Fig. 101.—Vesiculæ Seminales and Ductus Ejaculatorius of Pupa. VD, vas
deferens. × 28.
Fig. 102.—External Male Organs, separated. The lettering agrees with Brehm’s
figures. A, titillator; B, penis; C-F, hooks and plates. × 8.
The external reproductive organs of the male Cockroach are
concealed within the 9th sternum. The so-called penis (fig. 102)
is long, slender, and dilated at the end. It is not perforated,
and we do not understand its use, though it probably conveys
the semen.
Fig. 103.—The Tenth Tergum reflected to show the external male organs in situ.
T10, tenth tergum; p, podical plates; A-F, as in fig. 102; S, sub-anal styles.
× 8.
The “titillator” (Brunner von Wattenwyl) is a solid curved
hook with a hollow base. Besides these, are several odd-shaped,
unsymmetrical pieces (fig. 102, C, D, E, F), moved by special
muscles. A pair of styles (see figs. 32–3 and 103) project from
the hinder edge of the 9th sternum. These paired and unpaired
appendages are believed to open the genital pouch of the female,
but we do not understand their action in detail.173
Brehm observes that the male reproductive organs of the
Cockroach are most nearly paralleled by those of the Mantidæ.
A free penis occurs in all Orthoptera, except Acridiidæ and
Phasmidæ.
The male organs of the House Cricket will be found much
easier to understand than those of the Cockroach. The testes
are of irregular, oval figure, the vasa deferentia very long,
tortuous, and enlarged towards the middle of their length.
The vesiculæ seminales bear many utriculi majores et breviores.
The penis is of simple form, and dilated at the end. The
titillator is broad, but produced into a slender prong, which
projects beyond the penis. A pair of subanal styles is found,
but the unpaired hooklets are wanting or very inconspicuous.
Very little is known about the act of copulation among Cockroaches,
and the opportunities of observation are few. The
following account is given by Cornelius (loc. cit., p. 22):—
“The male and female Cockroaches associate in pairs, the females being
generally quiet. The male, on the contrary, bustles about the female,
runs round her, trailing his extended abdomen on the ground, and now
and then raises his wings. If the female moves away, the male stops the
road. At last, when the female has become perfectly still, the male goes
in front of her, brings the end of his abdomen towards her, then moves
backwards, and pushes his whole length under the female. The operation
is so rapid that it is impossible to give an exact account of the circumstances.
Then the male creeps out from beneath the female, raises high
both pairs of wings, depresses them again, and goes off, while the female
usually remains quiet for some time.”
CHAPTER X.
Development.
SPECIAL REFERENCES.
Rathke. Zur Entwickelungsgesch. der Blatta germanica. Meckel’s Arch. of
Anat. u. Phys., Bd. VI. (1832).
Balfour. Comparative Embryology, 2 vols. (1880–1).
Graber. Insekten, Vol. II. (1879).
Lubbock. Origin and Metamorphoses of Insects (1874).
Kowalewsky. Embryol. Studien an Würmern u. Arthropoden. Mém. Ac. Petersb.
Sér. VII., Vol. XVI. (1871).
Weismann. Entw. der Dipteren. Zeits. f. wiss. Zool., Bde. XIII., XIV. (1863–4).
Metschnikoff. Embryol. Studien. an Insecten. Ib., Bd. XVI. (1866).
Bütschli. Entwicklungsgeschichte der Biene. Ib., Bd. XX. (1870).
Bobretzky. Bildung d. Blastoderms u. d. Keimblätter bei den Insecten. Ib.,
Bd. XXXI. (1878).
Nusbaum. Rozwój przewodów organów pteiowych u owadów (Polish). Kosmos.
(1884). [Development of Sexual Outlets in Insects.]
---- Struna i struna Leydig’a u owadów (Polish). Kosmos (1886). [Chorda
and Leydig’s chorda in Insects.]
The Embryonic Development of the Cockroach. 174
By JOSEPH NUSBAUM, Magister of Zoology, Warsaw.
The development of the Cockroach is by no means an easy
study. It costs some pains to find an accessible place in which
the females regularly lay their eggs, and the opaque capsule
renders it hard to tell in what stage of growth the contained
embryos will be found. Accordingly, though the development
of the Cockroach has lately attracted some observers, the
inexperienced embryologist will find it more profitable to
examine the eggs of Bees, of Aphides, or of such Diptera as lay
their eggs in water.
The Cockroach is developed, like most animals, from fertilised
eggs.175 The eggs of various animals differ much in size and
form, but always contain a formative plasma or egg-protoplasm,
a germinal vesicle (nucleus), and a germinal
spot (nucleolus). Besides these essential parts, eggs also always
contain a greater or less quantity of food-yolk, which serves
for the supply of the developing embryo. The quantity of
this yolk may be small, and its granules are then uniformly
dispersed through the egg-protoplasm; or very considerable,
in which case the protoplasm and yolk become more or less
sharply defined. Eggs of the first kind are known as holoblastic,
those of the second kind as meroblastic, names suggested by the
complete or partial segmentation which these kinds of eggs
respectively undergo. When the food-yolk is very abundant it
does not at first (and in some cases does not at any time)
exhibit the phenomena of growth, such as cell-division. If, on
the other hand, the yolk is scanty and evenly dispersed through
the egg-protoplasm, the segmentation proceeds regularly and
completely. The eggs of Arthropoda, including those of the
Cockroach, are meroblastic.
The eggs of the Cockroach (P. orientalis) are enclosed (see
p. 23) sixteen together in stout capsules of horny consistence.
They are adapted to the form of the capsule, laterally compressed,
convex on the outer, and concave on the inner side.
The ventral surface of the embryo lies towards the inner,
concave surface of the egg. Each egg is provided with a very
thin brownish shell (chorion), whose surface is ornamented with
small six-sided projections. In young eggs, still enclosed within
the ovary, the nucleus (germinal vesicle) and nucleolus (germinal
spot) can be plainly seen, but by the time they are ready for
deposition within the capsule, so large a quantity of food-yolk,
at first finely—afterwards coarsely—granular, accumulates
within them, that the germinal vesicle and spot cease to be
visible.
Since the yolk of the newly-laid egg of the Cockroach is of
a consistence extremely unfavourable to hardening and microscopic
investigation, I have not been able to obtain transverse
sections of the germinal vesicle, nor to study the mode of its
division (segmentation). If, however, we may judge from
what other observers have found in the eggs of Insects more
suitable for investigation than those of the Cockroach, we shall
be led to conclude that a germinal vesicle, with a germinal spot
surrounded by a thin layer of protoplasm, lies within the nutritive
yolk of the Cockroach egg. From this protoplasm all the
cells of the embryo are derived.
Fig. 104.—Ventral Plate of Blatta germanica, with developing appendages, seen
from below. × 20.
The germinal vesicle, together with the surrounding protoplasm,
undergoes a process of division or segmentation. Some
of the cells thus formed travel towards the surface of the egg
to form a thin layer of flattened cells investing the yolk, the
so-called blastoderm, while others remain scattered through the
yolk, and constitute the yolk-cells (fig. 107).
Fig. 105.—Ventral Plate of B. germanica, side view. × 20.
On the future ventral side of the embryo (and therefore on
the concave surface of the egg) the cells of the blastoderm
become columnar, and here is formed the so-called ventral
plate, the first indication of the embryo. This is a long narrow
flattened structure (fig. 104). It is wider in front where the head
segment is situated; further back it becomes divided by many
transverse lines into the primitive segments. The total number
of segments in the ventral plate of Insects is usually seventeen.176
Indications of the appendages appear very early. They give
rise to an unpaired labrum, paired antennæ, mandibles, and
maxillæ (two pairs). The first and second pair of maxillæ have
originally, according to Patten,177 two and three branches respectively.
Behind the mouth-parts are found three rudimentary
legs. Upon all the abdominal segments, according to Patten,
rudimentary limbs are formed; but these soon disappear, except
one pair, which persists for a time in the form of a knobbed stalk;
subsequently this, too, completely disappears. Three or four of
the hindmost segments curve under the ventral surface of the
embryo, and apparently (?) give rise to the modified segments
and appendages of the extremity of the abdomen (fig. 105). The
ventral plate lies at first directly beneath the egg membrane
(chorion), but afterwards becomes sunk in the yolk, so that a
portion of the yolk makes its way between the ventral plate
and the chorion. Whilst this portion of the yolk is perfectly
homogeneous, the remainder, placed internally to it, becomes
coarsely granular, and encloses many roundish cavities and
yolk-cells. The middle region of the body is more deeply sunk
in the yolk than the two ends, and the embryo thus assumes a
curved position (fig. 105).
Fig. 106.—Diagram to illustrate the formations of the Embryonic Membranes.
A, amnion; S, serous envelope; B, blastoderm.
Fig. 107.—Transverse section through young Embryo of B. germanica.
E, epiblast; M, mesoblast; Y, yolk-cells.
This curvature of the embryo is closely connected with the
formation of the embryonic membranes. On either side of the
ventral plate a fold of the blastoderm arises, and these folds
grow towards each other beneath the chorion. Ultimately they
meet along the middle line of the ventral plate (fig. 106),
and thus form a double investment, the outer layer being the
serous envelope, the inner the amnion. Between the two the
yolk passes in, as has been explained above (fig. 107).
At the same time that the embryonic membranes are forming,
the embryonic layers make their appearance. The ventral
plate, which was originally one-layered, forms the epiblast or
outer layer of the embryo, and from this are subsequently
derived the middle layer (mesoblast) and the deep layer
(hypoblast).
Fig. 108.—Diagram to illustrate the formation of the Germinal Layers.
E, epiblast; M, mesoblast.
As to the origin of the mesoblast most observers have found178
that a long groove (the germinal groove) appears in the middle
line of the ventral plate (fig. 108), which bulges into the
yolk, gradually detaches itself from the epiblast, and completes
itself into a tube. The lumen of this tube soon becomes filled
with cells, and the solid cellular mass thus formed divides into
two longitudinal tracts, which lie right and left of the middle
line of the ventral plate beneath the epiblast, and are known as
the mesoblastic bands. In the Cockroach I was able to satisfy
myself that in this Insect also, the mesoblast, in all probability,
arises by the formation and closure of a similar groove of the
epiblast. M (fig. 108) represents the stage in which the lumen
of the groove has disappeared, and the mesoblast forms a solid
cellular mass.
The origin of the hypoblast in Insects has not as yet been
clearly determined. Two quite different views on this subject
have found support. Some observers (Bobretsky, Graber, and
others) maintain that the hypoblast originates in the yolk-cells,
which form a superficial layer investing the rest of the yolk.
Others (especially Kowalewsky179) believe that the process is
altogether different. According to the latest observations of
the eminent embryologist just named, upon the development of
the Muscidæ, the germinal groove gives rise, not only to the
two mesoblastic bands, but also, in its central region, to the
hypoblast. This makes its appearance, however, not as a
continuous layer, but as two hourglass-shaped rudiments, one at
the anterior, the other at the posterior end of the ventral plate.
These rudiments have their convex ends directed away from
each other, while their edges are approximated and gradually
meet so as to form a continuous hypoblast beneath the mesoblast.
Although I have not been able completely to satisfy
myself as to the mode of formation of the hypoblast in the
Cockroach, I have observed stages of development which lead
me to suppose that it proceeds in this Insect in a manner
similar to that observed by Kowalewsky in Muscidæ. The
hourglass-shaped rudiments of the hypoblast become pushed
upwards by those foldings-in of the epiblast which form
towards the anterior and posterior ends of the embryo, and give
rise to the stomodæum and proctodæum.180
The stage of development in which the germinal groove
appears, by the folding inwards of the epiblast, has been
observed in many other animals, and is known as the Gastræa-stage.
In all higher types (Vertebrates, the higher Worms,
Arthropoda, Echinodermata) the mesoblast and hypoblast are
formed in the folded-in part of the Gastræa in a manner
similar to that observed in Insects.
The yolk-cells, which some observers have supposed to form
the hypoblast, are believed by Kowalewsky to have no other
function except that of the disintegration and solution of the
yolk. I can, however, with confidence affirm that in the Cockroach
these cells take part in the formation of permanent
tissues (see below).
Each of the two mesoblastic bands which lie right and left of
the germinal groove divides into many successive somites, and
each of these becomes hollow. Every such somite consists of
an inner (dorsal) one-layered and an outer (ventral) many-layered
wall, the latter being in contact with the epiblast. The
cavities of all the somites unite to form a common cavity, the
cœlom or perivisceral space of the Cockroach. The cœlom, like
the cavities in which it originates, is bounded by two layers of
mesoblast—an inner, the so-called splanchnic or visceral layer,
which lies on the outer side of the hypoblast, and an outer
somatic or parietal layer, beneath the epiblast. There are
accordingly four layers in the Cockroach-embryo—viz., (1) epiblast,
from which the integument and nervous system are
developed; (2) somatic layer of mesoblast, mainly converted into
the muscles of the body-wall; (3) splanchnic layer of mesoblast,
yielding the muscular coat of the alimentary canal; and (4)
hypoblast, yielding the epithelium of the mesenteron.
Fig. 109.—Transverse sections of Embryo of B. germanica, with rudimentary nervous
system (Oc. 4, Obj. D.D. Zeiss). N, nervous system; M, mesoblastic somites.
Scattered yolk-cells associate themselves with the mesoblast
cells, so that the constituents of the mesoblast have a two-fold
origin. Fig. 109 shows that the yolk-cells are large, finely
granular, and provided with many (3–6) nuclei and nucleoli.
They send out many branching protoplasmic threads, which
connect the different cells together, and thus form a cellular
network. Certain cells separate themselves from the rest, apply
themselves to the walls of the somites, and form a provisional
diaphragm (fig. 110, D) consisting of a layer of flattened cells;181
other cells (fig. 109) pass into and through the walls of the
somites, and reach their central cavity, where they increase in
number and blend with the mesoblast cells. What finally
becomes of them I cannot say; perhaps they form the fat-body.
Fig. 110.—Transverse section through ventral region of Embryo of B. germanica. The
nerve-cord has by this time detached itself from the epiblast, E. D is the temporary
diaphragm; Ch, temporary cellular band, from which the neurilemma proceeds;
Ap, appendages in section; M, mesoblast; N, nerve-cord. (Oc. 4. Obj. BB.
Zeiss).
Fig. 111.—Transverse section of older Embryo of B. germanica (abdomen). E, Epiblast;
H, hypoblast; Ht, heart; G, reproductive organs; S, spherical granules.
The ventral plate occupies, as I have explained, the future
ventral surface of the Insect, and here only at first both the
embryonic membranes are to be met with. On the sides and
above the yolk is invested by the serous envelope alone. The
ventral plate, however, gradually extends upwards upon the
sides of the egg, in the directions of the arrows (fig. 107), and
finally closes upon the dorsal surface of the embryo, so as completely
to invest the whole yolk. Every segment of the
embryo shows at a certain stage numerous clusters of spherical
granules, which according to Patten (loc. cit.) are composed of
urates (fig. 111, S).
We shall now proceed to consider the development of the
several organs of the Cockroach.
Fig. 112.—Transverse section of Nerve-cord of Embryo of B. germanica (Oc. 4, Obj.
D.D. Zeiss). C, cellular layer; F, fibrillar substance (punkt-substance of
Leydig); Ch, cellular band; N′ N″ inner and outer neurilemma.
Nervous System.—Along the middle line of the whole ventral
surface there is formed a somewhat deep groove-like infolding
of the epiblast, bounded on either side by paired solid thickenings,
which detach themselves from the epiblast (fig. 110, N) and
constitute the double nervous chain. In many other Insects a
median cord (from which are derived the transverse interganglionic
commissures) forms along the bottom of the nervous
fold. This secondary median fold is very inconspicuous and
slightly developed in the Cockroach, so that the transverse
commissures between the developing ganglia are mainly contributed
by the cellular substance of the lateral nervous band.
The brain is formed out of two epiblastic thickenings which
occupy shallow depressions. The so-called inner neurilemma,
which surrounds the ventral nerve-cord, is developed as follows:—Along
the ventral nerve-cord, and between its lateral halves,
a small solid cellular band (fig. 110, Ch) is developed out of the
mesoblastic diaphragm described above. This grows round
the ventral nerve-cord on all sides (fig. 112, N′), passing also
inwards between the central fibrillar tract and the outer
cellular layer, and thus forming the thin membrane which
invests the central nervous mass (fig. 112, N″). The above-mentioned
solid mesoblastic band, which exists for a very
short time only, may perhaps be homologised with the
chorda dorsalis of Vertebrates, and the chorda of the higher
Worms, since in these types also the chorda forms a solid
cellular band of meso-hypoblastic origin, lying between the
nervous system and the hypoblast. The peripheral nerves arise
as direct prolongations of the fibrillar substance of the nerve-cord.
Fig. 113.—Alimentary Canal of Embryo of B. germanica. Copied from Rathke,
loc. cit., but differently lettered. st, stomodæum, al-ready divided into
œsophagus, crop, and gizzard; m, mesenteron; pr, proctodæum, with Malpighian
tubules (removed on the right side). × 12.
Alimentary Canal.—The epithelium of the mesenteron is
formed out of the hypoblast, whose cells assume a cubical form
and gradually absorb the yolk. The epithelium of the stomodæum
and proctodæum is derived, however, from two epiblastic
involutions at the fore and hind ends of the embryo. The
muscular coat of the alimentary canal is contributed by the
splanchnic layer of the mesoblast. The mesenteron in an
early stage of development appears as an oval sac of greenish
colour (fig. 113), faintly seen through the body-wall. The cæcal
tubes are extensions of the mesenteron, the Malpighian tubules
of the proctodæum. The epiblastic invaginations may be
recognised in all stages of growth by their chitinous lining
and layer of chitinogenous cells, continuous with the similar
layers in the external integument.
Tracheal System.—Tubular infoldings of the epiblast, forming
at regular intervals along the sides of the embryo and projecting
into the somatic mesoblast, give rise to the paired tracheal
tubes, which are at first simple and distinct from one another.182
Heart.—The wall of the heart in Insects is of mesoblastic
origin, and develops from paired rudiments derived from that
peripheral part of each mesoblastic band which unites the
somatic to the splanchnic layer. In this layer two lateral
semi-cylindrical rudiments appear, which, as the mesoblastic
bands meet on the dorsal surface of the embryo, are brought
into contact and unite to form the heart (fig. 111). The heart is
therefore hollow from the first, its cavity not being constricted
off from the permanent perivisceral space enclosed by the
mesoblast, but being a vestige of the primitive embryonic
blastocœl, which is bounded by the epiblast, as well as by the
two other embryonic layers. Such a mode of the development
of the heart was observed by Bütschli in the Bee, and by
Korotneff in the Mole Cricket. I am convinced, from my own
observations, that the heart of the Cockroach originates in this
way, though it is to be observed that, in consequence of
Patten’s results,183 the question requires further investigation.
According to Patten the mesoblastic layers of the embryo
pulsate rhythmically long before the formation of the heart.
Patten also states that the blood-corpuscles are partially derived
from the wall of the heart.
Fig. 114.—Young Ovary of B. germanica.
(Oc. 2, Ob. DD, Zeiss.)
Fig. 115.—Young Testis of B. germanica.
(Oc. 2, Ob. DD, Zeiss.)
Reproductive Organs.—In P. orientalis the reproductive organs
are developed as follows:—The reproductive glands have a
mesoblastic origin. The immature ovaries and testes take the
form of elongate oval bodies, which prolong themselves backwards
into a long thin thread-like cord or ligament (figs.
114, 115). These lie in the perivisceral space, between the
somatic and splanchnic layers of the mesoblast, and on the
sides of the abdomen. The glands divide tolerably early into
chambers, which have, however, a communicating passage (figs.
114, 115). From their backward-directed prolongations arises
the epithelium of the vasa deferentia and oviducts. All other
parts of the reproductive ducts are developed out of tegumentary
thickenings of the ventral surface in the last abdominal
segment, and the last but one. These thickenings are at first
paired,184 but afterwards blend to form single organs (fig. 118).
Within the tegumentary thickenings just described, there
appear in the male Cockroach two anterior closed cavities
which unite to form the single cavity of the permanent mushroom-shaped
body (vesicula seminalis). A posterior cavity
becomes specialised as the ductus ejaculatorius, while the hindmost
part of the thickening, which is at first double, afterwards
by coalescence single, forms the penis (figs. 117, 118). The
accessory reproductive glands have also a tegumentary origin.
In the female Cockroach the chitinogenous epithelium of the
integument gives rise to the uterus, vagina,185 and accessory
glands, the muscular and connective tissue layers of the sexual
apparatus being formed out of loose mesoblastic cells.186
Joseph Nusbaum.
Figs. 116, 117, 118.—Three stages of development of tegumentary portion of Male
Sexual Organs of P. orientalis. (Oc. 1, Ob. BB, Zeiss.) VD, vas deferens;
VS, vesicula seminalis; D, ductus ejaculatorius; P, p, penis and its lateral
appendages.
Post-embryonic Development.
At the time of hatching the Cockroach resembles its parent
in all essentials, the wings being the only organs which are
developed subsequently, not as entirely new parts, but as extensions
of the lateral edges of the thoracic terga. The mode of
life of the young Cockroach is like that of the adult, and
development may be said to be direct, or with only a trifling
amount of metamorphosis. In the Thysanura even this
small post-embryonic change ceases to appear, and the Insect,
when it leaves the egg, differs from its parent only in size. It
is probable that development without metamorphosis was once
the rule among Insects. At present such is by no means the
case. Insects furnish the most familiar and striking, though,
as will appear by-and-by, not the most typical examples of
development with metamorphosis. In many text-books the
quiescent pupa and the winged imago are not unnaturally
described as normal stages, which are exceptionally wanting in
Orthoptera, Hemiptera, Thysanura, and other “ametabolous”
Insects. It is, however, really the “holometabolous” Insects
undergoing what is called “complete metamorphosis,”
which are exceptional, deviating not only from such little-specialised
orders as Thysanura and Orthoptera, but from nearly
all animals which exhibit a marked degree of metamorphosis.
We shall endeavour to make good this statement, and to show
that the Cockroach is normal in its absence of conspicuous
post-embryonic change, while the Butterfly, Bee, Beetle, and
Gnat are peculiar even among metamorphic animals.
Animal Metamorphoses.
To investigate the causes of metamorphosis, let us select from
the same sub-kingdom two animals as unlike as possible
with respect to the amount of post-embryonic change to which
they are subject. We can find no better examples than
Amphioxus and the Chick.
The newly-hatched Amphioxus is a small, two-layered,
hollow sac, which moves through the sea by the play of cilia
which project everywhere from its outer surface. It is a
Gastræa, a little simpler than the Hydra, and far simpler than
a Jelly-fish. As yet it possesses no nervous system, heart,
respiratory organs, or skeleton. The most expert zoologist,
ignorant of its life-history, could not determine its zoological
position. He would most likely guess that it would turn either
into a polyp or a worm.
The Chick, on the other hand, at the tenth day of incubation,
is already a Bird, with feathers, wings, and beak. When it
chips the shell it is a young fowl. It has the skull, the skeleton,
the toes, and the bill characteristic of its kind, and no
child would hesitate to call it a young Bird.
Amphioxus is, therefore, a Vertebrate (if for shortness we
may so name a creature without vertebræ, brain, or skull),
which develops with metamorphosis, being at first altogether
unlike its parent. The Chick is a Vertebrate which develops
directly, without metamorphosis. Let us now ask what other
peculiarities go with this difference in mode of development.
Amphioxus produces many small eggs ( 1/10 mm. in diameter)
without distinct yolk, and consequently segmenting regularly.
The adult is of small size (2 to 3 in. long), far beneath the
Chick in zoological rank, and of marine habitat.
The Fowl lays one egg at once, which is of enormous size
and provided with abundant yolk, hence undergoing partial
segmentation. The Fowl is much bigger than Amphioxus,
much higher in the animal scale, and of terrestrial habitat.
Which of the peculiarities thus associated governs the rest?
Is it the number or size of the eggs? Or the size, zoological
rank, or habitat of the adult? The question cannot be answered
without a wider collection of examples. Let us run over the
great divisions of the Animal Kingdom, and collect all the facts
which seem to be significant. We may omit the Protozoa,
which never develop multicellular tissues, and in which segmentation
and all subsequent development are therefore
absent.
Porifera (Sponges).—Nearly all marine and undergoing
metamorphosis, the larva being wholly or partially ciliated.
Cœlenterates undergo metamorphosis, the immediate product
of the ovum being nearly always a planula, or two-layered
hollow sac, usually devoid of a mouth, and moving about by
external cilia. In many Cœlenterates the complicated process
of development known as Alternation of Generations occurs.
The sedentary Anemones pass through a planula stage, but
within the body of the parent. Among the few Cœlenterates
which have no free planula stage is the one truly fluviatile
genus—Hydra.
Worms are remarkable for the difference between closely
allied forms with respect to the presence or absence of metamorphosis.
The non-parasitic freshwater and terrestrial
Worms, however (e.g., Earthworms, Leeches, all freshwater
Dendrocœla, and Rhabdocœla), do not undergo metamorphosis.
In the parasitic forms complicated metamorphosis is common,
and may be explained by the extraordinary difficulties often
encountered in gaining access to the body of a new host.
All Polyzoa are aquatic (fluviatile or marine), and all produce
ciliated embryos, unlike the parent.
Brachiopoda are all marine, and produce ciliated embryos.
Echinoderms usually undergo striking metamorphosis, but
certain viviparous or marsupial forms develop directly. There
are no fluviatile or terrestrial Echinoderms.
Lamellibranchiate Mollusca have peculiar locomotive
larvæ, provided with a ring of cilia, and usually with a long
vibratile lash. These temporary organs are reduced or suppressed
in the freshwater forms. There are no terrestrial
Lamellibranchs.
Snails have also a temporary ciliated band, but in the freshwater
species it is slightly developed (Limnæus), and it is totally
wanting in the terrestrial Helicidæ.
Cephalopoda, which are all marine, have no ciliated band,
and the post-embryonic changes do not amount to metamorphosis.
There is usually a much larger yolk-sac than in other
Mollusca.
Crustacea usually pass through well-marked phases. Peneus
presents five stages of growth (including the adult), the earlier
being common to many lower Crustacea. The Crab passes
through three, beginning with the third of Peneus; the Lobster
through two; while the freshwater Crayfish, when hatched, is
already in the fifth and last.
Fishes seldom undergo any post-embryonic change amounting
to metamorphosis. Amphioxus (if Amphioxus be indeed a
fish) is the only well-marked case.
Amphibia develop without conspicuous metamorphosis, except
in the case of the Frogs and Toads (Anura), which begin life
as aquatic, tailed, gill-bearing, and footless tadpoles.
Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals do not undergo transformation.
This survey, hasty as it necessarily is, shows that habitat is a
material circumstance. Larval stages are apt to be suppressed
in fluviatile and terrestrial forms. Further, it would seem that
zoological rank is not without influence. Metamorphosis is
absent in Cephalopoda, the highest class of Mollusca, and in all
but the lowest Vertebrates, while it is almost universal in
Cœlenterates, Echinoderms, and Lamellibranchs.
It has often been remarked that the quantity of food-yolk
indicates the course of development. If a large store of food
has been laid up for the young animal, it can continue its
growth without any effort of its own, and it leaves the egg well
equipped for the battle of life. Where there is little or no
yolk, the embryo is turned out in an ill-furnished condition to
seek its own food. This early liberation implies metamorphosis,
for the small and feeble larva must make use of temporary
organs. Some very simple locomotive appendages are almost
universally needed, to enable it to get away from the place of its
birth, which is usually stocked with as much life as it can support.
Some animals, therefore, are like well-to-do people, who can
provide their children with food, clothes, schooling, and pocket-money.
Their fortunate offspring grow at ease, and are not
driven to premature exercise of their limbs or wits. Others are
like starving families, which are forced to send their children
to sell matches or newspapers in the streets. It is a question of
the amount of capital or accumulated food which is at command.
The connection between zoological rank and the absence of
metamorphosis is also explained by what we see among men.
High zoological position ordinarily implies strength or intelligence,
and the strong and knowing can do better for their
offspring than the puny and sluggish. It does not cost a Shark
or a quadruped too much to hatch its young in its own body,
while Spiders and Earwigs,187 which are among the highest
Invertebrates, defend their progeny, as do Mammals and Birds,
the highest Vertebrates.
But what has all this to do with habitat? Are fluviatile and
terrestrial animals, as a rule, better off than marine animals?
Possibly they are. In the confined and isolated fresh waters at
least, the struggle for existence is undoubtedly less severe than
in the waters of the sea. This is shown by the slow rate of
change in freshwater types. Many of our genera of land and
freshwater shells date back at least as far as to Purbeck and
Wealden times, while our common pond-mussel is represented
in the Coal Measures. The comparative security of fresh
waters is probably the reason why so many marine fishes enter
rivers to spawn.
More important, and less open to question, is the direct action
of the sphere of life. The cheap method of turning the
embryo out to shift for itself can seldom be practised with
success on land. But in water floating is easy, and swimming
not difficult. A very slightly-built larva can move about by
means of cilia, and a whole brood can disperse far and wide in
search of food, while still in a mere planula condition—hollow
sacs, without mouth, nerves, or sense-organs. Afterwards the
little locomotive larva settles down, opens a mouth, and begins
to feed. Nearly the whole of its development is carried on at
its own charge.
The extra risks to which marine animals are exposed also
tell in favour of transformation, for they are met by an increase
in the number of ova. Marine species commonly lay more eggs
than freshwater animals of like habits. The Cod is said to
produce nine million eggs; the Salmon from twenty to thirty
thousand; the Stickleback only about one hundred, which are
guarded during hatching by the male. The Siluroid fish, Arius,
lays a very few eggs, as big as small cherries, which the male
carries about in his mouth.
Without laying stress upon such figures as these, which
cannot be impartially selected, we can safely affirm that marine
forms are commonly far more prolific than their freshwater
allies. But high numbers increase the difficulty of providing
yolk for each, and thus tend to early exclusion, and subsequent
transformation. We may rationally connect marine habitat
with small eggs, poorly supplied with yolk, segmenting regularly,
and producing larva which develop with metamorphosis.
In fresh waters dispersal can seldom be very effective. The
area is usually small, and communicates with other freshwater
basins only through the sea. Migration to a considerable distance
is usually impossible, and migration to a trifling distance use
less.
Moreover, competition is not too severe to prevent some
accumulation of food by the parent on behalf of the family.
On land the conditions are still less favourable to larval
transformation. Very early migration is altogether impossible.
Any kind of locomotion by land implies muscles of complicated
arrangement, and, as a rule, there must be some sort of skeleton
to support the weight of the body. The larva, if turned out in
a Gastræa condition would simply perish without a struggle.188
Nor is great precocity needful. The terrestrial animal is commonly
of complicated structure, active, and well furnished with
means of information. It can lay-by for its offspring, and
nourish them within its own body, or at least by food stored up
in the egg.
The influence of habitat upon development may be recapitulated
as follows:—
Marine Habitat.—Eggs many. Yolk small. Segmentation
often regular. Young hatched early. Development with
metamorphosis. [The most conspicuous exceptions are Cephalopoda
and marine Vertebrata.]
Fluviatile Habitat.—Eggs fewer. Yolk larger. Segmentation
often unequal. Young hatched later. Development
direct, or with late metamorphosis only. [The most obvious exceptions
are Frogs and Toads, which develop with metamorphosis.]
Terrestrial Habitat.—Eggs few. Yolk large [except
where the young are supplied by maternal blood]. Segmentation
often partial. Young hatched late. Development without
metamorphosis. [An exception is found in Insects, which
usually exhibit conspicuous metamorphosis, though the yolk is
large, and the type of segmentation partial or unequal.]
Let us now take up the exceptions, and see whether these are
capable of satisfactory explanation.
1.—Cephalopoda and marine Vertebrates, unlike other inhabitants
of the sea, develop without metamorphosis. But
these are large animals of relatively high intelligence, well able
to feed and protect their young until development is completely
accomplished.
2.—Frogs and Toads, unlike other fluviatile animals, develop
with metamorphosis. The last and most conspicuous change,
however, from the gill-bearing and tailed tadpole to the air-breathing
and tailless frog, hardly belongs to the ordinary
period of embryonic development. When the tadpole has four
limbs and a long tail it has already reached the point at which
the more primitive Amphibia (Menopoma, Proteus, &c.) become
sexually mature. The loss of the tail, the lengthening of the
hind limbs, and the complete adaptation to pulmonary respiration,
relate to the mode of dispersal of the adult. Cut off from
early dispersal by the isolation of their breeding-places and the
difficulty of land migration, Frogs migrate from pool to pool as
full-grown animals. The eggs are thus laid in new sites, and
very small basins—ditches and pools which dry up in summer—can
be used for spawning. To this peculiar facility in finding
new spawning grounds the Anura no doubt owe their success in
life, of which the vast number of nearly-allied species furnishes
an incontrovertible proof. But the adaptation to terrestrial
locomotion necessarily comes late in life, after the normal and
primitive adult Amphibian condition has been attained. It is
by a secondary adult metamorphosis that the aquatic tadpole
turns into the land-traversing frog. The change is not fairly
comparable to any process of development by which other
animals gain the adult structure characteristic of their class
and order, but (in respect of the time of its occurrence)
resembles the late assumption of secondary sexual characters,
such as the antlers of the stag, or the train of the
peacock.
3.—Lastly, we come to the exceptional case of Insects which,
unlike other terrestrial animals, develop with metamorphosis.
The Anurous Amphibia have prepared us to recognise this too
as a case of secondary adult (post-embryonic) metamorphosis.
Thysanuran or Orthopterous larvæ cannot differ very widely
from the adult form of primitive Insects. From wingless,
hexapod Insects, like Cockroach larvæ in all essentials of
external form, have been derived, on the one hand, the winged
imago, adapted in the more specialised orders to a brief pairing
season exclusively spent in migration and propagation; on the
other hand, the footless maggot or quiescent pupa.
Insects, like Frogs, disperse as adults, because of the
difficulty of the medium, aerial locomotion being even more
difficult than locomotion by land, and implying the highest
muscular and respiratory efficiency. The flying state is attained
by a late metamorphosis, which has not yet become universal in
the class, while it is not found in other Tracheates at all.
Peripatus, Scorpions, and Myriopods become sexually mature
when they reach the stage which corresponds to the ordinary
less-modified Insect-nymph, with segmented body, walking
legs, and mouth-parts resembling those of the parent.189
The Caterpillar is not, as Harvey190 maintained, a kind of
walking egg; it is rather the primitive adult Tracheate modified
in accordance with its own special needs. It may be sexually
immature, imperfect, destined to attain more elaborate development
in a following stage, but it nevertheless marks the stage
in which the remote Tracheate ancestor attained complete
maturity. Where it differs from the primitive form, hatched
with all the characters of the adult, the changes are adaptive
and secondary.191
The Genealogy of Insects.
To construct from embryological and other data a chart of
the descent of Insects, and of the different orders within the
class, is an attempt too hazardous for a student’s text-book.192
A review of the facts of Arthropod development led Balfour193
to conclude that the whole of the Arthropoda cannot be united
in a common phylum. The Tracheata are probably “descended
from a terrestrial Annelidan type related to Peripatus....
The Crustacea, on the other hand, are clearly descended from a
Phyllopod-like ancestor, which can be in no way related to
Peripatus.” The resemblances between the Arthropoda appear
therefore to be traceable to no nearer common ancestors than
some unknown Annelid, probably marine, and furnished with a
chitinous cuticle, an œsophageal nervous ring, and perhaps with
jointed appendages. Zoological convenience must give place to
the results of embryological and historical research, and we
shall probably have to reassign the classes hitherto grouped
under the easily defined sub-kingdom of Arthropoda.
Sir John Lubbock has explained, in his very interesting
treatise on the Origin and Metamorphoses of Insects, the
reasons which lead him to conclude “that Insects generally
are descended from ancestors resembling the existing genus
Campodea [sub-order Collembola], and that these again have
arisen from others belonging to a type represented more or less
closely by the existing genus Lindia” [a non-ciliated Rotifer].
Present knowledge does not, therefore, justify a more definite
statement of the genealogy of Insects than this, that in common
with Crustacea they had Annelid ancestors, and that
Lindia, Peripatus, and Campodea approximately represent three
successive stages of the descent. When we reflect that Cockroaches
themselves reach back to the immeasurably distant
palæozoic epoch, we get some misty notion of the antiquity and
duration of those still remoter ages during which Tracheates,
and afterwards Insects, slowly established themselves as new
and distinct groups of animals.
CHAPTER XI.
The Cockroach of the Past.
By S. H. SCUDDER, of the U.S. Geological Survey.