Abstract

Of fragments involving a partial removal of the original adoral zone of membranelles (AZM), the monomacro‐nucleate ones become reorganized monostomes resulting from a simple fusion of the remnant AZM to the oral primordium induced, and the binucleate ones become dividers by initiation of the oral primordium posteriorly from the posterior terminal of the remnant AZM. The cirral primordium in any fragment arises alongside its corresponding oral area. Weisz's idea of the dominance and inhibition of the original oral system extending over the oral primordium site is applicable in stomatogenesis of the present species. This application is found also in cirral formation.In fragments from early stage dividers, a formed oral primordium is easily absorbed by influence of the intact original AZM. This event also occurs after complete removal of the AZM. Such results led to the hypothesis that the oral primordium in the normal divider may be formed under some stoma‐togenic activation of the AZM followed by escape from inhibition also arising from the same source. Irrevocable furrow formation and irreversibility of the oral primordium in stomatogenesis occur in later stages of division. Nevertheless division in these stages is blocked when certain operations are performed, forming monsters possessing the AZM of the opisthe translocated to the side opposite to that of the proter. In other monsters obtained from a fusion of the AZM of the proter to that of the opisthe, division occurs belatedly, prior to which secondary oral and cirral primordia are produced.

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