Observations on some outstanding features of protozoan life
dc.contributor.author
Simpson, James Young
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-02-15T14:21:57Z
dc.date.available
2019-02-15T14:21:57Z
dc.date.issued
1901
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en
dc.description.abstract
The following pages represent for the most part the results of two summers' work under Mr. Sedgwick at Cambridge.
In this place I would record my grateful indebtedness to that
gentleman , not only for the ample provision - from a room
down to the smallest necessary - put at my disposal , but also
for the kindly encouragement and stimulus that are now associated
in my mind with his name. Nor do I forget the interest
and help accorded by Messrs Shipley and Graham Kerr.
en
dc.description.abstract
Proceeding on the assumption that since the daughter forms
produced as the result of binary fission were duplicates , we
need not look for any variation there, I endeavoured in the
first instance to carry out e suggestion of Mr. Sedgwick's which
he ultimately published in his presidential address to the Zoological
Section of the British Association in 1899 , and laid
plans under his direction to find out bi observation of the
external characters how much variation could be detected in
exconjugates as the result of conjugation by comparing them
before and after the process. For this purpose it was necessary to choose a Ciliate with well- marked characters , and
Stylonichia pustulata with its systems of cirri and membranellae
appeared to offer the necessary requisite. The only line
along which it seemed that I could work was to draw the creatures
as accurately as was possible just before conjugation,
repeat this after they had come out of conjugation, and then
deduce results from measurements and other comparison of the
drawings. The first difficulty was to get the creatures
quiet so as to enable one to carry out this programme. A
common method of quieting Protozoa is by pressure with a coverglass
, but the distortion and displacement connected with
this method rendered it impossible for the work in hand.
Another method that has long been recommended is entanglement
with cotton wool , but here the success that one obtains is
distinctly limited and insufficient for the purpose. Cocaine
and other narcotics have been faintly recommended: I
have tried the former , but it not only did not produce the
amount of quiet that was desirable , but it seemed to disturb
the after-life of the creature. After many attempts with
various agents , I found that a drop or so of a 4 per cent solution
of gelatine had the effect of slowing down these Ciliata
they even had frequent spells of absolute rest , except for
the occasional movement of a cirrus. Accordingly eight
well-marked specimens , all differing in size , were selected
from a culture of Stylonichia , of which some members had alread.;
entered into conjugation. They were then drawn after
being, stilled by gelatine , and as they were easily recognisable
, they were all put together in a watch -glass containing
water from the original medium. Not a single case of conjugation occurred. I then took other specimens and subjected
them to the gelatine medium for the same interval of time as
was required to draw the others - each about a quarter of an
hour or twenty minutes - and then re- transferred them to a
watch-glass also containing water from the original culture.
Again I had no success in conjugation: it would appear that
the short sojourn in the gelatine was quite sufficient to
change the peculiar bodily equilibrium that must be associated
with the stage previous to conjugation. I have little
doubt that a similar result would have attended all attempts
with narcotics. Accordingly although working all the while
at other points I had to acknowledge defeat in this particular
instance.
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dc.description.abstract
It was , however , while making these more careful examinations of individual forms that I came to doubt the initial
assumption upon which one had been proceeding. Observation
of a dividing Paramecium with a cleft tail suggested that even
though the case was abnormal there was no reason why the products
of binary fission should be exactly alike, unless indeed
to afford theorists a rationale of conjugation. In several
cases I observed that actually it was not the case, but drawings
of these, poor in themselves, might unconsciously suggest that they represented theory rather than fact. Accordingly
it seemed worth while to see what could be done by micro-photography, and although I was assured by a young scientific
photographer that it was impossible to photograph living Ciliarta, an attempt was made. As I am not aware that living
Protozoa - Ciliata at any rate - have been photographed before,
I have added one or two pictures of forms that otherwise have
no definite connection with the point to be illustrated.
Ordinary Ilford chromatic plates were used , as also a Leitz
3 lens , which with the associated extension gave a magnification of about 80: the pictures were all taken instantaneously
by incandescent light. Those that are offered are but a
few successes out of about two hundred failures. The chief
difficulty was in obtaining a cell small enough to be wholly
included within the magnification of the lens. Ultimately
a block of soft paraffin was employed in which a hole was pierced
with a fine needle: it was then sectioned with the microtome ,
and in this way , by regulating the thinness of the section ,
a cell was obtained with the minimum of water in which the
infusorian could live and yet be in focus all the time. A
cover -glass was then super-imposed , and as it was held in
position by a generous application of vaseline round the edge ,
we were enabled to take the photographs in a horizontal position
They were taken at the Laboratory of the Royal College of Physicians
with the kindly assistance of Mr. Hume Patterson.
en
dc.description.abstract
With regard to the remaining methods not much need be
said. In pursuing the investigations relating to binary
fission I employed damp chambers , constructed very much upon
Maupas' system. In killing Protozoa I have pursued all the
better known methods sale, many that are less known , but I have
found nothing so satisfactory as the vapour of 2 per cent osmium, although good results were sometimes obtained with a
formula given by Hoyer in the Archiv für Mikroscopische Anatomie , Vol.54:Part I - viz. one volume of 5 p.c. corrosive sublimate
added to 2 volumes of 3 p.c. bichromate of potash.
en
dc.description.abstract
For the high-pcwer examination of living Ciliata I often
made use of Professor Marshall Ward's culture tubes which can
also be converted into very excellent miniature damp chambers.
It at least seems a more natural state of affairs to have the
living Protozoan in a drop , suspended from a cover-glass attached
to one of these culture tubes than to have it prisoned
and pressed under a cover-glass, however supported.
en
dc.description.abstract
Part I of this thesis contains some observations upon
the intimate stricture of Protozoa , as deduced from sections
longitudinal and transverse of Spirostomum ambiguum and Stylonichia
pustulata. Part II consists of two sections. The
first contains confirmation of Scheel's observations upon the
sporulation of Amoeba proteus. The second contains an incomplete
account of another method of reproduction which I
have ventured to call Fragmentation. It may be regarded as a preliminary account in which the main steps are given:
certain of the details have however yet to be ascertained.
The main contention of the thesis will be found in Part III.
It is only recently that Maupas' classical studies on the rationale
of binary fission and conjugation have been called in
question. I have attempted to go over his work in part ,
and while on the whole I find myself in agreement with him as
against his critic Joukowsky , I venture to offer a few modifications
in some details. To this part is appended some evidence for my belief that binary fission is not duplication.
To prove this thoroughly would be the work of many months.
At the sate time that work would only be multiplication and
amplification of the data that I offer. In the second section
of this part some notes upon conjugation are inserted.
Part IV contains a short account of Encystment as it occurs
amongst the Ciliata , together with descriptions of the little
known cysts of Parameciur.? and Spirostomum.
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The attempted diagrams and photographs are well-nigh self-explanatory.
The former were made with Abbe's drawing -
apparatus: the methods adopted in connection with the microphotography
have already been described. Much of the latter
is sadly lacking in definition , but it is a matter of extreme
difficulty to calculate and adapt that amount of water in the
cell which is sufficient for the free movement and life of
the Protozoan and yet not too great to allow it to get out of focus during the exposure. We may however hope for still
better success in future attempts.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33958
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2019 Block 22
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
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dc.title
Observations on some outstanding features of protozoan life
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
DSc Doctor of Science
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