Abstract
Fertilized uncleaved eggs of Xenopus laevis were divided into nucleate and non-nucleate egg fragments. Both fragments, together with the whole egg of the same batch, were observed by time-lapse cinematography. Two kinds of cyclic surface changes, (1) rounding-up and relaxing movements and (2) surface contraction waves, accompanying each cleavage in the whole eggs and the nucleate fragments, were also observed even in the non-nucleate fragments although they do not cleave. Cleavage intervals of the whole egg and the nucleate fragment were nearly equal, but the rounding-up intervals of the non-nucleate fragment were slightly but definitely longer than the cleavage intervals of the nucleate fragment and the whole egg.
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