The first skeletal condensation appears deep at the base of the limb bud near the somites, when the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) is maximally developed. Thereafter the skeletal elements generally appear in a proximodistal sequence but most of the mesopodial cartilages appear well after the metapodial ones and one of them, tarsalia-1, even after the phalangeal ones. The skeletal elements that fuse or "disappear" during the development are the cartilaginous condensation of fibulare, and the precartilaginous condensation of the distal centrale in the tarsus, and possibly the mesenchymatous condensation of the intermedium in the carpus. The calcification of all the long cartilages is perichondral and osseous while that of all the mesopodial and other cartilages, like epiphyses and sesamoids, is endochondral and nonosseous except the partly osseous astragalus and fibulare. The limbs of the mature adult have many sesamoids and metaplastic calcifications. The AER starts regressing after the appearance of the first skeletal condensation but is retained on the digital tips, though in a moderately regressed condition, almost till the time of the appearance of all the phalangeal condensations. These studies on the mesopodium differ with most studies on reptilian and avian mesopodia in favoring the view that very few skeletal condensations fuse or disappear during the development. They thus raise important issues concerning the ontogeny and phylogeny of the pentadactyl limb. While the AER has a substantial role in the limb morphogenesis, it most probably is not responsible for the information to mesoderm regarding the number, size, shape and relative position of the skeletal elements in the limb.
The following terminology is proposed for the heteropteran pretarsus : The median unguitractor plate, bearing basally the claws and terminally a small extension, the empodium, from which arises a pair o f bristles, the parempodia. Basal and ventral to the claws (and lateral to the parempodia) is a pair of pads, the pulvilli, each Few attempts appear to have been made to put of the pretarsus, but they did not consider homologies pretarsal nomenclature upon a firm footing. Cramp-from order to order and, like Crampton, they ignored Reprillted from the
The adults of Streptogonopus phipsoni (Pocock), an Indian polydesmoid millipede, emerge from the soil at the onset of the monsoon and mate. Eggs are laid in the soil and the adults die. The larvae leave the soil at stadium III and, apart from moulting periods, remain on the surface until the end of the monsoon. The larvae are aggregated in swarms, usually consisting of several hundred individuals. They are active on open ground, including metalled roads, during daylight, but usually spend the night in an inactive state under cover of stones or vegetation. If a swarm is disturbed, the individuals scatter but later reaggregate.
Laboratory experiments show that the larvae are sensitive to light even though they lack eyes, and if given a choice spend more time in the light than the dark. Just before and after moulting however they spend more time in the dark than in the light.
Experiments were carried out on the reactions of the larvae to aquatic suspensions of benzaldeyde, since this substance is related to components of the exudate of the repugnatorial glands; strong concentrations (10‐1) repelled the larvae, whilst weak concentrations (10‐6) attracted them. It is suggested that swarms may be dispersed or reaggregated by the effects of variations in concentration of components of the exudates. The benefits to the larvae which may result from swarming are discussed.
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