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Dr. Felix Hoppe-Seyler, Professor of Physiological Chemistry in the University of Strassburg, died in Wassenburg, on the Lake of Constance, Aug. 11, 1895, aged 70 years.

The Australian Association for the Advancement of Science, will hold its annual meeting at Sydney, Jan. 3 to 10, 1896. Professor A. Liversedge is the President.

The Berlin Academy of Science has elected Professors K. W. vonGümbel, K. A. von Zittel, A. Cossa, and Mr. Alexander Agassiz as corresponding members.

Dr. R. Krause, who formerly had charge of the Anthropological Section of the Museum Godfroy in Hamburg, died in Schwerin, Mecklinburg, July 25, 1895.

Dr. A. Schaper, of Zürich, has been appointed instructor in Histology and Embryology in the Harvard Medical School.

Ernst Baumann, formerly head of the station of Misahöhe, West Africa, died in Cologne, Sept. 4, 1895, aged 24 years.

Professor Hellriegel, botanist and Director of the Agricultural Experiment Station in Bernburg, died Sept. 24, 1895.

F. Nies, Professor of Mineralogy and Geology in the Agricultural School of Hohenheim, is dead at the age of 56.

Dr. Herman Credner has been advanced to the Ordinary Professorship of Geology in the University of Leipzig.

Dr. V. Rohon has been appointed Extraordinary Professor of Histology in the Bohemian University in Prag.

Dr. Valentin Häcker has been advanced to Extraordinary Professor of Zoology in the University of Freiburg.

Dr. Emil Yung is the successor of the late Carl Vogt as Professor of Zoology in the University of Geneva.

Dr. Moritz Willkomm, formerly Professor of Botany in Prag, died Aug. 26, in Wortenburg, Bohemia.

Dr. Kallies of Göttingen, has been promoted to Extraordinary Professor of Anatomy in Tübingen.

Joseph Thompson, African explorer and geologist, died in London, Aug. 2. 1895, aged 37 years.

Dr. F. Reinitzer, of Prag, has been appointed Extraordinary Professor of Botany in Graz.

Mr. R. Trimen has resigned his position as Director of the Cape Town (Africa) Museum.

L. Perry Arcas, entomologist, died in Requena, Spain, Sept. 24 1895, aged 70 years.

Dr. D. Brandza, Professor of Botany in Bucharest, died August 15, 1895, aged 48 years.

Dr. A. S. Dogiel, of Tomsk, goes to St. Petersburg as Professor of Histology.

Dr. H. Lenk, of Leipzig, has been called to the chair of Geology in Erlangen.

F. Kitton, the student of diatoms, died at Norwich, England, July 22, 1895.

E. J. Chapman, Professor of Geology in Toronto, has resigned his position.

Dr. F. Czapek is now Privat-docent in Botany in the University of Vienna.

Professor Sven Loven, of Stockholm, died Sept. 4, 1895, aged 86

years.

Dr. H. Strahl has been appointed Professor of Anatomy in Giessen. Dr. P. H. Macgillivray, the student of Australian Polyzoa, is dead. Dr. M. Miyoshi has been called to the chair of Botany in Tokyo. Dr. A. Senoner, geologist, died in Vienna, Aug. 30, 1895.

Dr. J. Vesque, botanist, of Vincennes, France, is dead.

Dr. F. Müller, herpetologist, died at Basel in May.

THE

AMERICAN NATURALIST

VOL. XXX.

April, 1896.

352

THE BEARING OF THE ORIGIN AND DIFFERENTIATION OF THE SEX CELLS IN CYMATOGASTER ON THE IDEA OF THE CONTINUITY OF THE GERM PLASM.1

CARL H. EIGENMANN.

At the meeting of the American Microscopical Society last August I read a paper on the Evolution of Sex in Cymatogaster, of which the present paper is a part. It is not, and was not intended as a full discussion of heredity, but contains observations and conclusions forced upon me while tracing the sex cells from one generation to the next in Cymatogaster aggregatus Gibbons, one of the viviparous perches of California.

Since writing it, I have received from Dr. Minot his article "Ueber die Vererbung und Verjüngung," which is just being republished in the NATURALIST. I have thought best to present my results as read at the Ithaca meeting, with a note written after the receipt of Dr. Minot's article, although the details of the observations on which the conclusions are based may not appear for some time.

12.

1 Contributions from the Zoological Laboratory of the Indiana University, No.

The origin of the heredity cells may be explained in one of three ways:2

I. The sex cell is the product of the whole organism, and is in this apart from the other tissues. This is the Pangenesis of Darwin.

II. The sex cell is an unchanged but increased part of the sex cell of the previous generation, and something apart from the rest of the body. This is Jaegerism, or, more popularly, Weismannism, and, according to it, the body has no influence over the hereditary cells and changes arising during the life of one individual cannot be transmitted to the next generation.

III. The sex cell is the product of histogenesis and of precisely the same significar.ce and origin as any other cell in the body. This view is held by Morgan, Minot and myself.

As a corollary of the last two is the fact that "in the ancestry of the individual cells of which our body is composed there has never been a death."

The first two theories are not based on observation. They have been evolved from the attempts to explain the heredity power of the sex cells.

The idea of the cellular continuity of successive generations first suggested by Nussbaum in 1880, is now generally accepted. Indeed, there is, perhaps, now no one who would contend that the reproductive cells are new formations in the individual. The reproductive cells are known to be of the same origin as the retinal or any other series of cells. There is but little less unanimity over the idea of the continuity of the unchanged germ plasm, although the number of observations bearing on this point have, necessarily, been very limited. So often is the idea restated without actual examination of the data, the whole subject has become hackneyed. I have taken up this subject because it seems to me the conditions observed in Cymatogaster warrant a conclusion differing from the one generally accepted.

2 See Osborn, Am. Nat., 1892. Morgan, Animal Life and Intelligence, 1891, p. 131.

3 Boveri, Befruchtung in Ergebnisse der Anatomie und Entwicklungsgesch, I, 1892, records an apparent case of unchanged transmission.

There is no doubt concerning the continuity of the reproductive cells in Cymatogaster; they may be followed from very early conditions till sexual maturity without once losing their identity. No somatic cells are transformed into reproductive cells, and the comparative constancy of the number of the latter present in any embryo up to 7 mm. long makes it probable that none are ever changed into any other structure. These statements apply with equal force to other tissues.

The difference between the reproductive and the somatic cells is that the latter, after development has begun, continue to develop, divide, grow and adapt themselves to their new duties without intermission. The sex cells, on the other hand, stop dividing at a certain point and remain at apparent rest for a long period. Owing to this arrest in division the sex cells soon stand out prominently as large cells among the smaller somatic cells. Such an arrest in segmentation has been observed in a number of other animals in which the reproductive cells are early segregated, and it cannot be without meaning. It has been supposed that during such periods of apparent rest the cells remain dormant, retaining their embryonic character unchanged. I do not think this is the true reason for the difference of development between the soma and the reproductive cells. The reason seems to me to lie in the fact that the sexual organs are the last to become functional, and their development is consequently retarded. The sex cells, when first segregated-that is, when they first lag behind in segmentation-are not exactly like the ovum from which they have been derived, and there is just as true histogenesis in their development into the reproductive tissues as in the case of any other embryonic cells into their corresponding tisEven during the long period of rest from segmentation, the process of tissue differentiation produces a visible and measurable change. But the difference between embryonic cells and undifferentiated reproductive cells being small, the histogenic changes in them during early stages is correspondingly small. This small change has been supposed to amount to no change, and has given rise to that fascinating "myth ", the

sue.

For possible exceptions see Eigenmann, Journ. Morph., V, No. 3, 1891.

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