Abstract
Post‐fertilization events leading to the cleavage of the zygote of the sea‐urchin, Arbacia punctulata were examined with the light and electron microscopes. Prior to prophase of the first cleavage division, endoplasmic reticulum and annulate lamellae become organized around the zygotic nucleus to produce a crescent‐shaped structure which is defined as the streak (Harvey, '56). With the advent of prophase the streak undergoes morphogenic events which lead to the formation of the mitotic asters. During this transition there is a loss of annulate lamellae and a concomitant increase in endoplasmic reticulum. Annulate lamellae are not found as a part of the mitotic apparatus and are not again observed within the embryo until the two cell stage. During telophase, karyomeres are formed which consist of chromosomes delimited by a porous bilaminar envelope. Blastomere nuclei are produced following the fusion of the outer laminae, and subsequently by the fusion of the inner laminae of the envelopes encompassing the karyomeres.