Page:EB1911 - Volume 18.djvu/206

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MESOXALIC ACID—MESOZOA
137


Der Anu Adad Tempel (1909). See also D. G. Hogarth, “Carchemesh and its Neighbourhood” (Annals, &c. ii. 165–184), and W. Andrae’s Die Ruinen von Hatra (1908).

History.—Early period: besides the histories of Babylonia and Assyria see Winckler, various essays in his Altor. Forschungen, “Vorläufige Nachrichten über die Ausgrabungen in Boghaz-köi im Sommer, 1907,” in Mitteilungen der Deutsch. Orient. Gesellschaft, No. 35, and “Suri” in Oriental. Lit.-Zeit, x. 281–299, 345–357, 401–412, 643; O. Weber, the notes to Knudtzon’s Die El-Amarna Tafeln; A. Ungnad, Untersuchungen zu den . . . Urkunden aus Dilbat (1909), pp. 8–21; P. Schnabel, Studien zur bab.-assyrischen Chronologie (1908); A. Sanda, Die Aramäer (1902) in the Der Alte Orient series; M. Streck, “Über die älteste Geschichte der Aramäer” in Klio, vi. 185–225. For the later periods see Persia: History; Hellenism; Rome: History; Parthia; Syriac Literature; Caliphate and authorities there given.  (H. W. H.) 

MESOXALIC ACID (dioxymalonic acid), (HO2C)2C(OH)2 or C2H4O6, is obtained by hydrolysis of alloxan with baryta water (J. v. Liebig, Ann., 1838, 26, p. 298), by warming caffuric acid with lead acetate solution (E. Fischer, Ann., 1882, 215, p. 283), or from glycerin diacetate and concentrated nitric acid in the cold (E. Seelig, Ber., 1891, 24, p. 3471). It crystallizes in deliquescent prisms and melts with partial decomposition at 119–120° C. It behaves as a ketonic acid, being reduced in aqueous solution by sodium amalgam to tartronic acid, and also combining with phenylhydrazine and hydroxylamine. It reduces ammoniacal silver solutions. When heated with urea to 100° C. it forms allantoin. By continued boiling of its aqueous solution it is decomposed into carbon dioxide and glyoxylic acid, C2H4O4.


(From Cambridge Natural History, vol. ii. “Worms, &c.,” by permission of Macmillan & Co. Ltd. After Gamble.)

Fig. 1.—Dicyemennea eledones Wag. from the kidney of Eledone moschata.

A. Full-grown Rhombogen with infusoriform embryos (emb).

g. Part of endoderm cell where formation of the embryos is actively proceeding.

n. ect. Nucleus of ectoderm cell.

n. end. Nucleus of endoderm cell.

p. “Calotte.”

B. Developing infusoriform embryo.

C. One fully developed.

D. “Calotte” of nine cells.

MESOZOA. Van Beneden[1] gave this name to a small group of minute and parasitic animals which he regarded as intermediate between the Protozoa and the Metazoa. The Mesozoa comprise two classes: (1) the Rhombozoa, which are found only in the kidneys of Cephalopods, and (2) the Orthonectida, which infest specimens of Ophiurids, Polychaets, Nemertines, Turbellaria and possibly other groups.

Class I. Rhombozoa (E. van Beneden).—These animals consist of a central cell from which certain reproductive cells arise, enclosed in a single layer of flattened and for the most part ciliated cells; some of them are modified at the anterior end and form the polar cap. The Rhombozoa comprises two orders: (a) Dicyemida, ciliated vermiform creatures whose polar cap has 8 or 9 cells arranged in two rows (Dicyema, Koll., Dicyemennea, Whitm.); (b) Heterocyemida, non-ciliated animals with no polar cap, but whose anterior ectodermal cells contain refringent bodies and may be produced into wart-like processes (Conocyema, v. Ben. in Octopus vulgaris; Microcyema in Sepia officinalis). Unlike the Dicyemida, which are fixed in the renal cells of their host by their polar cap, the Heterocyemida are free. The number of ectoderm cells apart from the polar cap is few, some fourteen to twenty-two.


The central cell is formed by the layer of the first two blastomeres, and remains quiescent until surrounded by the micromeres or products of division of the smaller blastomere. It then divides unequally, and of the two cells thus formed the larger repeats the process. Each of the two small cells are now called “primary germ cells,” and they enter into and lie inside the large central cell. The primary germ cells divide until there are eight of them all lying within the axial cell. At this stage the future of the parasite may take one of two directions. Following one path, the animal (now called a “Nematogen”). gives rise by the segmentation of its primary germ cells to vermiform larvae which, though smaller, are but replicas of the parent form. Following the other path, the animal (now termed a “Rhombogen”), gives origin to a number of “infusoriform larvae” several of these arising from each primary germ-cell. The vermiform larvae leave their Nematogen parent and swimming through the renal fluid attach themselves to the renal cells. They never leave their host, and die in sea-water. The infusoriform larvae have a very complicated structure; they escape from the Rhombogen, and, unlike the vermiform larvae they can live in sea-water. They possibly serve to infect new hosts. Some authorities look upon these infusoriform larvae as males, and consider that they fertilize some of the Nematogens, which then give rise to males again, whereas the females which produce the vermiform embryos arise from unfertilized vermiform larvae. After the infusoriform larvae have left the parent’s body, the Rhombogen takes to producing vermiform offspring, and thus becomes a secondary Nematogen. Thus, if the above views be correct, a Rhombogen is a protandrous hermaphrodite.

(From Cambridge Natural History, vol. ii., “Worms, &c.,” by permission of Macmillan & Co. Ltd. After Julin.)

Fig. 2.—Rhopalura giardii Metschn. from Amphiura squamata.
♂. Full grown male.
♀1. Flattened form of female.
♀2. Cylindrical female.

E. Nerescheimer has recently described under the name of Lohmanella catenata an organism parasitic in Fritillaria which shows marked affinities, with the Rhombozoa. The genus Haplazoon of which two species have been found in the worms Travisia and Clymene by Dogiel is classed as a new group of Mesozoa.

Class II. Orthonectida (A. Giard).—The Orthonectida contain animals with a central mass of eggs destined to form male and female reproductive cells surrounded by a single layer of ciliated ectoderm cells arranged in regular rings which contain varying numbers of rows of cells. Muscular fibrils occur between the outer and inner cells. The sexes are separate and unlike, and there are two kinds of females, cylindrical and flat. There are but two genera, Rhopalura and Staecharthrum, the latter found in a Polychaet. The male R. giardii lives in the body-cavity of Amphiura squamata, has six rings of ectodermal cells all ciliated except the second, whose cells contain refringent granules. The ectoderm encloses the testis, a mass of cells which have arisen from a single axial cell in the embryo. The female differs from the male in appearance, and in size it is larger. It occurs in two forms: (1) The cylindrical with 8 (or 9) rows of ectoderm cells; here as in the male the second ring is devoid of cilia. (2) The flat females are broader, uniformly ciliated, and have not rings of ectoderm cells. The central mass of cells forms


  1. Bull. Ac. Belgique (1876), p. 35.