Various features in the anatomy of the Tadpole point to its being a repetition of a primitive vertebrate type. The nearest living representative of this type appears to be the Lamprey.
The resemblance between the mouths of the Tadpole and Lamprey is very striking, and many of the peculiarities of the larval skull of the Anura, especially the position of the Meckelian cartilages and the subocular arch, perhaps find their parallel in the skull of the Lamprey[49]. The internal hypoblastic gill-sacks of the Frog, with their branchial processes, are probably equivalent to the gill-sacks of the Lamprey[50]; and it is not impossible that the common posterior openings of the gill-pouches in Myxine are equivalent to the originally paired openings of the branchial sack of the Tadpole.
The resemblances between the Lamprey and the Tadpole appear to me to be sufficiently striking not to be merely the results of more or less similar habits; but at the same time there are no grounds for supposing that the Lamprey itself is closely related to an ancestral form of the Amphibia. In dealing with the Ganoids and other types arguments have been adduced to shew that there was a primitive vertebrate stock provided with a perioral suctorial disc; and of this stock the Cyclostomata are the degraded, but at the same time the nearest living representatives. The resemblances between the Tadpole and the Lamprey are probably due to both of them being descended from this stock. The Ganoids, as we have seen, also shew traces of a similar descent; and the resemblance between the larva of Dactylethra ([fig. 83]), the Old Red Sandstone Ganoids[51] and Chimæra, probably indicates that an extension of our knowledge will bring to light further affinities between the primitive Ganoid and Holocephalous stocks and the Amphibia.
Metamorphosis. The change undergone by the Tadpole in its passage into the Frog is so considerable as to deserve the name of a metamorphosis. This metamorphosis essentially consists in the reduction and atrophy of a series of provisional embryonic organs, and the appearance of adult organs in their place. The stages of this metamorphosis are shewn in [fig. 82], 5, 6, 7, 8.
The two pairs of limbs appear nearly simultaneously as small buds; the hinder pair at the junction of the tail and body ([fig. 82], 5), and the anterior pair concealed under the opercular membrane. The lungs acquire a greater and greater importance, and both branchial and pulmonary respirations go on together for some time.
Fig. 82. Tadpoles and young of the common Frog. (From Mivart.)
1. Recently-hatched Tadpoles twice the natural size. 2. Tadpole with external gills. 2a. Same enlarged. 3 and 4. Later stages after the enclosure of the gills by the opercular membrane. 5. Stage with well-developed hind-limbs visible. 6. Stage after the ecdysis, with both pairs of limbs visible. 7. Stage after partial atrophy of the tail. 8. Young Frog.
When the adult organs are sufficiently developed an ecdysis takes place, in which the gills are completely lost, the provisional horny beak is thrown off, and the mouth loses its suctorial form. The eyes, hitherto concealed under the skin, become exposed on the surface, and the front limbs appear ([fig. 82], 6). With these external changes important internal modifications of the mouth, the vascular system, and the visceral arches take place. A gradual atrophy of the tail, commencing at the apex, next sets in, and results in the complete absorption of this organ.
The long alimentary canal becomes shortened, and the, in the main, herbivorous Tadpole gradually becomes converted into the carnivorous Frog ([fig. 82], 6, 7, 8).