Fig. 34. View of an advanced embryo of a Herring in the egg. (After Kupffer.)
oc. eye; ht. heart; hyv. postanal vesicle; ch. notochord.
The first cleft closes up very early (about the time of hatching in the Salmon); and about the same time there springs a membranous fold from the hyoid arch, which gradually grows backwards over the arches following, and gives rise to the operculum. There appear in the Salmon shortly before hatching double rows of papillæ on the four anterior arches behind the hyoid. They are the rudiments of the branchiæ. They reach a considerable length before they are covered in by the opercular membrane. In Cobitis (Götte, No. [64]) they appear in young larvæ as filiform processes equivalent to the external gills of Elasmobranchs. The extremities of these processes atrophy; while the basal portions became the permanent gill lamellæ. The general relation of the clefts, after the closure of the hyomandibular, is shewn in [fig. 35].
The air-bladder is formed as a dorsal outgrowth of the alimentary tract very slightly in front of the liver. It grows in between the two limbs of the mesentery, in which it extends itself backwards. It appears in the Salmon, Carp, and other types to originate rather on the right side of the median dorsal line, but whether this fact has any special significance is rather doubtful. In the Salmon and Trout it is formed considerably later than the liver, but the two are stated by Von Baer to arise in the Carp nearly at the same time. The absence of a pneumatic duct in the Physoclisti is due to a post-larval atrophy. The region of the stomach is reduced almost to nothing in the larva.
The œsophagus becomes solid, like that of Elasmobranchs, and remains so for a considerable period after hatching.
The liver, in the earliest stage in which I have met with it in the Trout (27 days after impregnation), is a solid ventral diverticulum of the intestine, which in the region of the liver is itself without a lumen.
Fig. 35. Diagrammatic view of the head of an embryo Teleostean, with the primitive vascular trunks. (From Gegenbaur.)
a. auricle; v. ventricle; abr. branchial artery; c´. carotid; ad. aorta; s. branchial clefts; sv. sinus venosus; dc. ductus Cuvieri; n. nasal pit.