Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2009
In May, 1933, during routine gonad examinations, a hermaphrodite specimen of Echinocardium cordatum was observed. It was collected in the sandy beach of Port Erin Bay at low water of ordinary spring tides, and was 4.7 cm. in length, which corresponds, in a normal specimen, to an age of about four years. The external colour was dark, although not more so than in other specimens in the batch, but the gonad was exceptionally pigmented—almost black. In this locality the colour of the test and gonad becomes progressively darker with increasing age, and affords some measure of the latter.
The specimen was examined within half an hour of being collected, and portions of the gonad were fixed within ten minutes of being opened, so that fertilization and segmentation could not have advanced in the laboratory to the stage found. Smears from the gonad showed ova, of which about 50% were ripe, together with ripe spermatozoa. The gonoduct contained ripe ova, together with segmenting ova and early embryos. Figure 1 is a photograph of the contents of the gonoduct, taken immediately after opening, and showing ova with a four-cell stage and a blastula. Cultures were set up in sterile sea-water, from the contents of the gonoduct, and also from the gonad itself, as well as a control fertilization from normal urchins, and from all of these normal early plutei were reared. Those cultures from the hermaphrodite specimen did not, however, develop much further, possibly owing to premature fertilization in the abnormal conditions in the gonad.