymph-cells is extruded into the cavity of the ovary and thus surrounds the masses of embryos. These swallow the fluid and digest the contained cells. In other forms (¢.g., viviparous Blennies, and Cyprinodonts), the embryos undergo development within the vascular follicles, and are probably nour- ished by diffusion; while in Anableps, villi are developed from the yolk-sac, and these doubtless absorb the nutritive fluid from the walls of the ovary. | In certain Amphibians which have no prelarval existence, in- teresting modifications occur for nourishing the young until the larval stage is passed. Thus in the Alpine Salamander (Salaman- | dra atra), a large number of ova (40—60) pass into each oviduct, just as in the allied S. maculosa, in which the young are born as gilled larvee. Were this the case in 8. atra, the young would be carried away in the mountain streams and destroyed, and a curious adaptive modification has therefore arisen in this form, in FETAL MEMBRANES 3 337 which only one embryo (that nearest the cloaca) in each oviduct undergoes complete development, remaining within the body of the parent until the gills are lost and metamorphosis has taken place. The other eggs break down and form a food-mass for the survivors after their own yolk has become used up. Degene- rative changes, moreover, take place in the epithelium of the ovi- duct, and masses of red blood-corpuscles pass into the lumen of the latter, undergo degeneration, and become mixed with the broken- down yolk-masses, the resulting broth being swallowed by the surviving young. After the birth of the latter, the uterine epithe- lium becomes regenerated ; and thus a process occurs which some- what resembles that of the formation of a decidua in placental Mammals (p. 340). II, AMNIOTA. In all the Amniota, as already mentioned (pp. 9 and 302), foetal membranes, known as the amnion and allantois are developed, the latter, or primary urinary bladder, represented only in rudi- ment in the Amphibia (p. 259), being of great importance in con- nection with respiration, secretion, and (in the higher Mammals) nutrition of the embryo. A glance at Fig. 8 will show that, owing to its mode of develop- ment, the amnion! consists primarily of two layers; an inner, the amnion proper, and an outer or false amnion. The latter lies close to the vitelline membrane, and forms the so-called serosa, or serous - membrane. As the allantois grows it extends into the space con- tinuous with the ccelome between the true and false amnion, and may entirely surround the embryo. : Amongst Reptiles, the eggs of the viviparous Lizard, Seps chal- cides, are relatively poor in yolk, and this is compensated for by the yolk-sac and allantois coming into close relation with the walls of the oviduct, thus forming an umbilical and an allantoic placenta, one at either pole of the embryo; the latter of these is the more important. Both foetal and maternal parts of the pla- centz become extremely vascular, and thus the necessary inter- change of materials can take place between the blood of the em- bryo and mother. In Trachydosaurus and Cyclodus, as well as in the Chelonia, a kind of umbilical placenta is apparently also formed. . The fact that a vascular yolk-sac (often known as the wmbilical vesicle) is present in placental Mammals, indicates that they are descended from forms in which, like the Sauropsida, the eggs were rich in yolk, and which were viviparous. This condition is 1 As the head enlarges and sinks downwards, it is at first surrounded by a modification of the head fold (p. 9) consisting entirely of epiblast. and called the pro-amnion : this is afterwards replaced by the amnion. : Z 338 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY moreover retained in the Monotremes, and even in Marsupials the ova are relatively large as compared with those of the higher Mammalia. As the amount-of yolk gradually became reduced in the course of phylogenetic development, close relations were set up between the foetal (allantoic) and maternal blood-vessels, the allantois becoming closely applied to the serosa to form a chorion (Fig. 271); but that this condition was only very slowly evolved is shown by the fact that, even at the present day, Mammals exist in which it has not been reached. These (viz., Monotremes and most Marsupials) are therefore known as Aplacentalia or Achoria, in contradistinction to the higher’ Placentalia or Choriata. Moreover, in the Rodentia, Insectivora, Cheir- optera, Carnivora, and Ungulata more or less distinct indications of an umbilical placenta, formed in connection with the yolk-sac, can still be observed, and ata still earlier stage the ova are nourished by uterine lymph (compare p. 336). In Monotremes and Marsu- pials, both the yolk-sac and allan- tois take part in respiration; in the former the two are of equal importance, while amongst the latter the yolk-sac is solely or Ri hee er ee, * de mainly (Phalcolarctos) important Mammat. (From Boas’s Zoology.) 12 this respect. In Perameles pineal: Coes Ty eae obesula a further approach towards sac (umbilical vesicle) ; the Baier the format ion of a true, allantove most line represents the serous placenta is seen, the allantois membrane. The outer wall of giving rise to small vascular villi. the allantois has united with the . ; serous membrane to form the In most Marsup ials the allantois chorion from which branchial villi SeETVes merely as a urinary reser- arise. voir, and in none of them does it possess any important function as an organ of nutrition, the young being born at a relatively early stage, when they become attached to the teats of the mother, and are then nourished by means of milk (see p. 288). In the higher Mammals, the umbilical placenta has usually only a very temporary importance, though in some cases (¢y., Rodents) it probably takes some part in respiration and nutrition during the whole uterine life. The allantois extends out from the body of the embryo and becomes attached to the serous membrane to form the chorion, from which numerous villi extend into the uterine wall (Fig. 271). As both the latter and the allantois become extremely vascular, the uterine and allantoic capillaries and sinuses coming into close contact with one another, a complicated FATAL MEMBRANES 339 allantoic placenta arises, consisting of maternal and feetal parts (Fig. 9). Thus the embryo is supplied with the necessities for existence during its comparatively long intra-uterine life. Various forms of placenta are met with amongst the Placentalia. The most primitive type is apparently that in which the allantois becomes attached around the whole serosa, so that the resulting chorion, from which the comparatively simple villi arise, are equally distributed over the whole surface (Fig. 271). This form is known as a diffused placenta, and is met with in Manis, the Suide, Hippo- potamus, Tylopoda, Tragulidz, Perissodactyla, and Cetacea. The next stage is characterised by the chorionic villi becoming more richly branched, so as to present a greater superficial extent, and at the same time being concentrated into definite and ; Chorton gela esse SER) ae =< Cha rionep tthel Multord wie a" A 7, yi ___.,mdtterl. Endothel ? Mutter? .. Wy Uy yy UY i , Uy / Lecidua # aM. : on uf a ie Li Zotton oop Chckion an, “ong Lrondosure Ae, “Wo, Mis er. Ble tg'era, SS Fic. 272.—DIAGRAM TO ILLUSTRATE THE RELATIONS OF 1HE F@TAL AND MATERNAL VESSELS IN THE HUMAN PLACENTA, SHOWING CHORIONIC AND MATERNAL VESSELS AND CAPILLARIES, VILLI (Zoften), AND DEcIDUA. (After Keibel.) more or less numerous patches or cotyledons. Thus a polycoty- ledonary placenta arises, such as is met with in most Ruminants, some of which, such as Cervus mexicanus and the Giraffe, show an interesting intermediate form of ee between the diffuse and the cotyledonary. The chorionic villi in these two types of placenta, even though more or less branched, separate from the uterime mucous membrane at birth, the latter not becoming torn away: these placente are therefore spoken of as non-deciduate. A further complication is seen in the forms of placenta known as the zonary, the dome- or bell-shaped, and the discoidal, in which the connection between foetal and maternal parts becomes much more close, the villi giving rise to a complicated system of branches within the uterine mucous membrane (Fig. 272). Thus the latter Z 2 340 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY becomes to a greater or less extent torn away at birth (decidua), the placenta being therefore spoken of as deciduate. In these cases, the placental part of the chorion does not extend all round the embryo. In the zonary placenta only the two opposite poles of the chorion are-more or less free from vascular villi, and this girdle-like form occurs in the Carnivora, as well as in the Elephant Hyrax, and Orycteropus. In Lemurs and Sloths, the placenta is dome- or bell-shaped, while in Myrmecophaga, Dasypodide (Arma- dilloes), and Primates (Fig. 9) it forms a discoidal mass on the dorsal side of the embryo (metadiscoidal form). The discoidal placenta of Rodentia, Insectivora, and Cheiroptera has probably not arisen, like that just mentioned, from a diffused type, but was originally restricted to a discoidal area, owing to the umbilical vesicle occupying a large surface of the chorion. From the above description it is evident that the differences in the form of the placenta are mainly those of degree, and that the latter gives little indication of the systematic position of the animal in question. The histological structure of the placenta and the various modifications seen in the maternal mucous membrane cannot be described here ; it is, however, important to note that there is no direct communication between the maternal and foetal blood, and that the maternal capillaries usually enlarge to form sinuses, the walls of which become invaginated by the villi: thus the latter are covered by an epithelium furnished by the maternal tissues (Fig. 272). in the course of development the embryo becomes more and more folded off from the yolk-sac (Fig. 8), the stalk of which latter and that of the allantois, enveloped by the base of the amnion, together form the umbilical cord. At birth, the foetal membranes are shed, the intra-abdominal portion of the allantois persisting as the urachus (comp. p. 358). I. URINOGENITAL ORGANS. a. GENERAL PART. The first traces of the urinary and generative organs of Verte- brates arise on the dorsal side of the ccelome, right and ieft of the aorta, and are more or less closely connected with one another, both morphologically and physiologically. The part of the urinogenital system first to arise is the paired pronephros and its duct, the pronephric duct. This is the most ancient and primitive excretory organ of Vertebrates ; it is usually restricted to a few of the anterior body segments, close behind the head, whence it is often known as the “ head-kidney.” It originates primarily as a series of segmentally arranged invaginations of the somatic mesoblast in the region of the ventral section of the mesoblastic somites, these invaginations giving rise to excretory tubules or nephridia (Figs. 273 and 274) ; secondarily, however, in consequence of alterations in the relative rate of growth of the parts, the tubules come to arise in connection with the unsegmented body-cavity. Each tubule opens into the ccelome by a ciliated funnel or nephrostome, and comes into relation with a segmental blood-vessel which primarily connects the aorta with the subintestinal vein. These vessels become coiled to form a rete mirabile known as the glomus (Fig. 274). Primarily, as in Cheeto- pods, the tubules must have opened at the other end on to the surface independently, through the ectoderm (Fig. 277, A, and comp. Amphioxus, p. 348 and Figs. 219 and 277, A), but this condition is no longer observable in the Craniata, in which they all communi- cate with a longitudinal pronephric duct. The number of nephro- stomes is in most cases not more than two or three. The pronephric duct is apparently a later acquisition than the pronephros itself. It first appears in the somatic mesoblast,' arising by the fusion of the peripheral ends of the pronephric tubules to form a longitudinal collecting tube (Figs. 274, 277, B), which extends backwards to open into the cloaca, thus establishing a communication between the ceelome and the exterior. 1 In Elasmobranchs its origin can be traced to the epiblast, a.m. 4..d.ms 1 --d.m. geen jrcorse OS be wwe ae ex “meen ww ee “+ +---.pn. sia en O01. -~-- d,s. URINOGENITAL ORGANS 343 Fic. 273.—A Series of DIAGRAMMATIC FIGURES ILLUSTRATING THE ACCOUNT OF THE CoMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE URINOGENITAL ORGANS OF THE VERTEBRATA GIVEN IN THE FOLLOWING PAGES. A, the pronephros stage of the Anamnia; B, a later stage of the same ; C, the pn. urinogenital apparatus of the male Amphibian; D, the same of the female ; KE, pronephros stage of the Amniota, the mesonephros as yet rudimentary ; F, urinogenital apparatus of the Amniota at a stage at which the sexes are not differentiated ; G, urinogenital apparatus of male Amniota; H, the same of female Amniota. ; pronephros; d.pn., duct of the pronephros; ms., the developing me- sonephros; ms.s, part of the mesonephros, becoming converted into the epididymis and parovarium; ms.r, vestiges of the mesonephros, the para- didymis and the paroophoron; +, rete and vasa efferentia testis; }t, a network homologous with these structures at the hilum of the ovary; hy.s, stalked hydatid ; ms.z, portion of the mesonephros which in Amphibians and Elasmobranchs becomes the so-called pelvic kidney; d.ms, duct of the mesonephros, which in male Amphibians and Elasmobranchs becomes (Fig. C) the urinogenital, and in females (Fig. D) the urinary duct. In the male Amniota it gives rise to the seminal duct (Fig. G), and in the female to Girtner’s duct (Fig. H); 7.s, the seminal vesicle, an outgrowth of the duct of the mesonephros; d.m., Miillerian duct, which in Mammals becomes differentiated (Fig. H) into the Fallopian tube (fl), the uterus (wt), and the vagina (vg); vs, its abdominal aperture; hy, and u.m (Fig. G), unstalked hydatids and uterus masculinus (vestiges, in the male, of the Miillerian duct, d.m.); m.t., the definitive kidney or metanephros of the Amniota, said to arise from the ureter (wv), itself an outgrowth of the mesonephric duct ; al, allantois or urinary bladder ; su, urinogenital sinus ; p.g, genital prominence, g.g, gonads, undifferentiated stage; ov, ovary; ts., testis; cl, cloaca; al, rectum ; y.a, abdominal pore; g.c, Cowper’s glands. TABULATED RESUME OF THE Facts PICTORIALLY ILLUSTRATED ON THE OPPOSITE PAGE. Pronephros. Duct of Pronephros. Anamunia. Amniota. Develops in all Anamnia, but Still develops in the Amniota, rarely persists as a permanent | but as an excretory organ under- excretory organ. goes entire degeneration in the embryo: it may take part in the formation of the _ suprarenal | body (?) In Elasmobranchii, appears to —- Probably persists as the meso- give origin by subdivision to | nephric (Wolffian) duct, and con- both mesonephric (Wolffian) | tributes in some to the forma- and Miillerian ducts. In Am.- | tion of the Miillerian duct. phibia, becomes converted into | the mesonephric duct. Its fate in | other Anamnia is not yet fully investigated. ae Male and Piale Mesonephros. ys ’ Male and Female. Functions in all Anamnia as a | urinary gland. In Elasmo- branchs, Amphibians, and one or two higher Fishes, its anterior © portion becomes related to the — male genital apparatus, the posterior portion persisting as a permanent kidney. Loses its renal function in all _Amniota (as a rule in the em- bryo), and becomes vestigial, except so far as it becomes an accessory portion of the repro- ductive apparatus in the male and enters into the formation of the suprarenal body (?) Metanephros and - Mesonephros. Duct of Mesonephros. Miillerian Duct. Ureter. Male. Female. : Male. COMPARATIVE ANATOMY TABULATED REsumE—(Continued),. Anamnia. Amniota. The proximal portion becomes in most cases (except in Cyclo- stomes and Teleosts) related to — the testis and functional in the transmission of the semen, the distal functioning as a kidney. Persists as the kidney. Functions in most higher | ve The proximal end becomes the rete and vasa efferentia testis, the caput epididymis, and per- haps also the stalked hydatid of Morgagni: the distal end be- comes the paradidymis (Giraldé’s. organ). The greater part of the proxi- mal portion becomes the par- ovarium, the distal the paroo- | phoron. The proximal portion becomes Fishes merely as the urinary | the corpus and cauda epidymis duct. In Elasmobranchs, bians, and some Ganoids, serves as the urinogenital duct. Functions exclusively as the duct of the mesonephros, i.e., the urinary duct. Male and Female. In Elasmobranchs it degene- |rates in post-embryonic life, _ vestiges of its proximal portion 'being retained. Its existence in most other Fishes is doubt- | ful. In Dipnoi and Amphibia it _is retained, at any rate for some | time, for its whole length, in a functionless and often but little degenerate condition. | | | | whole genital duct. When present, becomes the | _and the distal the seminal duct Amphi- (vas deferens). | The greater part, as a rule, | degenerates ; the proximal por- | tion may be retained in avestigial © form in the region of the par- /ovarium. In certain cases it -may persist, as a whole, as | Giirtner’s canal. The distal end _ becomes the organ of Weber. The proximal portion becomes the unstalked hydatid of Mor- gagni, the distal, in some Mam- mals, the so-called ‘‘ uterus masculinus.” In exceptional cases the whole is retained as Rathke’s duct. In Sauropsida the distal part usually dis- appears. Becomes the whole genital duct. f Probably unrepresented (comp | ip. 352). Appears to arise in part (ure- _ter) from the distal end of the _mesonephric duct, and in part _ (secreting elements) as a caudal extension of the mesonephros. 345 Its duct, however, always persists, and usually ant modifications, which are closely connected URINOGENITAL ORGANS nce of a second and more extensive series of The pronephros. itself has only a transitory function as an excretory organ. undergoes import with the appeara *(auamuuaga ry) [eucreadus pure (asyupulay) peuos oy} Jo sjuoUIIpNa oy} Uses o1e OUTYSOQUT oy} pur ospuqny otydouoseut oy} Jo oWojsorydou pozer[Io oy} UDOMJogT ‘UMOYS ore o[nsdeo ULIysId]ep wv se [124 se “gonp sq pur (asaius7) etnqny o11ydouosow ev puv ‘ouozas oY} Wor, YO ynYS owodeq sey ouI0joAUT — OY} Jo AQIAvO OY} “QJoT OYJ UG “UMOYS O1R sNUO[S oY} puP “(Hunhuvausog ) Yonp o1sydouo;d ayy ‘(avaru0 J ) einqny o1tydouoid & puv ‘snonulzUod oq 0} UdeS ov oTO[~Wd 9Yy PUR aUIOJOATH OY} Jo SoIyIAVO oY} WYStA ey} UQ “oUTISeZUT PUB ‘ez.10R “pxoyoojou ‘poo [euIds oY} ‘spavMUMOp eAOqe WOT ‘UdeS ov OUT] o[pplut oy} UT ‘SLOA(, WIGHL HLIM (LAWT AHL NO) SOMHAHNOSATY GNV (LHDIY AHL NO) SOUHdINOUT AHL AO SNOMLWINY AUVWIYd FHL ONILVULSOTIL NOLLOUG ASUMASNVYT, OLLVANVEDVIG—'FL1Z ‘DIyT 7 MM once le ct thin . feastgee f eae WO QUITUAOA ODD STUD] UDA, fe ‘ig gquntun UIQ ) AAITULOY LO) f uo sodyuayy YULOJIO) ULI PUL bunpunqiy U2 apyouuopohyy ) ULozohiyy Liqnnyas2bgy QLILUA/) AID UY USI WULOZIO) “ULOA | N Uy ( . , which appear later, mainly posteriorly , and constitute the mesonephros or mid- pronephric duct now serves as a mesonephric duct. onephros, often known as the Wolfian body (Figs. , 271, B) , ls sometimes regarded as corresponding simply to The mes excretory segmental tubules 273, 274 to the pronephros kidney; the 346 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY a “later generation” of pronephric tubules. It appears more probable, however, that this organ originates independently from a part of the mesoblastic somites situated more dorsally than that which gives rise to the pronephrie tubules. Primitively, the mesonephros is strictly metameric, owing to the fact that each of its tubules corresponds to the primary channel connecting the cavity of a sumite with the unsegmented ccelome (Fig. 274). The loss of connection between these two sections of the primary ceelome results in a series of segmental nephridia, each of which opens into the body-cavity by a nephros- tome, while at its other, or blind end, it comes into connection with the prone- phric duct—or mesonephric duct as it must now be called (Fig. 275). The glomus of the pronephros is continued backwards, and in the region of the mesonephros breaks up into portions, or glomeruli, each of which is situated in a small cavity constricted off from the colome and opening into a mesonephric tubule, forming what is known as a Malpighian capsule (Figs. 274, 275). Each mesonephric tubule, then, in its primitive form, is made up of the GE a Fie. 275.—DiIAGRAM OF THE MESONEPHRIC TUBULES, SHOWING THEIR (SECOND- ARY) CONNECTION WITH THE MeEsonEpuHRiIc Duct (S@). The two anterior tubules are already connected with the duct, while the two posterior have not yet reached so far. ST, nephrostome; M, Mal- pighian capsule with glome- rulus ; DS, coiled glandular tubule; HS, terminal por- following portions (Fig. 275):—(1) a funnel-shaped ciliated aperture, commu- nicating with the body-cavity (nephro- stome, or peritoneal funnel); (2) a rounded mass of capillaries (glomerulus), which is situated within a cavity (Mal- pighian capsule) derived from the celome; and (3) a coiled glandular tubule, opening into a collecting (me- sonephric) duct. Thus the mesonephros, as well as the pronephros, besides its tion of latter. main function of excreting waste pro- ducts by means of the epithelial cells lining the tubules, serves also to conduct water derived from the blood in the glomeruli, and peritoneal fluid, from the body. The mesonephros is of greatest importance in the Anamnia: in many Fishes it serves exclusively as a urinary organ, but in Elasmobranchs and higher forms it also takes on certain relations to the generative apparatus, giving rise to the rete and vasa efferentia of the testis, as well as to the parorchis or epididymis (p. 350), and, in Amniota, to other more or less rudimentary organs of secondary importance (compare Fig. 273). Nevertheless, it may still serve as the permanent urinary organ (Elasmobranchs, Am- phibians), or may more or less entirely disappear as such (Amniota) ; in the latter case, a third series of tubules is formed, giving rise URINOGENITAL ORGANS 347 to a metanephros, or hind-kidney, with which is connected a metanephric duct or ureter. The metanephros corresponds to a later developed posterior section of the mesonephros. Each metanephric duct apparently arises as a hollow outgrowth from the posterior end of the meso- nephric duct, where the latter opens into the cloaca. It gradually extends forwards, and comes into connection with a series of tubules developed as buds from the hinder end of the mesone- phros and provided with coelomic Malpighian capsules and with glomeruli, but not with nephrostomes. The posterior end of the ureter soon loses its connection with the mesonephric duct, and opens independently either into the cloaca or into a urimary bladder (Figs. 294—297). THE MALE AND FEMALE GENERATIVE DUCTs. In the Elasmobranchii, Amphibia, and Amniota, two canals are formed in connection with the primary excretory apparatus: one of these is known as the secondary mesonephric or Wolffian duct— which in male Elasmobranchii and Amniota functions as a seminal _ duct or vas deferens and in male Amphibia as a urinogenital duct, and the other as the Miillerian duct—which opens anteriorly into the coelome and serves in the female as an oviduct (Figs. 278, 279). The Wolffian duct becomes rudimentary in the female—except in Amphibians, in which it still serves as a urinary duct (Fig. 279)— and the Miillerian duct remains in a more or less rudimentary condition in the male. These two ducts in some cases (Elasmo- branchs) arise by a splitting of the primary mesonephric duct into two (Fig. 278), but more usually the Miillerian duct arises independently from the ccelomic epithelium. All the urinogenital ducts are lined by a mucous membrane, external to which are muscular and connective tissue layers. (For the relations of the urinary and generative ducts in other Fishes and in Dipnoans see pp. 360-363.) THE GONADS (“ GENERATIVE GLANDS”). The sexual cells, which give rise to the ova and spermatozoa originate from the germinal epithelium, which corresponds to a differentiation of part of the coelomic or peritoneal epithelium on the dorsal side of the body-cavity on either side of the mesentery, and into which the adjacent mesoblastic stroma penetrates; thus a pair of gonads or “sexual glands,” is formed (Fig. 274). Primitively the gonads were arranged segmentally, and extended through- out a greater number of body segments (compare Amphioxus, p. 359). The primitive germinal cells are at first entirely undifferen- tiated, but in the course of development a differentiation takes place, resulting in the formation of a male or a female gonad, ze., a testis or an ovary. 348 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY The mode of development of the ova and spermatozoa is briefly as follows :— , _ Ova.—The cells of the germinal epithelium grow inwards amongst the stroma of the ovary in the form of clustered masses : some of these increase in size more than the others, and give rise to the ova, while the smaller cells form an investment of follicle round them, and serve as nutritive material. The investing cells multiply, and in Mammals a cavity containing a fluid is formed in the middle of each follicle (Fig. 276): the main mass of the follicular cells which enclose the ovum project, as the discus proligerus, into the cavity of the follicle. When ripe, the ovum, surrounded. by a vitelline membrane, comes to the surface of the ovary and breaks through into the abdominal cavity; it then passes into the coelomic aperture of the oviduct. A certain amount of bleod is poured out through the broken ends of the vessels in the stroma of the ovary into the cavity of the follicle in which the ovum lay : this ‘‘ wound” then closes up, and its contents undergo fatty degeneration, giving rise to a body of yellow colour, known as the corpus lutewn. Spermatozoa.—As in the case of the female, primitive germinal cells can be at first distinguished in the development of the male generative elements. _ These give rise to a series of seminal tubules (Fig. 300), containing larger-and smaller cells; the former undergo division to form the sperm-cells or Fic. 276.—SEcrioN THROUGH A PORTION OF THE OVARY OF A MAMMAL, SHOWING THE MODE OF DEVELOPMENT OF THE GRAAFIAN FOLLICLES. KE, germinal epithelium, ingrowths from which extend into the stroma of the ovary to form the ovarian tubes (PS): the stroma is penetrated by vessels (g.g); U, U, primitive ova; S, cavity between the follicular epithelium (tunica granulosa, Mg) and the primitive ova; Lf, liquor folliculi; D, discus proligerus ; Hi, ripe ovum, with its germinal vesicle (K) and germinal spot ; Mp, zona pellucida, showing radiated structure ; 7//, theca folliculi. spermatozoa. The nucleus gives rise to the so-called ‘‘ head” of the sperma- tozoon, while the surrounding protoplasm becomes differentiated to form the motile ‘‘tail,” which serves as an organ of propulsion, the ‘‘neck”’ (Mittelstiick) arising from the centrosome of the cell (p. 3). URINOGENITAL ORGANS 349 b. SPECIAL PART. URINARY ORGANS. In Amphioxus a series (90 or more) of independent segmental tubules are present on either side in the reduced section of the ceelome situated on the dorsal side of the pharynx (“dorsal Fic. 277.—DIAGRAMMATIC TRANSVERSE SECTIONS THROUGH A, AMPHIOXUS, IN THE BRANCHIAL REGION, AND B, AN ELASMOBRANCH EMBRYO, BASED ON Boveri's FIGURES. In A, the section passes through a branchial cleft on the right side, and shows a transverse section of the anterior limb of a nephridium (X) ; on the left, a nephridium (X) is indicated showing its communication with the ccelome (B) and with the atrial chamber (C). A, genital section of ccelome (an ovary is indicated on the right side); D, section of the ccelome which extends down the branchial bars ; /, ventral aorta. In B, the section represents the pronephric region on the left, and the meso- nephric region on the right. A, rudiment of a mesonephric tubule, the blind end of which subsequently comes to open into the pro- (or meso-) nephric duct (C) as indicated by the dotted lines on the right. B, nephro- stome; D, celome: F, subintestinal vein. In both figures, EZ, lumen of gut; G, aorta; H, portion of commissural vessel which comes into relation with the excretory system. ccelomic canals”). Each of these tubules comes into close relation with a branchial blood-vessel, possesses a varied number of lateral branches, and opens on the one hand into the ccelome by several ciliated funnels or nephrostomes, and on the other by a single aperture into the atrial or peribranchial chamber (p. 275), which 350 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY thus also serves as an excretory duct (Figs. 219 and 272, 4). The segmental arrangement of the tubules in the adult corre- sponds to that of the branchial apparatus, and not to that of the myotomes. No nephridia are present posteriorly to the pharynx, and it is possible that the excretory system of Amphioxus may be to a certain extent comparable to an early stage of the pronephros of the Craniata. In Cyclostomes the pronephros persists beyond the larval period, and for some time at any rate, functions as the sole excre- tory organ: it possesses three or four nephrostomes. In Petro- myzon it is soon replaced by a mesonephros, and the pronephros then becomes rudimentary : between the two a fat-body 1s. situated. In Myxine it is uncertain whether the whole kidney,.or only its anterior part, represents the pronephros. The kidney does not come into relation with the generative organs, and its duct, which opens on either side into the urinogenital sinus, probably represents the unaltered pronephric duct. In the Teleostei the pronephros has, in the majority of cases, only a temporary significance, and the mesonephros constitutes the excretory organ of the adult: it consists of a narrow band varying in size and diameter in different regions, situated on the dorsal side of the body-cavity, between the vertebral column and the air-bladder. Secondary fusions between the - organ of either side often occur. The urinary duct in both groups probably represents the pronephric duct, and may. lie more or less freely, or be embedded in the substance of the kidney. Posteriorly the two ducts usually fuse together and become expanded to form a kind of urinary bladder (compare Figs. 286 and 287) which has nothing to do with the allantoic bladder of Amphibia and Am- niota. The bladder usually opens behind the anus—either inde- pendently or together with the genital ducts—by a simple pore, or on the summit of a urinogenital papilla. Thus a differentiation of the pronephric (or primary mesonephric) duct into a Wolffian and a Miillerian duct is not known to occur in Teleostei, nor does the mesonephros come into connection with the gonads; in Elasmobranchii, in which the pronephros is more rudimentary, this differentiation takes place (p. 346), and at the same time a distinction between an anterior and a posterior section of the mesonephros may be observed (compare Figs. 278, 289; and 290). In the male, the former (parorehis or epididymis) comes into connection with the testis by means of small ducts, the vasa efferentia, and its tubules open directly into the Wolffian duct, which thus functions as a vas deferens only ; while the latter, which persists as the permanent kidney, empties its secretion by means of separate urinary ducts into the base of the Wolffian duct. In the female the Wolffian 1 Tt is said to persist in Pierasfer, Lophius, Dactylopterus, Orthagoriscus mola, Mora mediterranea, and the Macruride, URINOGENITAL ORGANS 351 Fic. 2784.—DIAGRAM OF THE PRIMITIVE CONDITION OF THE KIDNEY IN AN ELASMOBRANCH Empryo. (After Balfour.) pd, pronephric duct: it opens at o into the body-cavity, and its other extremity communicates with the cloaca; #, line along which the division appears which separates the pronephric duct into the Wolffian duct above, and the Miillerian duct below ; s.t, nephridial tubes: they open at one end in the body-cavity, and at the other into the Wolffian duct. CW y Fig. 2788.—DIAGRAM OF THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE URINOGENITAL ORGANS IN AN ADULT FEMALE ELASMoBRANCH. (After Balfour.) m.d, Miillerian duct ; w.d, Wolffian duct ; d, urinary duct ; s.t, nephridial tubes : | five of them are represented with openings into the body-cavity : the posterior nephridial tubes form the functional kidney ; ov, ovary. Fic. 278c.—DIAGRAM OF THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE URINOGENITAL ORGANS IN AN ApULT MALE ExLAsmosprancH. (After Balfour.) m.d, rudiments of Miillerian duct ; w.d, Wolffian duct, marked vd in front, and serving as vas deferens ; s.¢, nephridial tubes: two of them are represented with openings into the body-cavity: the anterior tubules give rise to the parorchis or epididymis and the posterior ones to the functional kidney ; d, urinary duct; ¢, testis; nf, canal at the base of the testis; VH, vasa efferentia ; /c, longitudinal canal of the Wolffian body. 352 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY duct is rudimentary, and the ova pass to the exterior by means of the Miillerian duct. This special differentiation of the hinder part of the meso- nephros, and the formation of special ducts in connection with it, seems to foreshadow the condition which occurs in the Amniota (pp. 346 and 356). The anterior (sexual) part of the kidney is usually broader than the posterior (renal) part. The outer border is usually notched, and_ this, together with the arrangement of the nephrostomes in the embryo, , points to the original segmental arrangement of the organ. The segmental char- acter, however, disappears later on; in the adult the nephrostomes are much less numerous than the vertebre of this region, but their number and size vary much in different genera and even in individuals, and they apparently do not persist in all. The morphology of the kidneys and renal ducts in Ganoids (Figs. 286 and 287) requires further investigation. They seem on the whole to resemble those of Teleosts, though in the Sturgeon they apparently show points of similarity to those of Elasmobranchs. As in the Teleostei, a well-developed pronephros is present in the larva, and the kidney duct probably represents the pronephric duct. In many Fishes the kidneys extend far back into the root of the tail. A close examination of the organ, which appears to the naked eye as the kidney in Teleosts and Ganoids, shows that a larger or smaller portion of it pute particularly the anterior part—consists of an adenoid or lymphoid Supstance. In the Dipnoi the kidneys also undoubtedly correspond to the mesonephros. ‘They are relatively longer in Protopterus (Fig. 288) than in Ceratodus, extending through a considerable portion of the body-cavity: as in Elasmobranchs, a narrower anterior can be distinguished from a broader posterior part, and the whole is largely invested by lymphoid and adipose tissue. Nephrostomes are wanting. Until their development is known, it is uncertain to what extent the renal ducts correspond to the primary mesonephric ducts: each opens into the cloaca inde- pendently, behind the genital aperture. The cloacal caecum (p. 262) probably functions as a urinary bladder. Amphibia.—The pronephros is well developed in the larva, and is particularly large in the Gymnophiona, in which as many as 12 or 13 nephrostomes may be present. 3 In adults, the most primitive condition is met with in the Gymnophiona, in which the kidney (mesonephros) consists of long, narrow, varicose bands, usually extending from the heart to the anterior part of the cloaca, which latter is often much elongated. In the embryo they consist of definite masses, which are arranged metamerically, and in each of them a glomerulus, a nephrostome, and an excretory duct can be distinguished (Fig. 291). ‘This con- dition sometimes persists in the anterior portion of the kidney, URINOGENITAL ORGANS . 353 but, owing to secondary processes of growth, as many as twenty nephrostomes are later on met with in a single body-segment. The number of nephrostomes in the entire kidney may amount to a thousand or more. . As regards the urinary duct and the relations of the entire teen TS K WM « > s} OOD) TOMONC ON re yy = et - PO". 2 Ll» Te Fic. 279.—D1aAGRAM OF THE URINOGENITAL SysTEM oF (A) A MALE AND (B) A FEMALE URODELE ; FOUNDED ON A PREPARATION OF Triton teniatus. (After J. W. Spengel.) Ho, testis; Ve, Ve, vasa efferentia of testis, which open into the longitudinal canal of the mesonephros, + ; a, collecting tubes of the mesonephros, which open into the Wolffian (urinogenital) duct (/g, /g); in the female the latter serves simply as the urinary duct (Ur), and the system of the vasa efferentia (testicu- lar network) is rudimentary ; mg, mg! (Od), Miillerian duct; Of, ccelomic aperture of latter in the female ; Ov, ovary ; GN, anterior sexual portion of kidney (parorchis of the male) ; NV, posterior non-sexual portion of kidney. renal apparatus to the generative organs, the Gymnophiona in all essential points resemble other Amphibia. The kidneys of Urodela and Anura are situated in the usual position on the dorsal side of the body-cavity ; in the former they are band-like and more extended longitudinally than in the latter, ; AA 354 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY in which they are shorter and more compact, and are confined’ to the middle portion of the ccelome. In Urodeles. they always consist of a narrow anterior, and a broader and more compact posterior portion. The latter, as in Elasmobranchs, gives rise to the functional kidney (Fig. 279), while the former becomes connected in the male with the generative organs. Delicate vasa efferentia, developed from the mesonephros, pass out from the testis (Figs. 279, 280, 292) into the substance of the kidney, and there open into the renal tubules; they may either enter the kidney direct, or else open first into a longitudinal collecting duct, from which fine canals pass to the tubules. Thus the seminal fluid passes through the nephridia as well as through the Wolffian duct, which serves as a urinogenital duct. In Urodela and Anura of both sexes the Wolffian duct nearly always opens separately on either side into the cloaca, receiving first, in Urodeles, a number of ducts from the posterior part of the kidney (compare Elasmobranchs, p. 350). In Anura the Wolffian ducts pass some distance indepen- dently along the body-cavity, in correspondence with the position of the kidneys, and a_ seminal vesicle opens into each (Fig. 281). The urinary (allantoic) bladder (see p. 259) opens into thé cloaca ventrally, opposite to the urino- genital apertures. In its simplest form it is finger-shaped (e.g., Siren, Ur, Ur, Urinogenital falters: Proteus), but it usually becomes cusions of de eabios ov +. 8, swollen distally and is often bi- S’, their apertures into the cloaca lobed: in Alytes and Bombinator (Cl) ; Ho, ae a — ¥. i it forms a double sac. corpora adiposa; Cv, postcava . rieerwagen vein; Ao, aorta; Vr, revehent Slight indications of a ai renal veins. mental arrangement are found only in the anterior sexual portion of the kidney of Urodeles; in the posterior part, and in the entire kidney of Anura, all traces of segmentation have disappeared. In both cases, however, the nephrostomes remain throughout. life in great numbers on the ventral surface of the kidney, which is covered over by the peritoneum (Fig. 281). The nephrostomes are connected with the urinary tubules in larval Anura, but later on they become separated from them, and open into the renal Fic. 280.—MAaALE URINOGENITAL ORGANS OF Rana esculenta. - URINOGENITAL ORGANS 359d Fic. 281.—-Kipnry or Discoglossus pictus. From the ventral surface, showing the nephrostomes (S7’). (After J. W. Spengel). Ur, urinogenital duct, enlarging at Ur! to form a seminal vesicle. veins. In consequence of this change of function, for such it must be considered, the body-cavity of adult Anura forms a closed lymph-sinus, as in the Amniota ; the peritoneal fluid, which in the larva was carried to the exterior and lost, is in the adult poured into the general circulation, like the rest of the lymph. Se ee 356 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Reptiles and Birds.—In the Sauropsida, as in the Mammalia, the mesonephros, so far as it is retained in the adult, is entirely separate from the functional excretory apparatus; this consists of a metanephros, entirely wanting in nephrostomes (compare p. 346 and Fig. 273). : The metanephros never extends so far along the body-cavity as does the mesonephros; as a rule it has the form of a small compact or lobulated organ, usually situated in the posterior half of the body-cavity, or even entirely confined to the pelvic region: it has the latter position, for instance, in most Reptiles Fig. 282.—ExcRETORY APPARATUS OF Monitor indicus. The right kidney is shown in its natural position, while the left is turned on its longitudinal axis, so that the ureter and the collecting tubes are visible. The urinary bladder is not represented. — N, N, kidneys ; SG, collecting tubes which open into the ureter (Ur, Ur?); Ur', aperture of ureter into the cloaca. (Figs. 282, 294 and 295) and all Birds (Fig. 283). The posterior end of the kidney, which is generally narrower than the rest, may even extend under the root of the tail, as in Lacerta, in which region there is a fusion of the organ of either side. Thus, according to the position of the kidneys, the ureters (metanephric ducts) either do not extend freely along the body-cavity, or they may have a longer or shorter free course. The latter is the case, for instance, in Crocodiles, and more especially in Birds (Fig. 283): in the latter the kidneys are closely embedded within the pelvis, and their ventral flattened surface, which is usually divided into three lobes, is URINOGENITAL ORGANS 357 often penetrated by deep furrows and clefts in which the veins lie embedded; posteriorly they may fuse together in the middle line, as in Lizards. There is not always a perfect symmetry between the organ of either side, and this is most marked in Snakes, in which the Ao Ep : Fie. 283.-—_MALE URINOGENITAL APPARATUS OF HERON (Ardea cinerea). NV, kidneys ; Ur, ureter, opening into the cloaca (Cc) at Sr; Ho, testis ; Ep, epi- didymis ; Vd, vas deferens, which opens at Vd! on a papilla in the cloaca : V, V, furrows on the ventral surface of the kidney in which veins lie em- bedded ; Ao, aorta ; BF, bursa Fabricii, which opens into the cloaca at BF’. greatly lobulated kidneys, like those of limbless Lizards, are — elongated, narrow, and band-like, in correspondence with the form of the body. A urinary (allantoic) bladder arising from the ventral wall of the cloaca, is present in Lizards and Chelonians ; it is more or less bilobed. A bladder is wanting in Snakes, Crocodiles, and Birds. - 358 | COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Mammals.—'The definitive kidneys (metanephros) of Mammals are proportionately small, and lie on the quadratus lumborum muscle and ribs. They usually possess a convex outer, and a concave inner border; the latter is called the helwm, and at this point the ureters arise and the blood-vessels enter. The expanded proximal portion of the ureter is divided up to form one or more calyces (Fig. 284), into which small papilliform processes of the pyramids (see below) project ; on the summits of these the urinary tubules open in varying number. _ The calyces are continuous with a large cavity’ in the widened portion of the ureter called the pelvis, and from this the ureter (metanephric duct) passes freely backwards for some distance to open into the bladder (except in Monotremes, Fig. 296) on its dorsal side, sometimes ‘ nearer the apex, sometimes towards eigiieicin Ree ee the fundus. The bladder communi- KrpNey or A Mammat, cates with the xwrinogenital canal or R, R, cortical substance; M, M, urethra. : : medullary substance arranged in The kidney 1s greatly lobulated pyramids (Pr); between the j aad “ti in latter the cortical substance ex- in. the embry o; this condition 7 tends in the form of the columns remain throughout life, or the lobes of Bertini (B, B); Ca, calyces; may become more or less completely Pe, pelvis ; Ur, ureter. united (Fig. 285). In the latter case the original division into lobes may still be recognised more or less plainly internally. A section of the kidney shows an inner layer, the medullary substance, arranged in the form of wedges—the urinary pyramids,—and an outer layer, or cortical substance, extending as the columns of Bertini between the pyramids (Fig. 284). The pyramids correspond roughly to the embryonic lobes of the kidney, though several lobes may fuse together in one pyramid. The glomeruli as well as the coiled portions of the tubules, sur- rounded by a network of blood-capillaries, lie in the cortical substance, while the straight portions of the tubules extend through the pyramids, where they gradually anastomose to form larger collecting tubes. The greater part of the wrinary bladder does not corre- spond with the proximal end of the allantois, but to a special differentiation of the cloaca, which becomes divided into a dorsal and a ventral portion by the formation of a horizontal septum. The ventral portion gives rise to the bladder, which is continuous distally with the stalk of the allantois (urachus, see p. 340), from which the median ligament of the bladder is formed. In Monotremes and nearly all Marsupials (see URINOGENITAL ORGANS 359 p. 338) the whole allantois takes part in the formation of the bladder. WX Fic. 285.—A, Ricut Kipnry or A Deer; B, KipNrEys (NV) AND SUPRARENAL Boptes (V.N) of tHE Human Empryo. (Both from the ventral side.) Ur, ureters. GENERATIVE ORGANS. In Amphioxus the gonads are developed in a part of the reduced ceelome situated on either side of the pharynx and intestine (Fig. 277, A) between the outer body-wall and the atrial cavity. They have a marked segmental arrangement, and each portion sheds its products independently into the atrial cavity, whence they pass out through the atrial pore (compare p. 275 and Fig. 219). In Cyclostomes also, generative ducts are wanting ; the sper- matozoa or ova are shed directly into the body-cavity, aud pass through the genital pores (p. 298) into the urinogenital sinus, and so to the exterior. The gonad is a long unpaired organ suspended, as in other Vertebrates, to the dorsal wall of the body-cavity by a fold of peritoneum, the mesorchium or mesoarium, as the case may be. In Fishes the gonads are only exceptionally unpaired, and even then, this is only a secondary condition, due to the fusion of the two organs or to the reduction of that of one side; as in all 360 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY other Vertebrates, they are originally paired. There is usually a want of symmetry observable between the organ of the right and left sides. The testes and ovaries of 'Teleostei closely correspond with one another as regards position and the arrangement of their ducts. Dorsal and ventral folds of the peritoneum are developed in con- nection with the elongated ovary, and these in most cases meet along its outer side, so as to enclose a portion of the ccelome and thus convert the ovary into a hollow sac, blind anteriorly, on the inner folded walls of which the ova arise; this sac is continued backwards to form the oviduct (compare Fig. 286). The latter, which is generally short, as a rule fuses with its fellow to form an unpaired canal; this opens either by a genital pore (p. 298) between the rectum and the urinary aperture on a level with the integument, or on a papilla, which may become elongated to form a tube or “ovipositor”; or the ducts may communicate with a urinogenital sinus. The testis of Teleosts is elongated, and often lobulated in form. Its duct has similar relations to those seen in the female. Thus the ducts, both of the ovary and testis, correspond to folds of the peritoneum enclosing a coelomic cavity continuous with that of the gonads, and originate quite independently of the nephridial system. The oviducts must therefore be distinguished from true Miillerian ducts. In some Teleosts the ovary is solid, and the ova are shed into the body-cavity. In the Smelt (Osmerus) and in Mallotus the oviducts (“ peritoneal funnels”) have cpen coelomic apertures close to the ovaries into which the ova pass (compare Fig. 286, B); while in other Salmonide and in the Murenidz and Cobitis, for instance, these peritoneal funnels are shorter, and may even be absent, the ova then being shed into the urinogenital sinus through a paired or single genital pore. It is uncertain whether the latter is the primitive arrangement amongst Teleostei, or whether the peritoneal funnels represent reduced oviducts. Most Teleostei are oviparous, but viviparous forms occur (p. 336). The male Stickeback builds a nest for the protection of the young formed of a hardened secretion (mucin) of the kidney, which undergoes a change of function at the breeding-season ; in Syngnathus and Hippocampus the young are protected within a pouch on ‘the abdomen of the male, and in the female Solenostoma on a pouch between the ventral fins. Amongst Siluroids they are carried within the pharynx in the male Arius, and the eggs are attached to the soft ventral integument in the female Aspredo. Amongst Ganoidei the female organs of Lepidosteus are formed on the same type as those of the Teleostei. In Amia (Fig. 286, B) and Acipenser each oviduct opens by a funnel into the coelome, but in all Ganoids the oviduct is probably comparable to that of Teleosts, and not to a Miillerian duct. In the male Lepidosteus a series of vasa efferentia pass out from the testis and URINOGENITAL ORGANS — 361 open into a longitudinal canal from which ducts pass into the kidney, the duct of which therefore serves as a urinogenital duct (Fig. 287). The latter dilates before uniting with its fellow to open into the urinogenital sinus. A somewhat similar arrange- ment appears to occur in the male Sturgeon, in which representatives of the oviducts of the female are present in the form of short ccelomic funnels opening into the kidney-ducts. It is probable that the other male Ganoids also resemble Lepidosteus in the structure of their urinogenital organs, which, however, require further investigation. In the Dipnoi (Fig. 288) the elongated gonads are invested /, Yi RUAN it, M @\ ean San & q mt Rf J ~S AY, y Lie i? N N .9- Struthio it resembles that of the Crocodile, and is supported by a Fic. 305.—DIAGRAMMATIC LONGITUDINAL SECTIONS OF THE POSTERIOR PART OF THE RECTUM, THE CLOACA, AND THE COPULATORY ORGANS OF VARIOUS VERTEBRATES. (After Boas.) The position of the ureter and vas deferens are indicated, although not situated in the median line. A, Crocodile; B, hypothetical form between A and C; C, Monotreme (penis extruded) ; D, Monotreme (penis retracted). bi, connective-tissue ; b/, urinary bladder ; c/, cloaca; d, rectum; /, fibrous body (corpora cavernosa of human anatomy) ; ps, sheath of penis ; ps!, aperture of the sheath ; 7, seminal furrow or tube (penial urethra); s, vas deferens ; wu, urinogenital canal. 382 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY fibrous body, bifurcated at the base. In Dromzeus and Rhea there is an aperture at the apex of the penis leading into an elongated and curved blind sac, in which is a furrow, lined by cavernous tissue, continuous’ with the groove on the dorsal side of the organ. In the Duck and Swan the spiral penis is essentially similar to that of Dromzeus and Rhea. The absence of the blind sac in the Ostrich, however, is probably a secondary modification. A clitoris is present in the female of the above-mentioned Birds. The penis of Monotremes may be best understood by imagin- ing a hypothetical form intermediate between it and that of Croco- diles and Chelonians (Fig. 305, B). We must suppose that a sac-like outgrowth inta which the ureter and vasa defe- rentia open has become developed from the ventral cloacal wall at the base (anterior end) of the penis, the groove in which has become converted into a canal. The Monotreme condition is reached by the sac elongating to form a urinogenital canal, into the distal end of which the urinary and genital ducts and the bladder open (c, D). The penis consists of an unpaired. fibrous body enclosing the canal, and is only loosely surrounded by the mucous membrane of the cloaca, so that it can be protruded from and retracted into a sheath in which the apex or glans lies. In Kchidna, cavernous tissue is present in the glans; and in Ornitho- rhynchus the latter is bifurcated and covered with soft spines, the seminal canal opening in a groove on each fork by numerous fine canals situated on papillee. A clitoris is present in the female of all Mammals. In Marsupials (Fig. 306, A), the penis-sheath opens directly on to the surface of the body; the opening of the urinogenital canal into the cloaca has become closed, and is continuous with the seminal tube or urethra of the penis. The fibrous body is paired, and both it and the walls of the penial urethra are com- posed of cavernous tissue. Amongst Placental Mammals the penis of Rodents (Fig. 306, B) and Insectivores comes nearest to that of Marsupials. The paired fibrous body (corpus cavernosum) bifurcates proximally to form two crura, which are nearly always attached to the ischia. The opening of the penis-sheath gradually becomes further separated from the anus, and is situated more on the ventral side of the body (compare B and Cc), the penis itself lying horizontally along the abdomen. In Primates the organ becomes more or less free from the body-wall, and either its distal end (Apes, C), or the whole of it (Man, D) hangs freely, and the sheath forms a double tube-like investment, the foreskin or prepuce, over the glans. In the course of development, the penis of Marsupials and Placental Mammals passes through stages which resemble succes- sively those which are permanent in Crocodiles and Chelonians andin Monotremes. It arises from a “ genital prominence” on the bL “Wy Fic. 306.—Continuation of Fig. 305. a ae ) =e) For description see next page. 384 COMPARATIVE ANATOMY Fic. 306.—(The special thickening of the corpus spongiosum and the glans penis present in some Mammals is not indicated). A, Marsupial (very diagrammatic, for comparison with Fig. 305 C ; the obliterated opening of the urinogenital canal into the cloaca is indicated by dotted lines); B, Rodent (Celogenys paca) ; C, Ape (Cercopithecus): in most placental Mam- mals the apex of the penis does not hang down; D, Man; E, Human fetus. Additional letterings: a, anus ; b, pelvic symphysis ; p, genital prominence, which gives rise to the penis or clitoris ; a/, stalk of allantois. ventral wall of the cloaca. A channel passes along the side facing the cloaca to the opening of the urinogenital sinus: this condition is usually retained throughout life in the case of the clitoris of the female, while in the male (and occasionally in the female also) the groove becomes closed to form a canal continuous with the urinogenital canal or urethra, which thus becomes considerably lengthened. In addition to the paired erectile corpora cavernosa. there is a median corpus spongioswm or corpus cavernosum urethre in connection with the penis (Fig. 307): corpora cavernosa are also Ccu Bnd A Fic. 307.—A, SEMIDIAGRAMMATIC FIGURE OF THE HuMAN Penis. (In transverse section and from the side.) B, Cirroris or 4 Monkry (Cebus capucinus). A, albuginea penis ; A’, albuginea urethre ; Sp, septum between the two corpora cavernosa ; S, sulcus dorsalis penis ; Ccp, corpus cavernosum ; Ceu, corpus spongiosum, which gives rise to the glans penis at Gp, and forms an oval enlargement (bulbus) at B; rd, rd‘, crura of the corpora cavernosa ; Cli, clitoris, with its ventral furrow (2), glans (Gc), and prepuce (Pp). present in the clitoris, and the corpus spongiosum, which retains its paired character, is represented by the so-called bulbi vestibuli at the vulva or entrance to the vagina. In many Mammals a bone (0s penis) becomes developed in the septum between the corpora cavernosa (¢.g., many Marsupials, Rodents, Bats, Carnivores, Whales, Lemurs, and Apes). In some (e.g., Seal) there is an os clitoridis in the female also. The glans is provided with a special kind of tactile corpuscles, and in the male may bear horny papille and even calcified plates and spines (¢.g., certain Rodents). | SUPRARENAL BODIES 385 In addition to the glandular vesicule seminales and the prostate (Fig. 377), paired Cowper’s glands (Fig. 299), open in the male into the urinogenital canal, and representatives of these (glands of Bartholint) usually occur in the female. Preputial glands are also present between the prepuce and glans penis and in a corresponding position in the female. — SUPRARENAL BopIEs. The suprarenals or adrenals are bodies of a glandular structure situated in the ccelome right and left of the vertebral column, generally in close proximity to the kidneys. Nothing is known of these bodies in Amphioxus or in the Dipnoi. In Cyclostomes they are said to be present and to arise in connection with the anterior part of the pronephros. In Elasmobranchii and Holocephali they are represented by two distinct sets of structures—paired or unpaired interrenals of a. yellow colour, close to the kidneys (Fig. 290), and a segmentally arranged row of suprarenal bodies, situated close to the inter- costal arteries in the neighbourhood of the kidneys. The former apparently represent the cortical (mesoblastic) and the former the medullary (epiblastic) portions of the adrenals of higher forms. In Teleostei the adrenals are usually paired and are in close relation with the kidneys—they correspond to the interrenals of Elasmobranchs. Amongst Ganoids the Sturgeon possesses numerous yellow bodies of the same nature. In Amphibia these organs form yellow streaks or dots on the ventral surface or inner border of the kidneys, receiving blood from the renal portal veins. as well as from the renal arteries. ; | In the higher Vertebrates the adrenals consist of “cortical ” and “medullary” portions, the latter derived from the sympathetic nervous system, and therefore epiblastic, and the former from the pronephros or mesonephros, or from the germinal epithelium (mesoblastic): the mode of development of the cortical substance, however, requires further investigation. They are abundantly supplied with blood-vessels and must have an important function, but their physiology is not understood. In Reptiles and Birds they are elongated and lobulated, and are situated close to the gonads. Both medulla and cortex are apparently represented in all these forms, but the relative relations of the two parts vary greatly. In Mammals each adrenal forms a definite and uniform rounded or oval mass lying near the corresponding kidney (Fig. 285 B), the medullary substance being central, and the cortical substance peripheral. In many Mammals these organs contain pigment cells as well as numerous lymphatic follicles and vessels. APPENDIX oa .t Ses APPENDIX. BIBLIOGRAPHY. List of the more important periodicals dealing with Comparative Anatomy, Embryology, Histology, &c. (The abbreviations used in the following pages are given in brackets.) Abhandlungen und Monatsberichte der K. Preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin. (Abh. Ak. Berlin.) Abhandlungen der mathematisch-physikalischen Classe der K. Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Miinchen. (Abh. Bayer. Ak.) Abdhandlungen der mathematisch-naturwissenschaftlichen Classe der K. Béhm- ischen Gesellschaft. Prag. (Abh. Bohm. Ges.) Abhandlungen der K. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gittingen. (Abh. Ges. 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Part 1. 1896. On the morphology and physiology of the suprarenal capsulesin Fishes. Anat. Anz. Bd. XT. 1897." . Contribution to the Comparative Anatomy and Histology of the suprarenal capsules. The suprarenal bodies in Fishes, and their relation to the so-called head kidney. Tr. Zool. Soc. Vol. XIV. Part 3. 1897. WeEtpon, W. F. R. On the Head Kidney of Bdellostoma with a suggestion as to the origin of the Suprarenal Bodies. Stud. Morph. Cam. Vol. II. Part 1. 1884. On the suprarenal Bodies of Vertebrata. Q. Journ. Micr. Sci. 1885. ZANDER, R. Ueber functionelle und genetische Beziehungen der Nebennieren zu andern Organen, speciell zum Grosshirn. Beitr. z. pathol. Anat. und .z. allgem. Pathol., herausgegeb. von Prof. E. Ziegler. Bd. VII. 1890. INDEX AMPHIOXUS :—segmentation of ovum, 5 ; development of body-cavity, 8; inte- gument, 16; notochord, 36; central nervous system, 157 ; nerves, 178, 179, 189; sense-organs, 190, 197, 211; lateral or metapleural folds, 104; muscles, 137 ; mouth, 239 ; alimentary canal, 257, 267; liver, 269; gills, 275; blood-vessels and corpuscles, 299 5 urinary organs, 348 ; generative organs, 359 (Compare Fig. 219) CYCLOSTOMEs :—segmentation of ovum, 5; integument, 16 ; vertebral column, 36 ; skull, 72; median fins, 103 ; muscles, 137, 142; brain, 157; spinal nerves, 179, 189 ; sense-organs of the integu- ment, 191, 193 ; olfactory organ, 197 ; eye, 211 ; auditory organ, 224 ; mouth, 239 ; horny teeth, 241; tongue, 252 ; thyroid, 255; alimentary canal, 257, 259, 267; liver, 271; pancreas, 272; gills, 275; genital pores, 298; blood- corpuscles, 300; heart, 305; veins, 322, 326 ; urinary organs, 349 ; genera- tive organs, 359 FisHEs :—integument, 16; exoskeleton, 30; vertebral column, 37; ribs, 54; skull, 74-81; unpaired fins, 103; paired fins, 104; pectoral arch, 106 ; pelvic arch, 109; free limbs, 122; parietal muscles, 137 ; visceral muscles, 142 ; muscles of the appendages, 142 ; electric organs, 146; spinal cord, 151 ; brain, 159-165; spinal nerves, 179; cerebral nerves, 180 ; sympathetic, 188 ; sense-organs of the integument, 190- 193 ; olfactory organ, 198; eye, 211 ; retina, 214; eye-muscles and eyelids, 216, 217; auditory organ, 224; rela- tions of auditory organ with air- bladder, 226 ; teeth, 241 ; tongue, 252 ; thyroid, 255 ; thymus, 256 ; alimentary canal, 257, 267; liver, 269; pancreas, 272; gills, 273, 276; air-bladder, 273, 280 ; abdominal and genital pores, 298 ; heart and vessels, 300, 305; arteries, 319; veins, 302; retia mirabilia, 333 ; lymphatic system, 333; spleen, 335 ; nutrition of embryo, 336; urinary organs, 350; generative organs, 360 ; claspers, 377 ; suprarenal bodies, 385 DIPNOANS :—integument, 16; exoskele- ton, 31; vertebral column, 37; ribs, 54; skull, 81; unpaired fins, 103; pectoral arch, 107; pelvic arch, 111 ; free limbs, 122 ; parietal muscles, 137 ; muscles of the appendages, 142 ; brain; 165; cerebral nerves, 180; sense- organs of the integument, 190-193; olfactory organ, 199; eye, 211; audi- tory organ, 224; teeth, 243; tongue, 252.; thyroid, 255 ; thymus, 257 ; ali- mentary canal, 257, 267; pancreas, 272; gills, 278 ; lungs, 283, 288; ab- dominal pore, 278 ; heart, 307 ; blood- vessels, 319, 326 ; spleen, 335 ; urinary organs, 352 ; generative organs, 361 AMPHIBIANS :—segmentation of ovum, 5; integument, 18 ; exoskeleton, 20, 33; vertebral column, 42 ; ribs,55 ; sternum, 58; episternum, 62; skull, 82, 88; median fins, 183; pectoral arch, 107 ;° pelvic arch, 111; free limbs, 127 ; parietal muscles, 137 ; visceral muscles, 143; muscles of the appen- dages, 142; spinal cord, 152-; brain, 166; spinal nerves, 179; cerebral nerves, 180; sympathetic, 189; sense- organs of the integument, 190, 193 ; tactile cells, 175 ; olfactory organ, 200 ; Jacobson’s organ, 205; eye, 212; retina, 214; eye-muscles and eyelids, 216, 217; glands of the eye, 218; auditory organ, 226 ; teeth, 243 ; glands of the mouth, 251 ; tongue, 253; thy- roid, 255; thymus, 257; alimentary Il 482 canal, 257, 267 ; liver, 269; pancreas, 272; gills, 273, 279; air-tubes and larynx, 283; lungs, 288; blood-cor- puscles, 300 ; heart, 309.; arteries, 319 ; veins, 328; lymphatic system, 333; spleen, 335; nutrition of embryo, 336 ; urinary organs, 352 ; generative organs, 365 ; copulatory organs, 379 ; adrenals, 385 REPTILES :—segmentation of ovum, 5 ; _ integument, 20; exoskeleton, 33 ; vertebral column, 45; ribs, 56: ster- num, 60; episternum, 63; skull, 88 ; median fins, 103; pectoral arch, 108 ; pelvic arch, 113; free limbs, 127; parietal muscles, 138 ; visceral muscles, 144; muscles of the appendages, 142 ; ‘*diaphragm,” 141; spinal. cord, 152 ; brain, 167; spinal nerves, 179; cere- bral nerves, 180; sympathetic, 189; end-buds, 193; tactile cells, 195; Pa- cinian corpuscles, 195 ; olfactory organ, 201 ; Jacobson’s organ, 207; retina, 214 ; eye-muscles and eyelids, 216, 217 ; glands of eye, 218; auditory organ, 227; teeth, 243; glands of mouth, 251 ; tongue, 253; thyroid, 255; thymus, 257 ; alimentary canal, 262, 267 ; liver, 269; pancreas, 272; air-tubes and larynx, 284; lungs, 290; abdominal pores, 298 ; heart, 313; arteries, 319 ; veins, 328; lymphatic system, 333; spleen, 335; urinary organs, 356 ; generative organs, 368; copulatory organs, 379; suprarenals, 370, 385 Birps :—segmentation of ovum, 5; inte- gument, 20; vertebral column, 47 ; ribs, 56; sternum, 60 ; episternum, 63 ; skull, 93; pectoral arch, 109; pelvic arch, 119; limbs, 129; parietal muscles, 140; spinal cord, 152; brain, 172 ; cerebral nerves, 180 ; sympathetic, 189 ; tactile cells, 195; Pacinian cor- puscles, 195; olfactory organ, 202 ; eye, 213; retina, 214 ; eye-muscles and eyelids, 216, 217; glands of the eye, 218; auditory organ, 227; teeth, 245; glands of the mouth, 252 ; tongue, 253 ; thyroid, 256; thymus, 257; alimen- tary canal, 262, 267 ; liver, 269; pan- creas, 272; air-tubes and larynx, 285; lungs and air-sacs, 291; circu- lation in embryo, 364; heart, 315; arteries, 319; veins, 328; lymphatic system, 334; urinary organs, 356; generative organs, 368; copulatory organs, 380; suprarenals, 385 MAMMALS :—segmentation of ovum, 5; integument, 23 ; mammar'y glands, 27 ; exoskeleton, 34 ; vertebral column, 49 ; ribs, 57 ; sternum, 60 ; episternum, 63 ; INDEX skull, 96; median fins, 103; pectoral arch, 109; pelvic arch, 120; limbs, 130; parietal muscles, 140; visceral muscles, 144; muscles of appendages, 142 ; diaphragm, 141 ; spinal cord, 152 ; brain, 172; spinal nerves, 179; cere- bral nerves, 180; sympathetic, 189 ; end-buds, 193; tactile cells, 195 ; Pa- cinian corpuscles, 195 ; olfactory organ, 203 ; Jacobson’s organ, 207 ; eye, 214; retina, 214; eye-muscles and eyelids, 216, 217 ; glands of eye, 218 ; auditory organ, 229 ; histology of cochlea, 232 ; lips, 239 ; teeth, 245 ; glands of mouth, 252 ; tongue, 255; thyroid, 256 ; thy- mus, 257 ; alimentary canal, 263, 267 ; liver, 269; pancreas, 272; air-tubes and larynx, 286; lungs, 296 ; blood- corpuscles, 300; heart, 315; arteries, 319; veins, «328; lymphatic system, 334; spleen, 335 ; tonsils, 335 ; urinary organs, 358; generative organs, 370 ; copulatory organs, 382; suprarenals, 385 A. Abdominal pores, 298 Acetabular bone, 120 Acetabulum, 113-120 Achromatin, 3 Acrania, 13 Acrodont dentition, 243 Acromion, 109 Adrenals (see Suprarenals) . Air-bladder, 273, 280 Air-sacs of birds, 291 Air-tubes, 283 Alimentary canal, 235-269 appendages of, 269 mucous membrane of, 267 Allantois, 9, 259, 337 Amnion, 9, 337 Amniota, 9 Amphiccelous vertebrae, 40 Anamnia, 9 Antibrachium, 126 Antlers, 100 Anus, 235 Aortic arches, 303 Aponeurosis, pulmonary, 292 Appendages, 12 Appendices auricule, 305 Apteria, 21 -Arachnoid, 151 Archenteron, 5 Arches, neural and hzemal, 36 Archipterygium, 106, 124 Arteries, 299—322 Artiodactyle foot, 134 Arytenoid cartilages, 283 Astragalus, 127-132 Atlas and axis of Reptiles, 46 ; 48; of Mammals, 49, 50 of Birds, ~ INDEX Atrial chamber of Amphioxus, 275 Auditory capsules, 68 Auditory organ, 220—234 :—development of, 220; relations with air-bladder, 226 Auditory ossicles, 100, 231 Autostylic skulls, 75 B. Baleen, 26 Basal processes of vertebral column, 38, 54 Basilar plate, 67 Basipterygium, 103, 104, 110, 122—125 Bidder’s organ, 366 Bile-duct, 272 Biserial fin, 106, 123, 124 Blastoderm, 4 Blastopore, 5 Blastosphere, 4 Blastula, 4 Blood corpuscles, 299, 300 Blood vessels, 299 Bodies of vertebrze (see Centra) Body-axis, 12 Body-cavity, 8 Bones, cartilage-, membrane-, and invest- ing-, 70; dermal, 18, 20, 26 Bones of skull (see Skull) Brachium, 126 Brain :—development, 149, 153; mem- branes of, 151 ; general structure, 153 ; convolutions, 154, 172 ; epiphysis, 154, 155; hypophysis, 154, 155; optic vesicles, 154; pallium, 153; saccus vasculosus, 154, 159, 160; ventricles, 156 Brain of Cyclostomi, 157; of Elasmo- branchii and Holocephali, 159; of Ganoidei, 162; of Teleostei, 162; of Dipnoi, 165; of Amphibia, 166; of Reptilia, 167 ; of Aves, 172; of Mam- malia, 172 Brain-case, 67 Branchiz (see Gills) Branchial arches, 69, 75—80, 85, 88, 93, 94, 102 Branchial basket of Cyclostomes, 73, 74 Branchial clefts, 69, 72, 236, 273 Branchiostegal membrane and rays, 79, 82 Bronchi, 281, 285, 296 Bursa Fabricii, 263 C. Czecum, 236, 262, 266 Calcaneum, 126—133 Campanula Halleri, 212 Cannon-bone, 134 Capillaries, 300 483 Carapace, 34 Carpalia, 126—133 Carpometacarpus, 130 Carpus, 126—133 Cartilage-bones, 71 Cauda equina, 152 Cement of teeth, 240 Centra of vertebra, 36 Central nervous system, 11, 149 Centrosome 3, 348 Cerebral flexure, 156 Cerebral nerves, 180 Cerebral vesicles, 153 Cerebro-spinal cavity, 11 Cheiropterygium, 125: Chevron bones, 46, 52 Chiasma, optic, 208 Choane, 82 Chondrocranium, 69 Chorda dorsalis (see Notochord) Chorion, 338 Choroid, 209 Choroid fissure, 209 Choroid ‘‘ gland,” 212 Choroid plexus, 158 Chromatin, 3 Cilia, 16 Ciliary folds, 209 Ciliary muscles, 210 Circulation (fcetal), 300 Claspers, 31, 377 Classification of Vertebrates, 13 Clavicle, 107—109 Claws, 16, 19, 20, 21, 26, 130 Clitoris, 373, 380, 384 Cloaca, 236, 259, 262 Coccyx, 52 Cochlea, 221—232 ; histology of, 233 Ccelome, 8 Colon, 236 Colostrums, 29 Columella auris, 84 ‘Commissures of brain, 154 Conjunctiva, 210 Constriction of notochord, 39, 40, 42, 45, 47, 49. Copulatory organs, 377 — _ Coracoid, 107—109 Corium, 16 Cornea, 210 Corpora adiposa, 368, 370 Corpora cavernosa and corpus spongio- sum, 382, 384 Corpus callosum, 173 Corpus luteum, 347 Corpuscles of blood, 268 Craniata, 13 Cranium, 66, 67 Cribriform plate, 99 Cricoid cartilage, 283 Crop, 262 Crus, 126 Cuboid, 132 Cutis, 16 484 D. Decidua, 340 Dental formule, 250°. >. Denticles, dermal, 30, 7 Dentine, 240 Dentition, milk, 245 Dermal skeleton, 30—34 Dermis, 16 Deuteroplasm, 3, 4 Development :—general, 3—12; feathers, 21; hairs, 23; teats, 28 ; dermal skele- ton, 30; vertebral column, 34; tail of Fishes, 41; ribs, 52; sternum, 58; skull, 64—72; horns, 99; _ limbs, 102—106 ; muscles, 135, 142; electric organs, 147 ; central nervous system, 149; brain, 153; nerves, 177, 180; sympathetic, 188; sensory organs, 189 ; olfactory organ, 196; eye, 207; glands of eye, 218; auditory organ, 220; alimentary canal, 235; teeth, 239; thyroid, 255; thymus, 256; ali- mentary glands, 267—272 ; gills, 272; air-bladder, 273 ; lungs, 281 ; air-sacs, 295; heart, 300; placenta, 337; urinogenital organs, 341 ; suprarenals, 385 Diaphragm, 141 Digestion, intracellular, and extracellu- lar, 267 Digits, 123—134. Diphycercal tail, 41 Diphyodont, 241 Discoid segmentation, 5 Duct :—hepatic, 272; naso-lachrymal, 201; naso-palatine of Myxinoids, 198 ; pancreatic, 272; pneumatic, 280 ; sali- vary, 251, 252; urinogenital, 346. Ductus Botalli, 312. Cuvieri, 322 ejaculatorius, 377 endolymphaticus, 221 perilymphaticus, 232 venosus, 333 Duodenum, 236 Dura mater, 151 ee E. Ear, 220—234 Echeneis, suctorial disk, 103 Ketoderm, 4 Egg-cell (see Ovum) Electric lobes of brain, 161 _ Electric organs, 146, 150 Embryonic area, 8 Enamel organs, 240 End-buds, 193 Endoderm, 4 Endolymph, 222 Ensiform process, 61 Enterocceles, 8 INDEX Epiblast, 4 ~ Epicoracoid, 109 Epidermis, 16 - Epididymis, 346, 350 Epiglottis, 286 Epiphyses of vertebre, 49 Kpiphysis cerebri, 155 Epipubis, 111, 114, 117, 118, 121 Episternum, 62—64 Eustachian aperture and tube, 87 91, 94 Exoskeleton, 30, 34 Extra-branchials, 138,210 Kye, 207—216:—glands in connection ' with, 217; muscles of, 216 Eyelids, 217 Kyes, rudimentary, 21] 213 F. Fallopian tube, 373 Fascize, 136 Fat-bodies, 368, 370 Feathers, 21 Femur, 126—131 Fenestra :—rotunda, 91, 227, 232; ovalis. 84, 226, 232 Fertilisation of ovum, 3 Fibula, 126, 131 Fibulare, 126, 133 Filum terminale, 152 Fin-rays, 103, 105, 122, 125 Fins (see Limbs) Food-yolk, 3, 5 Foramen ovale (of heart), 317 Foramen Panizzxe, 314 — Furcula, 109 Gall-bladder, 272 Giartner’s duct, 375 Gastrula, 5 Generative cells, development of, 347 Generative ducts, 346 Generative organs, 359—385 Genital pores, 298 Germinal epithelium, 347 Germinal layers, 4 Germinal spot, 3 Germinal vesicle, 3 Gill-arches and clefts (see Branchial arches and Clefts) Fills, 236, 273 Gills, external, 273, 278, 279 Gills, spiracular, 278 Gizzard, 262 Glands :—Bowman’s, 204 ; of Bartholini, 385; of claspers, 18, 378 ; Cowper’s, 385; digestive, 267; femoral, yf gastric, 257; ‘267 5 Harderian, 217-3 inguinal, 27; integumentary, 17—29 ; intermaxillary or internasal, 251 ; INDEX labial, 251 ; lachrymal, 217 ; of Lieber- kiihn, 268; lingual, 251; mammary, 27; Meibomian, 219; Mboll’s, 219; nasal (external) of Birds, 203; of olfac- tory mucous membrane, 201, 202 ; ovi- ducal, 363; palatine, 251; parotid, 252 ; pharyngeal, 251 ; poison, 18, 251 ; preputial, 27, 385; prostate, 377; rectal, 261; sebaceous, 27; Stenson’s, 204; sublingual, 252 ; sweat, 27; uni- cellular, 217 ; uropygial, 21. Glomerulus, 345 Glomus, 341 _ Glottis, 281 Glyptodon, exoskeleton of, 34 Gnathostomata, 73 Goblet-cells; 17 Gonads, 347 Gut, postanal, 322 Gyri, 154 Hairs, 16, 24 Head, 12 Heart, 299—319 Hemibranch, 276 Heredity, 1 Hermaphrodite structures, 365, 366. 370 Heterocercal tail, 41 Heterodont dentition, 241 Hibernating gland, 335 Holoblastic segmentation, 5 Holobranch, 276 Homocercal tail, 41 Homodont dentition, 241 Horns, 99 Humerus, 126—133 Humour, vitreous, 209 aqueous, 210 Hyaloplasm, 3 Hymen, 375 Hyoid arch, 69, 70, 75, 76, 80, 82, 85, 88, 93, 94, 102 Hyomandibular, 70, 75, 76 Hyostylic skulls, 75 Hypoblast, 4 Hypoischium, 117, 118 Hypophysis cerebri, 155 Hypural bones, 41 Ichthyopsida, 13 Ichthyopterygium, 125 Tleum, 236 Ilium, 114—120 Impregnation, 3 Incus, 100, 231 Inguinal canal, 375 Integument, 16—29: sense, organs, of, 190 Intercalary pieces of vertebree, 38 485 Intercentra, 41, 44, 45, 47, 52 Interclavicle, 63 Intermedium, 126—133 Intermuscular bones, 55 Interspinous bones, 103 Intertrabecula, 67, 74 Intervertebral discs, 46, 48, 49 Intestine, small and large, 236, 257, 262, 263 Tris, 210 Ischium, 114, 120 J, Jacobson, anastomosis of, 186 Jacobson, organ of, 205 Jejunum, 236 K. Karyokinesis, 3 Kidney, 340—359 L. Labial cartilage, 73, 75 Labyrinth :—membranous, 221 ; 222 Lachrymal glands, 217 Lacteals, 334 Lagena, 221 Lamina cribrosa, 74, 85 Lanugo, 26 Laryngeal pouches, 288 Laryngo-tracheal chamber, 283 Larynx, 281, 283 Lateral fin-folds, 103 Lateral line, sensory organs of, 191 Lens, crystalline, 209 Leucocytes, 334 Ligaments, intervertebral, 36 Limbs :—unpaired, 102; Ered 108—134 Lips, 239 Liver, 269 Lungs, 273, 281, 288 Lymph, 299, 334 Lymph-hearts, 334 sinuses, 334 vessels, 299, 333 Lymphatic glands, 267, 335 system, 333 Lymphoid substance in relation with urinogenital organs :—of Teleostei, Ganoidei, and Dipnoi, 352, 363; of Amphibia, 368 ; of Reptilia, 370 bony, M. Macula acustica, 223 Malleus, 100, 231 j Malpighian capsule, 345 Mammalia, 14 Mammary glands, 27 486 Mammary pouch, 28 Mandibular arch, 69 Manubrium sterni, 61 - Manus, 126—134 = Marsupial bones, 121 Marsupial pouch, 28, 375 Maturation, 3 Meatus, external auditory, 224 Meckel’s cartilage, 69 Mediastinum, 298 Medullary cord and groove, 149 Membrana tympani, 224 tympaniformis, 286 Membrane bones, 71 Membranous labyrinth, 221 Menisci of vertebra, 46, 48, 49 Meroblastic segmentation, 5 Mesentery, 236 Mesoblast, 4, 6 Mesoblastic somites, 8, 66 Mesoderm, 4 Mesonephric duct, 341, 346 Mesonephros, 341 Mesopterygium, 122—125 Metacarpus, 126—134 Metamerism of head and body, 33, 65, 181 Metanephric duct, 346 Metanephros, 346 Metapterygium, 110 Metatarsus, 126—134 Milk dentition, 245 Morula, 4 Mouth, 235, 239 Miillerian duct, 346 Muscular system, 135—145 :—voluntary and involuntary, 135; integumentary musculature, 136; facial muscles, 136 ; muscles of the trunk, 137; of the dia- phragm, 141; of the appendages, 142 ; of the eyes, 181, 216; visceral muscles —Fishes, 142; Amphibia, 143; Amni- ota, 144; muscles of the feather sacs, 21; arrectores pili, 26; ciliary, 210, 213, 214; of iris, 210, 214; cremaster, 375; lateral, 137; papillary, 316 ; platysma myoides, 136; stapedius, 231 ; tensor tympani, 231 Myocommata, 137 Myotomes, 66, 137 N. Nails, 26 Nares (see Nostrils), Naso-lachrymal duct, 201 Naso-palatine duct of Cyclostomes, 74 Navicular, 133 Neck, 12 Neostoma, 155 Nephridia, 341, 346 Nephrostomes, 341, 345 Nerve-eminences, 190 Nerve-plexuses, 179 INDEX Nerve, lateral, 185, 187 phrenic, 141 ° Nerves, cerebral, 180—188; olfactory, 196 ; optic, 207 ; oculomotor, trochlear, and abducent, 184, trigeminal, 184 ; facial, 185; auditory, 186 ; glossopharyn- geal, 186 ; vagus, 186 ; spinal accessory, 187 ; hypoglossal, 188 Nerves, spinal, 177, 179 Nervous system, 149; central, 149—177 ; peripheral, 177—189; sympathetic, 189 Neural ridge, 177 Neural tube, 9 Neurenteric canal, 151 Neuroglia, 149 Neuropore of Amphioxus, 157 Nictitating-membrane, 217 Nose, external, 204 Nostrils, 73, 82, 197 Notochord, 5, 9, 34—49 Nucleolus, 3 Nucleus, 3 Nucleus pulposus, 49 O. Obturator foramen, 111, 117, 119 Odontoid bone, 46 (Esophageo-cutaneous duct, 275 (Esophagus, 238, 257, 262, 263 Olfactory organ, 196—207 Olfactory scrolls, 203 Olfactory tract and bulb, 159 Omosternum, 58 Oosperm, 3 Opercular bones, 77, 79 Operculum, 75 Orbital ring, 79, 91 Organ of Corti, 230 Os penis and clitoridis, 384 Ossification, 71 Osteocranium, 69 Otic bones, 78 Otoliths, 222 Ovarian follicle, 347 Ovary, 347, 359—375 Oviducal gland, 363 Oviduct, 346 Ovipositor, 360 Ovotestis, 367 Ovum, 2, 347 x. Paeinian corpuscles, 195 | Palate, 92, 94, 288 Paleostoma, 155 Palatoquadrate, 69, 75, 76, 78 Pancreas, 272 Panniculus adiposus, 26. __ Parachordal and prechordal cartilages, 67 Paraphysis, 155 INDEX 487 Parietal foramen, 85, 91, 162, 166, 171 Proventriculus, 262 Parietal organ, 155, 171 Pseudobranch, 278 Parorchis, 346, 350 Pterygiophores, 103, 105, 122—125 Parovarium, 375 Pterygopodium, 378 Pars acetabularis, 119, 120 Pteryle, 21 Patella, 132 Pubis, 114—120 Pecten, 213 Pupil, 210 Pectoral arch, 106 Pygostyle, 48 Pelvic arch, 109 Pyloric ceca, 259 Pelvic plate, 109, 111 Penis, 377, 379—384 Q. Pericardium, 300 Perilymph, 222 + Perinseum, 375 Quadrate cartilage, 69 Perissodactyle feet, 134 Peritoneal funnels, 235 Peritoneum, 235 R. Pes, 126—134 : Phalanges, 126—134 Radiale, 126—133 7 Pharyngeal teeth of Teleosts, 81 Radii of fins, 102, 105, 122—125 Pharynx, 236, 273 Radius, 126—133 : Phosphorescent organs, 18 Receptaculum chyli, 334 Physoclisti, 280 Rectum, 236 Physostomi, 280 Reproduction of tail in Licayle, 47 Pia mater, 151 Respiratory organs, 273—298 Pigment of skin, 18, 19, 20, 26 Rete testis, 346 Pineal organ, 155, 159 Retia mirabilia, 280, 333 Pinna of ear, 233 Retina, 208, 214 Pisiform bone, 128, 133 Ribs, 11, 52—61 Pituitary body, 155 Ribs, abdominal, 56, 57, 58 Pituitary space, 67 Ribs, cranial, of Dipnoi, 82 a Placenta, allantoic, 9, 337—340 pet peek limbs, 109, 121, 127, 129, i 338 Placoid organs, 30 Ruminant stomach, 265 Plastron, 34 Pleura, 297 S. Pleurocentra, 41, 44, 45 Pleurodont dentition, 243 Sacculus, 221 Pleuronectide, asymmetry of head, 81 Sauropsida, 14 Plica semilunaris, 217 Scala vestibuli, tympani, and media, 232 Pneumatic bones, 93, 99, 130, 295 Scales, 18, 20, 26, 30 Poison fangs, 243 Scapula, 107—109 Polar cells, 3 Schizoceele, 8 Polymastism and Polythelism, 29 Sclerotic, 210 Polyphyodont, 241 plates, 213 Prehallux, 127, 128, 133 Scrotal sacs, 375 Prepollex, 128, 133 : Segmentation cavity, 4 Prepubic process, 117 nucleus, 3 Prepuce, 382 of head, 66 Primitive steak, 6 of oosperm, 3, 5 Pro-amnion, 357 Semicircular canals, 221 Pro-atlas, 46 Sense-capsules, 68 Processus falciformis, 211 Sense organs of integument, 190—196 Processus vermiformis, 266 Sensory organs, 189—234 Procoracoid, 107 Septum, oblique, 292 Proctodeum, 5, 235 Sesamoids, 136 Promontory of sacrum, 51 Sheaths of notochord, 34 Pronephric duct, 341 Skeletogenous layer of vertebral column, Pronephros, 341 36 Pronucleus, male and female, 3 Skin, 16 Propterygium, 122—125 Skull, 64—102 Prostate, 377 bones of, 71, 76—102 Protocercal tail, 41 Somatopleure, 8 Protovertebre, 8, 66 Spermatozoa, 3, 348 488 Spinal cord, 149, 152 Spines, neural and hemal, 37 Spiracle, 75,277 Spiracular cartilage, 75 Spiral valve of intestine, 257 Splanchnopleure, 8 Spleen, 335 Spongioplasm, 3 Spots, blind and yellow, of retina, 214, 216 Stapedial plate, 84 Stapes, 100, 231 Sternum, 11, 56, 58—61 Stomach, 236, 257, 262, 263 Stomodeum, 5, 235 Stratum corneum and Malpighii, 16 Sublingua, 255 Sub-notochordal rod, 235 Suctorial mouth, 73, 86 Sulci, 154 Suprarenal bodies, 370, 385 Suspensorium, 70, 85, 92 Swim-bladder (see Air Bladder) Sympathetic, 188 Symphysis pubis and ischii, 114-121 Symplectic, 70, 76 Syrinx, 258 ay Tactile cells and een, 195 Tapetum, 212 Tarsalia, 126—133 Tarsometatarsus, 130 Tarsus, 126—133 Taste, organs of, 193 Teats, 28 Teeth, 74, 78, 82, 84, 92, 94, 239—250 horny, 73, 241, 243, 250 Testis, 347, 359—377 Thecodont dentition, 243 Thoracic duct, 344 Thymus, 256 Thyroid, 255 Thyroid cartilage, 286 Tibia, 126—131 Tibiale, 126—133 Tibiotarsus, 130 Tissues, 2 Tongue, 252 muscles of, 144 Tonsils, 335 Tori, 296 Trabecule cranii, 67 Trachea, 281, 283 Triconodont tooth, 246 Tritubercular tooth, 246 Trunk, 12, Tubules of kidney, 341 Turbinals, 100, 200—203 Tusks, 250 Tympanic membrane and cavity, 86, 224 Typhlosole, 257 INDEX us Ulna, 126—133. Ulnare, 126—133 Umbilical cord, 340 vesicle, 337 Uniserial fin, 122, 124 Unciform bone, 132 Uncinate processes, 56 Urachus, 340, 358 Ureter, 346 Urethra, 358 Urinary bladder, 259, 262, 354, 357, 358 of Fishes, 350 organs, 348 —359 Urinogenital organs, 340—385 Urostyle, 41, 44 Uterus, 363, 373 —~ masculinus, 377 Utriculus, 221 V. ' Vagina, 373 Vas deferens, 346 Vasa efferentia, 346, 350 Vascular system, 299—336 Veins, 299—318, 322—333 Velum, 275 Vent, 235 Ventricles of brain, 156 Vertebral column, 9, 34-52 theory of skull, 64 Vertebrarterial canal, 50 Vesicula seminalis, 354, 363, 377 Villi of intestine, 269 of placenta, 338 Viscera, 11 Visceral arches, 66, 69, 75—85, 88, 93, 94, 102 Visceral tube, 9 Vitelline membrane, 3 Vitello-intestinal duct, 9 Vitellus, 2 Vocal cords, 283 Vocal sacs of Anura, 283 WwW Wolffian body, 341 duct, 346 X. _ Xiphoid process, 61 bd Yolk, 3, 4 Yolk-sac, 8 Z. Zygantra and Zygosphenes, 47 Zygapophyses, 40, 45, 47, 48, 49 Zygomatic arch, 100 14 DAY USE RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED .. { 6 This book is due Gn‘the last date stamped below, or on the date to which renewed. 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