Phylogeny of the Chordata. It may be convenient to shew in a definite way the bearing of the above speculations on the phylogeny of the Chordata. For this purpose, I have drawn up the subjoined table, which exhibits what I believe to be the relationships of the existing groups of the Chordata. Such a table cannot of course be constructed from embryological data alone, and it does not fall within the scope of this work to defend its parts in detail.
In the above table the names printed in large capitals are hypothetical groups. The other groups are all in existence at the present day, but those printed in Italics are probably degenerate. [TN1]
The ancestral forms of the Chordata, which may be called the Protochordata, must be supposed to have had (1) a notochord as their sole axial skeleton, (2) a ventral mouth, surrounded by suctorial structures, and (3) very numerous gill-slits. Two degenerate offshoots of this stock still persist in Amphioxus (Cephalochorda), and the Ascidians (Urochorda).
The direct descendants of the ancestral Chordata, were probably a group which may be called the Protovertebrata, of which there is no persisting representative. In this group, imperfect neural arches were probably present; and a ventral suctorial mouth without a mandible and maxillæ was still persistent. The branchial clefts had, however, become reduced in number, and were provided with gill-folds; and a secondary head (vide p. [313]), with brain and organs of sense like those of the higher Vertebrata, had become formed.
The Cyclostomata are probably a degenerate offshoot of this group.
With the development of the branchial bars, and the conversion of the mandibular bar into the skeleton of the jaws, we come to the Proto-gnathostomata. The nearest living representatives of this group are the Elasmobranchii, which still retain in the adult state the ventrally placed mouth. Owing to the development of food-yolk in the Elasmobranch ovum the early stages of development are to some extent abbreviated, and almost all trace of a stage with a suctorial mouth has become lost.
We next come to an hypothetical group which we may call the Proto-ganoidei. Bridge, in his memoir on Polyodon[118], which contains some very interesting speculations on the affinities of the Ganoids, has called this group the Pneumatocœla, from the fact that we find for the first time a full development of the air-bladder, though it is possible that a rudiment of this organ, in the form of a pouch opening on the dorsal side of the stomachic extremity of the œsophagus, was present in the earlier type.
Existing Ganoids are descendants of the Proto-ganoidei. Some of them at all events retain in larval life the suctorial mouth of the Protovertebrata; and the mode of formation of their germinal layers, resembling as it does that in the Lamprey and the Amphibia, probably indicates that they are not descended from forms with a large food-yolk like that of Elasmobranchii, and that the latter group is therefore a lateral offshoot from the main line of descent.