AMPHIBIA[42].

The eggs of most Amphibia[43] are laid in water. They are smallish nearly spherical bodies, and in the majority of known Anura (all the European species), and in many Urodela (Amblystoma, Axolotl, though not in the common Newt) part of the surface is dark or black, owing to the presence of a superficial layer of pigment, while the remainder is unpigmented. The pigmented part is at the upper pole of the egg, and contains the germinal vesicle till the time of its atrophy; and the yolk-granules in it are smaller than those in the unpigmented part. The ovum is closely surrounded by a vitelline membrane[44], and receives, in its passage down the oviduct, a gelatinous investment of varying structure.

In the Anura the eggs are fertilized as they leave the oviduct. In some of the Urodela the mode of fertilization is still imperfectly understood. In Salamanders and probably Newts it is internal[45]; but in Amblystoma punctatum (Clark, No. [98]), the male deposits the semen in the water. The eggs are laid by the Anura in masses or strings. By Newts they are deposited singly in the angle of a bent blade of grass or leaf of a water-plant, and by Amblystoma punctatum in masses containing from four eggs to two hundred. Salamandra atra and Salamandra maculosa are viviparous. The period of gestation for the latter species lasts a whole year.

A good many exceptions to the above general statements have been recorded[46].

In Notodelphis ovipara the eggs are transported (by the male?) into a peculiar dorsal pouch of the skin of the female, which has an anterior opening, but is continued backwards into a pair of diverticula. The eggs are very large, and in this pouch, which they enormously distend, they undergo their development. A more or less similar pouch is found in Nototrema marsupiatum.

In the Surinam toad (Pipa dorsigera) the eggs are placed by the male on the back of the female. A peculiar pocket of skin becomes developed round each egg, the open end of which is covered by a gelatinous operculum. The larvæ are hatched, and actually undergo their metamorphosis, in these pockets. The female during this period lives in water. Pipa Americana (if specifically distinct from P. dorsigera) presents nearly the same peculiarities. The female of a tree frog of Ceylon (Polypedates reticulatus) carries the eggs attached to the abdomen.

Rhinoderma Darwinii[47] behaves like some of the Siluroid fishes, in that the male carries the eggs during their development in an enormously developed laryngeal pouch.

Some Anura do not lay their eggs in water. Chiromantis Guineensis attaches them to the leaves of trees; and Cystignathus mystacius lays them in holes near ponds, which may become filled with water after heavy rains.

The eggs of Hylodes Martinicensis are laid under dead leaves in moist situations.

Formation of the layers.