Melbourne botan. Garden,
25 Aug 1864,
Dear Prof. Owen.
It affords me extreme pleasure to inform you, that I have forwarded to you under special
care of Capt. Gray, commander of the "Great Britain", a small cask, containing a male
& female Echidna Hystrix (immersed in Alcohol), and besides a small package containing
the young animal in an early state of development. After receiving many female specimens
in an unimpregnated state, I at last obtained one, which (though perhaps prematurely)
had given birth to a young. Lest an accident should occur in the transmission, my
friend Dr James Rudall, a distinguished operat. surgeon of this city, and myself dissected
preliminary the mother animal, and byefollowing we offer the results of our observations,
as far as they refer to the fecundation of this species. It so happened that Dr Rudall
& myself were at the time both unusually occupied in our ordinary respective professional
duties, and hence we did not so far penetrate with our investigations as originally
contemplated; other wise we would have missed the opportunity of sending you the specimina
by the Great Britain. But as your unparalleled knowledge alone can do full justice
to the subject, we were also glad not to anticipate your researches, regretting only
that the material is still so imperfect as to leave the generative process of the
Monotremata almost as much as before in mystery & obscurity. From our notes & more
particularly from the examination of the specimina you will observe, that whilst we
see a great resemblance between the generative organs of the Echidna & Ornithorrynchus
and between the young of either, we are also unable to conceive how the nutrition
of the young Echidna, especially in its earlier stages is effected. It is however
our intention to follow up the subject as closely as we can, & some fortunate event,
we hope, will some day place into our hands a mother animal with the young in situ.
It appeared to us desirable to send also a male Echidna well developed; for the male
organ is most singular & the testicles are so large; & many other points connected
with the anatomy of this creature appear to us deserving attention, if no opportunity
was afforded to you before, to subject it to a vigorous examination. If an essay on
the subject is already extant we are not aware of it, and as neither of us had at
the moment leisure to trace it out in any of the periodicals (even if fully accessible)
foreign or British in which the respective evidence may have been already deposited
we thought best to send the male also. Should individual animals fall into our hands,
from which the embryology and Development of the Echidna can be fully illustrated,
Dr Rudall & myself will invite the learned Prof of Anatomy of the University of Melbourne,
Dr Halford, to aid us with his skill, in order that not unnecessarily any rare specimens
may be risked before the results for your use are secured. It occurs to me, that the
offer of a large premium might have the effect of induc[e]ing many inhabitants, living
in favorable spots, to spend the neccessary time and exertions in searching carefully
after the Ornithorrhynchus & Echidna in a gravid state.
Would it be possible for you to send me from the British Museum a good-sized cask
with preservation-liquid for such or any other animals you may need from here for
anatomical dissections? Many larger animals, such as the Phascolarctos &c &c which
we have hitherto failed to send home, might be brought thus within the reach of your
glorious investigations.
You will kindly pardon the inelegance of this letter, written whilst I am embarrassed
with the mail work; also the briefness of Dr Rud[e]lls & my notes, which we wrote
last night at a late hour.
Respecting the meteorite I shall write to your Colleague Dr Maskelyne, by this mail
& trust that you will be pleased with the arrangements finally adopted by this Government
in reference to its transmission.
Probably you possess in the British museum the first volume of the work on Australian
plants, published under my assistance by Mr Bentham last year. Perhaps it may be pleasing
to you to refer to the pages devoted to
,
as they give an account of the wide range of this noble genus of trees over Australia
familiarly now know to colonists and travellers as
trees. As a genus
is one of the most marked of the many it has fallen to my share to describe; and
moreover it is that, which of all of mine contains most species. I selected it at
the time for that purpose as the best I ever had to give away, and as I then had not
the honor of being with you in direct communication I trust that you will always kindly
regard it as a token of the admiration, which I since my early years entertained for
your genius. You were illustrious, when I had hardly seen the light of the world &
hence it is quite fascinating to me that it was reserved to me to perpetuate your
illustrious name in the systematic appellations of the treasures of natures. Perhaps
you would have preferred that your name should have been attached to one of those
huge monsters of a byegone creation, for the elucidation of so many we are indebted
to you. And indeed by a slight modification of the etymology this tribute may still
any day be brought to you from some of those great men, who are advancing palaeontologic
enquiry.
In my work on the vegetation of the Chatham-Islands
(phytologically hitherto almost unknown) I shall briefly but not in an antagonistic
spirit expose my views on the limits of species and their immutability. A great Italian,
whose judgement has weight, Parlatore in Florence, in a philosophic treatise just
received from the hand of its illustrious author, briefly gives the results of his
observations on this subject, in which I most fully concur.
Ever with admiration & grateful attachment
your
Ferd. Mueller
Brief notes on the generative apparatus of the female Echidna.
The animal being excessively difficult to handle it was immersed in cold water and
by these means and the additional use of Hydrocyanic Acid its life was extinguished.
A longitudinal incision was made from the orifice of the cloaca upwards to the length
of about 5". Five larger and some smaller ovules were found arranged in a grapelike
manner, the largest measuring from 1-1½'"
in diameter. Fine vessels expanded reticularly over the surface of the ovules. We
vainly endeavoured to trace an opening at the ovarian end of the oviduct. Oviduct
about 2" long; its upper extremity expanded and attached to the ovarium. As a probable
sign of recent functional activity were noted a number of large veins lying between
the layers of the peritoneum. Numerous oval mesenteric glands were seen. Meatus urinarius
lying in the inferior wall of the cloaca about ½" from the orifice.
The ureter terminates in a conspicuous conical protuberance from 3-4''' long. No other
exit for the urine from the bladder being found but the point into which this conical
protuberance fits, the ingress and egress of the urin, as far as we believe, takes
place at the same aperture.
In close proximity and lateral to it the oviducts terminate by slit-like openings.
The mucous membrane of the thick walls of the oviducts are, at least in the lower
portion, longitudinally folded. The oviducts are suddenly narrowed for about ⅙" from
the lower orifice, offering some resistance to the passage of an ordinary sized probe.
The upper portion of the oviduct seems of a structure capable of considerable expansion
during gestation. The upper portion was dilated and thin, and a probe could be passed
to near one of the ova. The lower portion of the rectum is so large and so capable
of distension as to admit of the periodical nidulation
of the young animal, in case its great size should be provided for that purpose,
as it is a receptacle large enough for a young animal twice as large as that found
now with the mother.
The foetal young may possibly have been extruded prematurely after the capture of
the animal. We found no cicatrix of an umbilical cord on the abdomen of the young
animal.
A rough sketch of the young, as seen by us, is appended.
It was of a pale color; no apertures for the eyes were yet visible in the skin; nor
were any tegumentary appendages formed. The finder
contends, that he saw the young external to the mother and alive. We purposely abstained
from the internal examination of the young one, so as not to mutilate the only specimen
available.
The four mammmary glands at this time are apparently quite rudimentary;
they are destitute of nipples, as are those of the Ornithorrhynchus. Nor was the
least appearance of milk in these glands.
From the imperfect means of judging we had, we incline to the opinion that the Echidna
cannot be oviparous.
Ferd. Mueller
James T. Rudall.
Melbourne,
25/8/64
Brief notes on a partial dissection of a male Echidna Hystrix
The abdominal parietes were divided to the extent of about 5" in the middle line;
the incision in the skin entering as low as the cloacal orifice. The articulations
between the marsupial bones and the pubes were divided.
The opening of the canal leading from the bladder was found situated in the inferior
portion of the wall of the rectum, higher up than the corresponding aperture in the
female and also much smaller.
Lodged in a sac opening by a plicated aperture into the cloaca, curved like a bow
and lying across below the symphysis pubis the penis was seen, its distal end pointing
toward the right side. It was remarkable in size and formation, being about 2" long;
the distal extremity was found divided vertically into four short closely packed segments.
The testes, situated in the abdomen just below the kidneys were observed to be very
large, each being about the size and form of a pigeon’s egg.
The bladder externally viewed seemed to correspond in every respect with the same
organ of the female animal.
A small incision was made into the left testis with a view of ascertaining its internal
structure.