In fig. G the rudiments of the nasal sacks are clearly visible as small open pits.

The first cleft is no longer similar to the rest, but by the closure of the lower part has commenced to be metamorphosed into the spiracle.

Accompanying the change in position of the first cleft, the mandibular arch has begun to bend round so as to enclose the front as well as the sides of the mouth. By this change in the mandibular arch the mouth becomes narrowed in an antero-posterior direction.

In fig. H are seen the long filiform external gills which now project out from all the visceral clefts, including the spiracle. They are attached to the front wall of the spiracle, to both walls of the next four clefts, and to the front wall of the last cleft. They have very possibly become specially developed to facilitate respiration within the egg; and they disappear before the close of larval life.

When the young of Scyllium and other Sharks are hatched they have all the external characters of the adult. In Raja and Torpedo the early stages, up to the acquirement of a shark-like form, are similar to those in the Selachoidei, but during the later embryonic stages the body gradually flattens out, and assumes the adult form, which is thus clearly shewn to be a secondary acquirement.

An embryonic gill cleft behind the last present in the adult is found (Wyman, No. [54]) in the embryo of Raja batis.

The unpaired fins are developed in Elasmobranchs as a fold of skin on the dorsal side, which is continued round the end of the tail along the ventral side to the anus. Local developments of this give rise to the dorsal and anal fins. The caudal fin is at first symmetrical, but a special lower lobe grows out and gives to it a heterocercal character.

Enclosure of the yolk-sack and its relation to the embryo.

The blastoderm at the stage represented in [fig. 28] A and B forms a small and nearly circular patch on the surface of the yolk, composed of epiblast and lower layer cells. While the body of the embryo is gradually being moulded this patch grows till it envelopes the yolk; the growth is not uniform, but is less rapid in the immediate neighbourhood of the embryonic part of the blastoderm than elsewhere. As a consequence of this, that part of the edge, to which the embryo is attached, forms a bay in the otherwise regular outline of the edge of the blastoderm, and by the time that about two-thirds of the yolk is enclosed this bay is very conspicuous. It is shewn in [fig. 30] A, where bl points to the blastoderm, and yk to the part of the yolk not yet covered by the blastoderm. The embryo at this time is only connected with the yolk-sack by a narrow umbilical cord; but, as shewn in the figure, is still attached to the edge of the blastoderm.