Fig. 22. Horizontal section through the trunk of an embryo of Scyllium considerably younger than 28 F.
The section is taken at the level of the notochord, and shews the separation of the cells to form the vertebral bodies from the muscle-plates.
ch. notochord; ep. epiblast; Vr. rudiment of vertebral body; mp. muscle-plate; mp´. portion of muscle-plate already differentiated into longitudinal muscles.
The next change results in the complete separation of the vertebral portion of the plate from the lateral portion; thereby the upper segmented part of the body cavity becomes isolated, and separated from the lower and unsegmented part. As a consequence of this change the vertebral plate comes to consist of a series of rectangular bodies, the mesoblastic somites, each composed of two layers, a somatic and a splanchnic, between which is the cavity originally continuous with the body cavity ([fig. 23], mp). The splanchnic layer of the plates buds off cells to form the rudiments of the vertebral bodies which are at first segmented in the same planes as the mesoblastic somites ([fig. 22], Vr). The plates themselves remain as the muscle-plates (mp), and give rise to the whole of the voluntary muscular system of the body. Between the vertebral and lateral plates there is left a connecting isthmus, with a narrow prolongation of the body cavity ([fig. 23] B, st), which gives rise (as described in a special chapter) to the segmental tubes and to other parts of the excretory system.
In the meantime the lateral plates of the two sides unite ventrally throughout the intestinal and cardiac regions of the body, and the two primitively isolated cavities contained in them coalesce. In the tail however the plates do not unite ventrally till somewhat later, and their contained cavities remain distinct till eventually obliterated.
At first the pericardial cavity is quite continuous with the body cavity; but it eventually becomes separated from the body cavity by the attachment of the liver to the abdominal wall, and by a horizontal septum in which run the two ductus Cuvieri ([fig. 23] A, sv). Two perforations in this septum ([fig. 23] A) leave the cavities in permanent communication.
The parts derived from the two layers of the mesoblast (not including special organs or the vascular system) are as follows:—
From the somatic layer are formed
(1) A considerable part of the voluntary muscular system of the body.
(2) The dermis.
(3) A large part of the intermuscular connective tissue.
(4) Part of the peritoneal epithelium.
From the splanchnic layer are formed
(1) A great part of the voluntary muscular system.
(2) Part of the intermuscular connective tissue.
(3) The axial skeleton and surrounding connective tissue.
(4) The muscular and connective-tissue wall of the alimentary tract.
(5) Part of the peritoneal epithelium.