. The physiology of the Invertebrata. erhaps * Archiv. fiir Milcr. Anat., vol. 5, p. 248, et seq. + Vergleich. Physiol. Studien, p. 85. X Annales des Sciences NatureUes, 1838, vol. 10, p. 190. § Journal of Anatomy and Physiology, 1868, p. 114; 1870, p. 119. PHYSIOLOGY OF THE INVERTEBRATA. 131 in Stokes reduced hsematin.* .... Prof. Lankester couldnot obtain derivatives of chlorocruorin, owing, as he hasstated, to the apparent instability of this body, whichdecomposes rapidly, Dr. MacMunn has recently examined spectroscopically thebehaviour of chlorocruorin with certain reagents, but hisinvesti


. The physiology of the Invertebrata. erhaps * Archiv. fiir Milcr. Anat., vol. 5, p. 248, et seq. + Vergleich. Physiol. Studien, p. 85. X Annales des Sciences NatureUes, 1838, vol. 10, p. 190. § Journal of Anatomy and Physiology, 1868, p. 114; 1870, p. 119. PHYSIOLOGY OF THE INVERTEBRATA. 131 in Stokes reduced hsematin.* .... Prof. Lankester couldnot obtain derivatives of chlorocruorin, owing, as he hasstated, to the apparent instability of this body, whichdecomposes rapidly, Dr. MacMunn has recently examined spectroscopically thebehaviour of chlorocruorin with certain reagents, but hisinvestigations will be de-scribed later in this chap-ter, when we consider indetail the chromatology ofthe Invertebrate blood. The red blood of lahm,-hricus can be made toyield crystals of oxyhse-moglobin (Fig. 27), anda solution of these crystalsgives an absorption spec-trum (Fig. 28). Hemoglobin is also pre-sent in special corpusclesof the blood of Glyccra(one of the Polycliceta) ;as well as in the vascular fluid of NepJielis and Fig. 27.—Crystals of OxyhemoglobinFROM Blood of Lumbricus. It JOa,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectinverte, bookyear1892