Fig. 27*. Transverse section through the tail region of a Pristiurus embryo of the same age as fig. 28 E.
df. dorsal fin; sp.c. spinal cord; pp. body cavity; sp. splanchnic layer of mesoblast; so. somatic layer of mesoblast; mp. commencing differentiation of muscles; ch. notochord; x. subnotochordal rod arising as an outgrowth of the dorsal wall of the alimentary tract; al. alimentary tract.
The middle portion of the alimentary tract is the last to be closed in since it remains till late in embryonic life as the umbilical or vitelline canal, connecting the yolk-sack with the alimentary cavity. The umbilical canal falls into the alimentary tract immediately behind the entrance of the hepatic duct.
At a fairly early stage of development a rod is constricted off from the dorsal wall of the alimentary canal ([figs. 27*] and [23] x), which is known as the subnotochordal rod. It is placed immediately below the notochord, and disappears during embryonic life.
General features of the Elasmobranch embryo at successive stages.
Shortly after the three germinal layers become definitely established, the rudiment of the embryo, as visible from the surface, consists of an oblong plate, which extends inwards from the periphery of the blastoderm, and is bounded on its inner side by a head-fold and two lateral folds ([fig. 28] B). This plate is the medullary plate; along its axial line is a shallow groove—the medullary groove (mg). The rudiment of the embryo rapidly increases in length, and takes a spatula-like form ([fig. 28] C). The front part of it, turned away from the edge of the blastoderm, soon becomes dilated into a broad plate,—the cephalic plate (h)—while the tail end at the edge of the blastoderm is also enlarged, being formed of a pair of swellings—the tail swellings (ts)—derived from the lateral parts of the original embryonic rim. By this stage a certain number of mesoblastic somites have become formed but are not shewn in my figure. They are the foremost somites of the trunk, and those behind them continue to be added, like the segments in Chætopods, between the last formed somite and the end of the body. The increase in length of the body mainly takes place by growth in the region between the last mesoblastic somite and the end of the tail. The anterior part of the body is now completely folded off from the blastoderm, and the medullary groove of the earlier stage has become converted into a closed canal.
By the next stage ([fig. 28] D) the embryo has become so much folded off from the yolk both in front and behind that the separate parts of it begin to be easily recognizable.
The embryo is attached to the yolk by a distinct stalk or cord, which in the succeeding stages gradually narrows and elongates, and is known as the umbilical cord (so. s.). The medullary canal has now become completely closed. The anterior region constitutes the brain; and in this part slight constrictions, not perceptible in views of the embryo as a transparent object, mark off three vesicles. These vesicles are known as the fore, mid, and hind brain. From the fore-brain there is an outgrowth on each side, the first rudiment of the optic vesicles (op). The tail swellings are still conspicuous.