Abstract: | Unfertilized sea urchin eggs were exposed to sea water solutions of local anesthetics, such as caffeine, tetracaine and ethyl urethane, and the herbicide, isopropyl N-phenyl carbamate (IPC) for 10min and returned to normal sea water. Then they were inseminated 5min later. When eggs were pre-treated with 1–2 mM caffeine, 0.02–0.05 mM tetracaine, 50–100 mM ethyl urethane and 2% saturated sea water of IPC, respectively, they could cleave and hatch earlier than the control eggs. However, when fertilized eggs were continuously post-treated with solutions of the agents except IPC at the same concentrations as those in the case of the pre-treatments, the fertilized eggs could not cleave or were retarded in development. The possible mechanisms of the cleavage acceleration by pre-treatments with local anesthetics were discussed. |