Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T08:52:57.275Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

VIII.—Regeneration of the Legs of Decapod Crustacea from the Preformed Breaking Plane

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

J. Herbert Paul
Affiliation:
Physiological Department, Glasgow University
Get access

Summary

(1) Homarus vulgáris, Eupagurus bernhardus, and Carcinus mœnas all form limb-buds or papillæ in the process of limb regeneration. These are covered by a chitinous envelope, and the observations here recorded show that their outer form and size are adaptations to the requirements of the animal. That of the lobster is straight, that of the hermit crab curved, while the shore crab has a papilla which may be folded on itself three times inside the envelope.

(2) Valvular action of the diaphragm at the breaking plane plays a greater part in the stopping of haemorrhage after self-amputation than clotting, and the dilatation of small vessels which pass beneath the epidermis detaches a layer of cells. This layer of epidermis proliferates from its free edges to form the new limb.

(3) A new diaphragm is the first structure laid down, and differentiation takes place from the base outwards. Muscle arises at the growing tip from cells proliferated from the old epidermis (an ectodermal structure), and the nerve grows outwards from the torn end by cell proliferation.

(4) Muscle-fibres are anatomically complete immediately before moulting. The fibrillæ are cross-striated and enclosed in a sarcolemma, but full functional activity does not come till several days after moulting, beginning with slow rhythmic movements. Sarcoplasm seems to be less plentiful than in the normal fibre.

(5) When moulting occurs the papilla is at once expanded to several times its previous size by valvular action, and the epidermis, previously composed of several layers of cells, now thins to a single layer, as is seen in the normal limb.

Type
Proceedings
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1915

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

(1)Réaumur, , “Sur les diverses reproductions qui se font dans les éerevisses, les omars, les crabes, etc., et entre autres sur celles de leurs jambes et de leurs écailles,” Mém. de l'Acad. Roy. des Sc., 1712.Google Scholar
(2)Herrick, F. H., “The American Lobster,” Bull. U.S. Fish Commission, 1895.Google Scholar
(3)Chantran, , “Expériences sur la régénération des yeux chez les éerevisses,” Compt, rendu, lxxvii.Google Scholar
(4)Morgan, T. H., “Regeneration and Liability to Injury,” Zool. Bull., i, 1898.Google Scholar
Morgan, T. H., “Further Experiments on Regeneration of the Appendages of the Hermit Crab,” Anal. Ariz., xvii, 1900.Google Scholar
Morgan, T. H., Regeneration, The Macmillan Co., 1901.Google ScholarPubMed
(5)Steele, M. I., “Regeneration of Crayfish Appendages,” University of Missouri Studies, No. 4, 1904.Google Scholar
(6)Reed, M. A., “Regeneration of the First Leg of the Crayfish,” Arch, f. Entw., T. xviii, 1904.Google Scholar
(7)Emmel, V. E., “Differentiation of Tissues in the Regenerating Crustacean Limb,” Amer. Jour. Anat., vol. x, 1910.Google Scholar
(8)Ost, J., “Zur Kenntnis der Regeneration der Extremitäten bei den Arthropoden,” Arch. f. Entw., T. xxii, 1906.Google Scholar
(9)Zeleny, C., “The Direction of Differentiation in Development,” Arch. f. Entw., T. xxiii, 1907.Google Scholar
(10)Haseman, J. D., “Direction of Differentiation in Development,” Arch. f. Entw., T. xxiv, 1907.Google Scholar
(11)Goodsir, H. D. S., “A Short Account of the Mode of Reproduction of Lost Parts in the Crustacea,” Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., xiii, 1844.Google Scholar
(12)Brooks, G., “Notes on the Reproduction of Lost Parts in the Lobster (ELomarus vulgaris),” Proc. Roy. Physical Soc., Edin., cxvi, 1887.Google Scholar
(13)Frédérique, L., “Nouvelles recherches sur l'autotomie chez le crabe,” Archives de Biol., t. xii, 1892.Google Scholar
(14)Pearson, J., L.M.B.C. Memoir on Cancer, 1907.Google Scholar
(15)Tait, J., “Types of Crustacean Blood Coagulation,” Jour. M.B.A., vol. ix, No. 2.Google Scholar
(16)Vitzou, A. N., “Recherches sur la structure et la formation des teguments chez les crustacés décapodes,” Arch, de Zool. expér. et général, t. x, 1882.Google Scholar
(17)Taylor, J. A., “The Casting or Moulting of the Lobster,” Report of Northumberland Sea Fisheries Committee, 1911.Google Scholar