Page:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Vol 60.djvu/211

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On Fertilisation, and the Segmentation of the Spore Fucus.
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were really ten or twelve, but the absolute number is not of importance as all the nuclei were compared from the same aspect. Remains, more or less preserving the original form, of the nucleolus were sometimes visible at this and even in a later stage. No divisionplanes are formed in the oogonium until the full complement of nuclei are produced; after this the positions which they will ultimately occupy are indicated by the heaping up into lines (or rather plates) of the cytoplasmic granules above referred to. These seem to be repelled equally from all the nuclei, thus effecting a symmetrical division of the entire oogonium.

After the complete delimitation of the oospheres within the oogonium, we observed, as an occasional circumstance, that one of the oospheres might contain two, or even three, nuclei, a fact also noticed by Oltmanns. When the oospheres are extruded, and come to lie free in the water, they grow in size, and are turbid with granules, which are very abundant in the cytoplasm. The chromatophores early become distinguishable from the other constituents of the cell, and the nucleus occupies a central position. It is itself surrounded by a dense layer of cytoplasm, which later on becomes very strongly marked. About five minutes after the mixing of the sexual cells, the antherozoids are found to have slipped into many of the oospheres. We failed to observe the act of penetration, but found a number of cases in which the antherozoid could be recognised within the oosphere, before its final fusion with the nucleus of the latter. It is a roundish, densely staining body, and, unlike the majority of animal sperm cells as yet described, it imports into the egg no system of radiations along with it. Judging from the short period of time elapsing between its penetration of the surface of the oosphere and its arrival at the exterior of the female nucleus, it must pass through the intervening cytoplasm with great rapidity. It then becomes closely appressed to the nucleus, and is about as large as the nucleolus of the latter. It rapidly spreads over a part of the female nucleus as a cap, and it presents a less homogeneous aspect than before. Both it and the female nucleus assume a granular condition, which is probably to be interpreted as representing a coiling and looping of the lining of the respective nuclei. Finally the two nuclei coalesce, and the original components can no longer be distinguished. Complete fusion may be effected in less than ten minutes after addition of the antherozoids to the water. These results are in striking accordance with those described by Wilson in connexion with the fertilisation of the eggs of echinoderms in his recent “ Atlas of Fertilisation.”

A delicate pellicle is meanwhile formed around the periphery of the oosphere, which is thus easily distinguished from the unfertilised cospheres, in which such a membrane is wanting. The texture of the