In 1928, Ernest Everett Just wrote a series of articles for the MBL’s summer circular the Collecting Net in which he detailed how to collect, care for, and manage the embryos of local marine fauna commonly used in embryological research. In this article, he noted the central importance of collecting work to the investigator:
The proper collecting and care of the animals after collecting are therefore essential for embryological work. The collector is as important as the investigator himself, and his importance increases with the number of investigators he supplies. The success of a marine laboratory in the greatest degree thus rests with the collecting staff.
Just followed up on his 1928 Collecting Net series with a book that shared similar methodological details (as he did in the 1928 series) titled Basic Methods for Experiments on Eggs of Marine Animals, published in 1939.
Methods for Obtaining and Handling Marine Eggs and Embryos, published in 1957, directly descended from Just’s sentiment about the importance of collecting work to the scientific investigator. The book started as a project in 1940 by Viktor Hamburger, who was noticing that much of the local knowledge base (older investigators like E.B. Wilson, E.G. Conklin, and C.M. Child) were beginning to dwindle in number. In 1930, the local Supply Department director and collector George Gray had retired. So, E.E. Just had started the conversation, but Hamburger continued it by garnering institutional support through the MBL Embryology course combined with the help of Supply Department workers like James McInnis, who had taken over as head of that department in 1933.
While Methods was a survey of the species available for research, it was also very commonly used as a reference guide by embryological researchers in the Woods Hole region. As a list or survey, it was similar to Verrill’s List and the 1913 survey published by Sumner, Osburn, and Cole. However, it differed dramatically from the first two by outlining methods of dealing with marine fauna in terms clearly relevant to MBL embryological investigators. While Sumner, Osburn, and Cole had systematized their survey to become useful for collectors, this volume combined information that was already in the species-specific index cards into short excerpts detailing where to find the animal, when it breeds, how to handle and care for it, and (probably most important for embryology) how its normal development proceeds.
Survey and Collecting
Report Upon the Invertebrate Animals on Vineyard Sound and Adjacent Waters
- Verrill, Addison Emery and Sidney Irving Smith. Report Upon the Invertebrate Animals on Vineyard Sound and Adjacent Waters. 1873.
- -- A biological survey of the waters of Woods Hole and vicinity
- Sumner, Francis B. "The Biological Laboratory of the Bureau of Fisheries at Woods Hole, Mass. Report of Work for the Summer of 1904." (1905): 566-572.
- Sumner, Francis Bertody, Raymond Carroll Osburn, Leon Jacob Cole, and Bradley Moore Davis. A biological survey of the waters of Woods Hole and vicinity. Vol. 31. Govt. Print. Off., 1913.
- -- Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos
- Costello, Donald P., and Catherine Henley. Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, 1957.
Experiment
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt. “Experimental studies on echinoderm eggs.” Anat. Anz. 9 (1893): 141–52.
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt. "A Study of Metamerism." Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science 37 (1895): 395.
On Regeneration
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt. "An Analysis of the Phenomena of Organic 'Polarity'." Science 20 (1904): 742–8.
- ———. "An Attempt to Analyze the Phenomena of Polarity in Tubularia." Jour. Exp. Zool. 1 (1904): 587–91.
- ———. "Experimental Studies of the Internal Factors of Regeneration in the Earthworm." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 14 (1902): 562–91.
- ———. "Experimental Studies of the Regeneration of Planaria Maculata." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 7 (1898): 364–97.
- ———. "The Factors That Determine Regeneration in Antennularia." Biol. Bull. 2 (1901): 301–5.
- ———. "Further Experiments on the Regeneration of the Appendages of the Hermit-Crab." Anat. Anz. 17 (1900): 1–9.
- ———. "Further Experiments on the Regeneration of the Tail of Fishes." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 14 (1902): 539–61.
- ———. "Further Experiments on the Regeneration of Tissue Composed of Parts of Two Species." Biol. Bull. 2 (1900): 111–9.
- ———. "Further Experiments on the Regeneration of Tubularia." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 13 (1902): 528–44.
- ———. "Growth and Regeneration in Planaria Lugubris." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 13 (1901): 179–212.
- ———. "The Internal Factors in the Regeneration of the Tail of the Tadpole. (with S. E. Davis)." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 15 (1902): 562–91.
- ———. "Notes on Regeneration." Biol. Bull. 6 (1904): 159–72.
- ———. Regeneration. Biology Series. New York: Columbia Univ., 1901.
- ———. "Regeneration and Liability to Injury." Zool. Bull. 1 (1898): 287–300.
- ———. "Regeneration and Liability to Injury." Science 14 (1901): 235–48.
- ———. "Regeneration in Allolobophora Foetida." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 5 (1897): 570–86.
- ———. "Regeneration in Bipalium." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 9 (1900): 563–86.
- ———. "Regeneration in Planarians." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 10 (1900): 58–119.
- ———. "Regeneration in Teleosts." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 10 (1900): 120–34.
- ———. "Regeneration in the Egg, Embryo, and Adult." Am. Nat. 35 (1901): 949–73.
- ———. "Regeneration in the Hydromedusa, Gonionemus Vertens.". Am. Nat. 33 (1899): 939–51.
- ———. "Regeneration in Tubularia." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 11 (1901): 346–81.
- ———. "Regeneration of Proportionate Structures in Stentor." Biol. Bull. 2 (1901): 311–28.
- ———. "Regeneration of the Appendages of the Hermit-Crab and Crayfish." Anat. Anz. 20 (1902): 598–605.
- ———. "Regeneration of the Heteromorphic Tails in Posterior Pieces of Planaria Simplicissima." Jour. Exp. Zool. 1, no. 385–91 (1904).
- ———. "Regeneration of the Leg of Amphiuma Means." Biol. Bull. 5 (1903): 293–6.
- ———. "Regeneration of Tissue Composed of Parts of Two Species." Biol. Bull. 1 (1899): 7–14.
- ———. "Regeneration: Old and New Interpretations." Biol. Lect., Woods Hole, 12th (1900): 185–208.
- ———. "Some Factors in the Regeneration of Tubularia." Arch. Entw.-Mech. 16 (1903): 125–54.
- ———. "Some Problems of Regeneration." Biological Lectures, Woods Hole (1898): 193–207.
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt. "Self-fertilization induced by artificial means." J Exp Zool 1 (1904): 135-178.
Supply and SaleSupply
- “The Marine Biological Laboratory, Ninth Report for the Years 1896–1899 and Statistics of the Years 1900–1902.” The Biological Bulletin (1902): 173.
- “The Marine Biological Laboratory, Thirty-Third Report for the Year 1930—Forty-Third Year.” The Biological Bulletin 61 (1931): 13.
Sale
- Pauly, Phil. Biologists and the Promise of American Life: From Meriwether Lewis to Alfred Kinsey. (Princeton U. Press, 2000): 187.
- Lipshitz, Howard. “From Fruit Flies to Fallout: Ed Lewis and His Science.” Developmental Dynamics 232 (2005): 529–46.
- “The Marine Biological Laboratory, Seventieth Report, For the Year 1967—Eightieth Year.” The Biological Bulletin 135 (1968): 72.