e. “The tail, like the skull, is remarkably chimæroid; it terminates in a long thin pointed lash, and the whole caudal region is narrow and elongated as compared with that of our ordinary Batrachian larvæ.

f. “The fore-limbs are not hidden beneath the opercular fold.”

Fig. 83. Larva of Dactylethra. (After Parker.)

Although most Anurous embryos are not provided with a sufficient amount of yolk to give rise to a yolk-sack as an external appendage of the embryo, yet in some forms a yolk-sack, nearly as large as that of Teleostei, is developed. One of these forms, Alytes obstetricans, belongs to a well-known European genus allied to Pelobates. The embryos of Pipa dorsigera (Parker) are also provided with a very large yolk-sack, round which they are coiled like a Teleostean embryo. A large yolk-sack is also developed in the embryo of Pseudophryne australis.

The actual complexity of the organization of different tadpoles, and their relative size, as compared with the adult, vary considerably. The tadpoles of Toads are the smallest, Pseudophryne australis excelling in this respect; those of Pseudis are the largest known.

The external gills reach in certain forms, which are hatched in late larval stages, a very great development. It seems however that this development is due to these gills being especially required in the stages before hatching. Thus in Alytes, in which the larva leaves the egg in a stage after the loss of the external gills, these structures reach in the egg a very great development. In Notodelphis ovipara, in which the eggs are carried in a dorsal pouch of the mother, the embryos are provided with long vesicular gills attached to the neck by delicate threads. The fact (if confirmed) that some of the forms which are not hatched till post-larval stages are without external gills, probably indicates that there may be various contrivances for embryonic respiration[55]; and that the external gills only attain a great development in those instances in which respiration is mainly carried on by their means. The external gills of Elasmobranchii are probably, as stated in a previous chapter, examples of secondarily developed structures, which have been produced by the same causes as the enlarged gills of Alytes, Notodelphis, etc.

Urodela. Up to the present time complete observations on the development of the Urodela are confined to the Myctodera[56].

The early stages are in the main similar to those of the Anura. The body of the embryo is, as pointed out by Scott and Osborn, ventrally instead of dorsally flexed. The metamorphosis is much less complete than in the Anura. The larva of Triton may be taken as typical. At hatching, it is provided with a powerful swimming tail bearing a well-developed fin: there are three pairs of gills placed on the three anterior of the true branchial arches.