The margins of the stigmata are lined with cilia which set up currents; and the water which enters by the branchial orifice, passes through the stigmata into the atrial cavity, and thence out through the atrial orifice. The walls of the branchial sac are chiefly composed of a sieve-like meshwork of fine blood-vessels arranged in transverse and longitudinal rows. The currents of water passing through the stigmata aërate the blood in the vessels. Besides the stigmata, the branchial sac has two relatively large orifices, viz., the branchial orifice or mouth, and, at the opposite end, the opening into the gullet. The branchial sac is, in fact, a capacious throat or pharynx (Diagram Fig. 2 and Fig. 14). Inside the branchial orifice is a circle of fine tentacles, which guard the entrance to the branchial sac. The food of the animal consists of minute animal and vegetable organisms.
It may be wondered how this food is secured, seeing that the currents of water are continually passing through the sieve-like walls of the branchial sac to the exterior again. Within the branchial orifice and above the branchial sac are two circular ciliated ridges with a groove between, which is full of viscid secretion; the cilia on the ridges direct particles into the groove where they are retained by the mucus.
Passing backwards along the ventral edge of the branchial sac is a thick-lipped furrow, which appears like a rod in the thin-walled sac, and hence is called the endostyle. This organ secretes the mucus which is carried up by ciliary action to the circular groove in front of the branchial sac, and thence to the gullet along a fold or crest, termed the dorsal lamina, situated along the dorsal edge of the branchial sac.
The gullet opens into a large stomach situated posteriorly on the left side of the branchial sac. The stomach opens into the intestine, which, after forming a loop, terminates in the anal orifice or vent opening into the atrial cavity.
The tubular heart lies below the stomach, a remarkable feature in the circulation consisting in the periodic reversal of the blood current. An elongated nerve ganglion is situated between the branchial and atrial orifices.
Fig. 5.
Ascidian Tadpole with part only of the tail C. Magnified section.
N, nervous system with enlarged brain in front and narrow spinal cord behind n; N′, cavity of brain; O, the single cerebral eye lying in the brain; a, auditory organ; K, pharynx; d, intestines; o, rudiment of mouth; ch, notochord or primitive backbone.
(From Gegenbaur’s ‘Elements of Comparative Anatomy.’)
Ascidia mentula is hermaphrodite. The egg develops into a minute tadpole-like larva which swims about by means of its tail. Water entering by the mouth passes out through the gill-slits. A nerve-tube extending along the back and tail is swollen in front into a brain-vesicle; and underneath the long nerve-tube behind the brain is a stiff skeletal rod or axis—the notochord—which constitutes the rudiment of a backbone. Inside the brain are two unpaired sense organs, an eye and an organ of hearing (Fig. 5). After swimming freely for a few hours, the larva settles down head foremost and fixes itself by papillæ on the anterior end (Figs. 6, 7). Presently the tail becomes absorbed, and the posterior end of the nerve-tube, and the brain with its eye and hearing organ, undergo atrophy, the nerve ganglion of the adult alone representing the cerebrospinal axis of the larva. The branchial sac and intestines develop greatly, and growth proceeds in such a manner that the mouth is pushed round to a position opposite to the fixed area, and gradually the animal becomes the adult ascidian.
Fig. 6.
Degeneration of Ascidian Tadpole to form the adult. The black pieces represent the rock or stone to which the Tadpole has fixed its head.