Fig. 1.–1-5, Five successive stages of the development of a caudal vertebra of a newt; 6-7, the second and the first cervical vertebra of Cryptobranchus; 8-9, side view of the constituent cartilaginous blocks of a caudal vertebra (8) and a trunk-vertebra (9) of Archegosaurus as typical examples of Temnospondylous quadripartite and tripartite vertebrae. The cross-hatched parts indicate the articular facets for the ribs. The anterior end of all the vertebrae looks towards the right side. af, In 7, articulating facet for the occipital condyle; B.D, basidorsal piece or neural arch; B.V, basiventral piece or ventral arch; Ch, chorda dorsalis, or notochord; I.D, interdorsal piece; I.V, interventral piece; I.V.L, intervertebral ligament; N, spinal nerve–these are numbered I, II, III in 6 and 7; R, rib; T, in 7, rib-like tubercle on the first vertebra.
Towards the end of the tail the vertebrae diminish in size, and their constituent cartilages assume a more and more indifferent shape, until they become confluent into a continuous rod of cartilage, resembling in this respect the Dipnoi and Holocephali. A periodical revival of this rod, at least of its connective tissue, appears in the tail-filament of the male Triton palmatus during the breeding-season.
The first vertebra, called the atlas, because it carries the head, is remarkable for the possession of an odontoid process. The latter is formed by a pair of cartilages and represents part of a vertebra, the dorsal portion of which seems to have been added to the occipital part of the cranium.
All the trunk-vertebrae, with the exception of the atlas, carry ribs, at least vestiges thereof. Owing to the early disappearance of the basiventral cartilages the capitular portions of the ribs are much reduced, and are mostly represented by strands of connective tissue only. The ribs develop therefore occasionally at some distance from the vertebral column, and that portion of the rib which in the metamorphosed young newt looks like the capitulum is to a great extent really its tuberculum. Witness the position of the vertebral artery, which still indicates the true foramen transversarium. The homologies of these parts are still more obscured by the fact that a new process grows out from the rib, by which the latter gains a new support upon a knob of the neural arch. Thus an additional foramen is formed, sometimes confounded with the true transverse canal. The meaning which underlies all these modifications is the broadening of the body, the ribs shifting their originally more ventral support towards the dorsal side. The whole process is intensified in the Anura; it is an initial stage of the notocentrous type of vertebrae. The transverse ossified processes of the adult are often much longer than the vestiges of the ribs themselves, and are somewhat complicated structures. They are composed first of the rib-bearing cartilaginous outgrowths of the neural arches; secondly, of a broad string of connective tissue which extends from the ventro-lateral corner of the perichordal skeletogenous layer to the ribs.
Fig. 2.–Transverse section through a trunk-vertebra of a larva of Salamandra maculosa, enlarged. The right side shows the actually existing state, while on the left side the rib and its attachments are restored to their probable original condition. A, Vertebral artery within the true transverse canal; B.V, remnant of the basi-ventral cartilage; Ch, chorda dorsalis; Sp.c, spinal canal; *, the false transverse canal.
The shoulder-girdle is extremely simple. It remains almost entirely cartilaginous, and the three constituent elements are not separated by sutures. Ossification is restricted to the base of the shaft of the scapula, and may extend thence over the glenoid cavity. The coracoids are broad, loosely overlap each other, and are "tenon and mortised" into the triangular or lozenge-shaped cartilaginous sternum, which latter has no connection with the ribs. The precoracoid is a large, flat process, directed forwards, not meeting its fellow; it is absent in Siren.
The humerus articulates with both radius and ulna, and these two bones of the forearm remain separate. The elements which compose the wrist and hand exhibit an almost ideally simple arrangement, slightly varied by the frequent fusion of two or more neighbouring carpalia into one, and by the reduction of the number of fingers. Most frequently the intermedium and the ulnar carpal element fuse together, and there is more often one centrale instead of two. The wrist and hand of the Urodela represent, however, no longer the entirely primitive pentadactyle type, owing to the loss of one finger together with its metacarpal and carpal element. Comparison with the Anura makes it probable that the Urodela have lost the pollex, their four fingers being consequently the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th. Siren has four or three fingers; Proteus has only three fingers and three large compound carpal cartilages. In Amphiuma, with either three or two fingers, the ulnare, intermedium, and carpale are fused together, the radiale with the neighbouring carpale. The number of phalanges in the four-fingered species is generally 2, 3, 3, 2 respectively.
The pelvic girdle.–The ilium stands vertically to the vertebral axis, slanting slightly forwards and downwards. It is attached by means of a rib to only one vertebra, and this ilio-sacral connection is acetabular in its position, i.e. it lies in the same transverse plane with the acetabulum, in other words vertically above it. The ventral portion of the pelvis is formed by one large continuous mass, the united pubo-ischia, the anterior or pubic portion of which extends forwards in the shape of a broad triangle (Necturus) or as a slender, stalked, Y-shaped cartilage, the epipubis, which is often movably jointed at its base. The lateral portion of the pubic cartilage is always perforated by the nervus obturatorius. Ossification is restricted to the ischium and to the middle of the shaft of the ilium. The acetabular fossa for the femur is closed. The tibia and fibula remain separate. The foot is still more primitive than the anterior extremity, as the majority of Urodela possess the full complement of five toes, with 2, 2, 3, 3, 2 phalanges respectively. Concrescence of the tarsalia applies most frequently to the fourth and fifth distal and to the two centralia; exceptional, for instance, in Cryptobranchus japonicus, are as many as three centralia, but this is an individual, even a one-sided variation, as shown for instance by a specimen in the Cambridge Museum. Loss of the fifth toe occurs sporadically in genera of different groups, namely, in Salamandrella, Batrachyperus, Salamandrina, Necturus, Manculus, Batrachoseps. In Amphiuma the number is reduced to three or two; in Proteus to two; and in Siren the hind limbs, with their girdle, are altogether absent. Lastly, in some species of Spelerpes and Batrachoseps both fore and hind limbs have become so small as to be practically without function, parallel cases being found among various Scincidae and other Lizards.