Fig. 73. Diagrammatic longitudinal section of the embryo of a Frog. (Modified from Götte.)
nc. neural canal; x. point of junction of epiblast and hypoblast at the dorsal lip of the blastopore; al. alimentary tract; yk. yolk-cells; m. mesoblast. For the sake of simplicity the epiblast is represented as if composed of a single row of cells.
In the formation of the organs of sense the nervous layer shews itself throughout as the active layer. The lens of the eye and the auditory sack are derived exclusively from it, the latter having no external opening. The nervous layer also plays the more important part in the formation of the olfactory sack.
The outer layer of epiblast-cells becomes ciliated after the close of the segmentation, but the cilia gradually disappear on the formation of the internal gills. The cilia cause a slow rotatory movement of the embryo within the egg, and probably assist in the respiration after it is hatched. They are especially developed on the external gills.
Urodela. In the Newt (Scott and Osborn, No. [114]) the medullary plate becomes established, while the epiblast is still formed of a single row of cells; and it is not till after the closure of the neural groove that any distinction is observable between the epithelium of the central canal, and the remaining cells of the cerebrospinal cord ([fig. 75]).
Before the closure of the medullary folds the lateral epiblast becomes divided into the two strata present from the first in the Frog; and in the subsequent development the inner layer behaves as the active layer, precisely as in the Anura.
The mesoblast and notochord: Anura. After the disappearance of the segmentation cavity, the mesoblast is described by most observers, including Götte, as forming a continuous sheet round the ovum, underneath the epiblast. The first important differentiations in it take place, as in the case of the epiblast, in the axial dorsal line. Along this line a central cord of the mesoblast becomes separated from the two lateral sheets to form the notochord. Calberla states, however, that when the mesoblast is distinctly separated from the hypoblast it does not form a continuous sheet, but two sheets one on each side, between which is placed a ridge of cells continuous with the hypoblastic sheet. This ridge subsequently becomes separated from the hypoblast as the notochord. Against this view Götte has recently strongly protested, and given a series of careful representations of his sections which certainly support his original account.
Fig. 74. Section through the anterior part of the trunk of a young embryo of Bombinator. (After Götte.)
as´´´. medulla oblongata; isx. splanchnopleure; asx. somatopleure in the vertebral part of the mesoblastic plate; s. lateral plate of mesoblast; f. throat; e. passage of epithelial cells into yolk-cells; d. yolk-cells; r. dorsal groove along the line of junction of the medullary folds.