Abstract

ABSTRACT Child (1936) has described reduction gradients in different stages of developing sea-urchin and starfish larvae. His results concerning the gradients in seaurchin mesenchyme blastulae and early gastrulae have been confirmed with Janus green. There exists a stronger vegetal (acropetal) reduction gradient and a weaker animal one, appearing later, in the normal whole larva. Isolated vegetal halves show a similar vegetal reduction gradient, but in most cases no animal gradient. In isolated animal halves the reduction starts in the thick plate of the enlarged apical tuft and no vegetal gradient appears. Micromeres implanted laterally in the animal part of a whole egg induce there a reduction centre. Four micromeres implanted into an isolated animal half induce a new vegetal reduction gradient and restrict the animal gradient, so that the reduction gradient system now resembles that of a normal egg. A comparison of isolated animal and vegetal halves shows that the reduction seems to start at the same time and to proceed simultaneously in both kinds of halves. We can, therefore, state that the metabolism in isolated animal halves is not identical with that of the same material when forming the animal part of a normal larva. A comparison of the reduction gradients in these different cases shows a remarkable conformity with the animal and vegetal morphogenetic gradients known from the analysis by fragmentation and transplantation experiments. (These results have been published in full, Horstadius, 1952.)

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