Experiments are described in which attempts were made to fertilize eggs of the lugworm taken from the coelom. These were unsuccessful except when the eggs were taken from spent or partially spent worms or from worms kept in the laboratory until they were about to spawn. It was concluded from this that maturation of the eggs precedes spawning but only by a matter of hours. That maturation begins in the body cavity was confirmed by histological examination of eggs from partially spent worms and criteria are given for the recognition of immature and mature eggs. Lack of success in previous attempts to fertilize coelomic eggs from non-spawning worms may be because females which are just about to spawn are not obtained by the normal methods of collection. It is suggested that this is due to a change in the behaviour of the worms associated with retention of eggs in the burrow after oviposition. With regard to the stimulation of spawning in female worms, it has been shown that maturation immediately precedes the onset of shedding. This, together with the fact that if eggs undergoing maturation are injected into a nonspawning worm they are shed automatically suggests that the primary stimulus for the onset of shedding is, simply, one which will induce maturation of the eggs.
Observations made during the above experiment together with the fact that worms can be induced to shed a few unripe eggs by injection of tissue extracts suggest, however, that spawning is not entirely passive and dependent on maturation. The lipid fraction of tissue extracts stimulates the active uptake of eggs from the coelom but it fails to induce maturation of the eggs and hence the free spawning produced in male worms. While the release of lipid into the body cavity may have some effect on the spawning of female worms (under natural conditions) similar to that previously suggested for males, it cannot provide the primary internal stimulus for spawning.