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1.
Due to its biological and systematic importance, the morphology and function of the male copulatory apparatus of Haminoea navicula, a Cephalaspidea gastropod mollusk, was investigated by light and electron microscopy. These systems are poorly understood in haminoids, but are often used in the taxonomy of the genus. In H. navicula, the male copulatory apparatus comprises the penis within a penial sheath, a seminal duct and the prostate with two lobes. The penis is a muscular structure with a tip covered by spikes formed by muscular cells. The penial sheath consists of muscular tissue folds lined by an epithelium. Below this epithelium, polysaccharide‐secreting cells and pigment cells were observed. A large number of vacuolar cells were found below the ciliated epithelium of the seminal duct. The proximal lobe of the prostate was formed by tubules that could be divided in basal, middle and apical zones, containing cells that secrete polysaccharides and proteins. The tubules of the prostate distal lobe contained a single type of secretory cells with vesicles that were stained by histochemical techniques for detection of polysaccharides and proteins. Ciliated cells were present along the tubules in both lobes of the prostate. This study revealed a complex prostate with five types of secretory cells, which secrete substances that should be involved in the maintenance and eventually also in the maturation of spermatozoa. A comparison with previous publications, shows that the male copulatory apparatus can differ substantially among cephalaspideans, even between H. navicula and non‐European species attributed to this genus.  相似文献   

2.
In this study, semi-thin sections stained with histochemical techniques and transmission electron microscopy were used to obtain new data about the morphology and function of the male copulatory apparatus of the cephalaspidean gastropod Bulla striata. The apparatus comprises a vestibule, a penial papilla and a prostate consisting of a coiled unbranched tube ending in a blind caecum. The penial papilla and the coiled tubular prostate are enclosed by a muscular sheath, which is continuous with the muscular tissue of the vestibule. The epithelium lining the lumen of the vestibule is formed by ciliated and mucus-secreting cells. Two new types of subepithelial secretory cells were discovered in this region. The penial papilla is a muscular structure without secretory cells in the epithelium lining the narrow lumen. The tubule that constitutes the prostate possesses a muscular wall and can be divided in three distinct regions: a non-secretory duct connected to the penial papilla, a glandular region rich in large secretory cells and the terminal caecum containing just a few small secretory cells. In the terminal blind caecum, the muscular sheath is fused with the muscular wall of the tubular prostate. Large numbers of spermatozoa were found in the glandular region and in the terminal caecum of the prostate. A new functional mechanism is proposed to explain penial eversion during copulation. This differs from a previous hypothesis in two main aspects: (1) existence of a permanent penial papilla in mature animals acting as a functional penis and (2) functional role of vestibule during copulation, which everts and surrounds the penial papilla, while the latter protrudes outwards.  相似文献   

3.
Seven specimens of Rhynchodemus sylvaticus (Leidy) collected from a variety of localities in the US and having variously developed copulatory organs are believed to represent stages in the development of the copulatory apparatus. Four specimens were juveniles with under-developed male components, one specimen had a well-developed female atrium and small male component, and two specimens were mature with a male organ twice the size of the female part. In early stages, the male component had sperm ducts, seminal vesicle, and narrow atrium; more mature stages had a considerable elongated atrium with thick folds in its muscularized wall, a massive muscular bulbus; and a sigmoid ejaculatory duct opening into the large bulbar cavity. Morphological features of mature male copulatory organs in all species of the genus Rhynchodemus are basically similar whereas external body features (color and number of dorsal stripes) of these same species differ.  相似文献   

4.
Five specimens, presumably representing different developmental stages of the land planarian Kontikia mexicana (Hyman, 1939), were used to reconstruct the development of the copulatory apparatus in this species. The results support the notion that Kontikia differs from the closely related Caenoplana in its possession of a penis papilla. In the earliest stage available, a penis papilla was absent and other components were not differentiated. In a late-juvenile condition, the gonopore, seminal vesicle, and ejaculatory duct were present. The short penis papilla appeared to arise in this stage by elongation of the terminal tissue around the ejaculatory duct and its separation from the antral wall. The female canal was guarded by an epithelial fold and the glandular duct was present. In the mature condition, the penis papilla was more elongate, and the secretory (prostatic) region of the ejaculatory duct was functional. The female canal, guarded by an epithelial fold, was well-developed with enlarged glandular duct but lacking the posterior diverticulum and the sperm storage system associated with the ovovitelline ducts known in Kontikia orana Froehlich, 1955.  相似文献   

5.
Macquaridriloides gen.n. is established for M. heronae from Heron Reef in Queensland, Australia. The species is characterized principally by its lack of spermathecae, and its elaborate male efferent ducts, each of which consists of (1) a ciliated vas deferens, (2) a ciliated and muscular atrium with diffuse prostates, and (3) a stout muscular, non-ciliar ejaculatory duct opening into a large copulatory sac surrounded by posterior prostates. The genus appears closely related to Macquaridrilus Jamieson, 1968, the habitat and zoogeography of which are briefly discussed. Heronidrilus gen.n. is established for H. fastigatus sp.n. and H. bihamis sp.n. both from Heron Reef. This genus is closely related to Macquaridriloides , but the two species differ from M. heronae in that they possess spermathecae and lack ejaculatory ducts.  相似文献   

6.
The copulatory organ in adult specimens of Archilopsis unipunctata has been studied by transmission electron microscopy.This copulatory organ is of the conjuncta-duplex type with eversible cirrus. The seminal vesicle, lined with a nucleate epithelium, is surrounded by spirally arranged muscles. The fibres are enclosed in a sheath that is continuous with the septum of the bulbus and the basement lamina of the male canal epithelium. Distally to the seminal vesicle the bulbus is filled with the secretory cell-necks of the prostate glands. The male canal shows three different parts: seminal duct, ejaculatory duct and eversible cirrus. At the transition of seminal duct and ejaculatory duct two prostate ducts open into the lumen. The structure of the epithelium lining the different parts of the canal is described. The transition into the cirrus may be recognized by an abrupt change in the thickness, the electron density and the stratification in the basement lamina and by the disappearance of the epithelium absent indeed in the cirrus. The material found inside the cirrus-lumen is different according to the zone considered. The origin of this material and of the cirrus teeth is discussed.Abbreviations ab- apoptotic body - ba- bacteria - bb- basal bodies of cilia - bl- basement lamina - bw- body wall - c- cilia - cb- cell body - cgp- common genital porus - ci- cirrus - cip- cirrus plug - cl- lumen of cirrus - cm- circular muscles - cr- cytoplasmatic remnants - cs- cytoplasmatic sheets - ejd- ejaculatory duct - epej- epithelium of ejaculatory duct - d- desmosomes - f- flagella of spermatozoa - fd- female duct - fp- female porus - gc- golgi complex - gl- glycogen particles - hd- hemidesmosomes - lm- longitudinal muscles - ly- lysosome-like body - m- muscles - mb- muscles of the bulbus - mc- muscles of the cirrus - mc- muscles of the seminal vesicle - mi- mitochondria - ml- microvilli - ms- mesenchyme - nsd- nuclei of the seminal duct - pd- prostate duct - pg- prostate glands - ri- ribosomes - s- septum - sb- secretory vesicle - sd- seminal duct - sp- spines - sv- seminal vesicle - v- vagina - vd- vas deferens  相似文献   

7.
Cystiplana rubra sp.n. and Crassicollum musculare gen. et sp.n. are described and their taxonomy discussed. C. rubra (family Cystiplanidae Karling, 1964) is distinguished by red pigmented stripes, two pairs of cuticular pieces within the copulatory bulb, a small male atrium posterior to the copulatory bulb, and a two part atrial bulb. C. musculare is characterized by a large, unpaired prostatic vesicle with two distinct regions of secretory products, a muscular penis papilla with a small apical stylet, large muscle bolsters bracketing a glandular evagination of the genital atrium, and a large sphincter encircling the genital canal. A new family of Eukalyptorhynchia, Crassicollidae, is erected. Notes on some biological aspects of these species are included.  相似文献   

8.
This study was aimed to investigate the functional morphology of copulation and sperm transfer in the invasive snail Pomacea canaliculata. Three-dimensional renderings of the male copulatory apparatus were made and showed elaborate systems for innervation and for hemolymph supply and drainage. A key component of the male copulatory apparatus is the penial sheath, which shows three specialized glands; the medial and distal glands may participate in adherence to the mantle cavity wall of the female during copulation. The outer gland has an epithelium composed of columnar cells with branched microvilli, mucous goblet cells and large granular secretory cells containing intragranular crystalloids, which produce an exocrine secretion during copulation. The interaction of male/female copulatory organs was studied in dissections of snap-frozen pairs. Sperm are left in the sperm pit, at the end of the pallial spermiduct. Afterwards, the muscular action of the penial bulb takes the sperm up to the vermiform penis, which slides from the penial pouch into the central groove of the penial sheath, and it later emerges through a T-shaped sulcus of this structure and enters the female vagina. Then, it climbs through the capsule duct, and its tip reaches the proximity of the seminal receptacle. A model of copulation and sperm transfer is presented on the basis of the new findings and on published literature.  相似文献   

9.
The light microscopic structure of the testis and genital duct system of the freshwater stingray Himantura signifer was observed. The testis is composed of lobes having numerous spermatocysts in a dorsoventral zonated arrangement. The germinal papilla at the middorsal surface of the testicular lobe is the origin site of spermatocyst development, where mesenchymal-like cells are predominantly found. The association of a Sertoli cell precursor with a spermatogonium marks the onset of spermatocyst formation and development. The newly formed spermatocysts at the dorsal end of the germinal zone replace the older ones, which are sequentially moved to the ventral side and are termed spermatogonial, spermatocyte, spermatid, spermatozoal, and degenerate zones. In the degenerate zone, the spermatocysts deteriorate after releasing the spermatozoa into the intratesticular duct, where they are further transported through the extratesticular duct system and finally stored at the seminal vesicle. The epithelial lining of the genital duct is a pseudostratified ciliated columnar with no muscular layer underneath; thus, sperm are conveyed through ciliary activity. The interesting features of the present study are the finding of mesenchymal-like cells in the germinal papilla and the nonaggregated formation of sperm in the seminal vesicle.  相似文献   

10.
The ultrastructure of the genital tracts in amphigonic females of Aphidoidea is described for the first time, using Euceraphis betulae Koch (Aphididae: Calaphidinae) as a representative. The female reproductive apparatus consists of two ovaries, each one with three/four meroistic telotrophic ovarioles; two sac‐like accessory glands lie laterally to a sac‐like seminal receptacle, opening into the dorso‐medial part of the common oviduct by means of a spermathecal duct. A marked secretory activity takes place in the epithelial cells of all the investigated tracts as shown by ultrastructural observation of many organelles involved in this process. No evident golgian area was observed in the cytoplasm of these cells. Extensive smooth endoplasmic reticulum, whose probable role is here discussed, was observed in epithelial cells of the wall of the accessory gland. Spermathecal duct and seminal receptacle had peculiar features that could be related to different secretory activities carried out by these two parts of the spermatheca.  相似文献   

11.
The male genital duct in Tubificidae consists of a funnel, a vas deferens, an atrium, and, frequently, a copulatory structure. There may also be a diffuse or compact prostate gland in association with the duct. The morphogenesis of this duct is described for Rhyacodrilus coccineus and Monopylephorus rubroniveus (Rhyacodrilinae). The funnel and vas deferens in both species originate from peritoneal (mesodermal) cells in the posterior septum in the testis segment. The atrium in R. coccineus develops from a primary epidermal (ectodermal) invagination. A typical atrium is not formed in M. rubroniveus; the entire duct is of mesodermal origin. In the latter species, a shallow epidermal invagination occurs, into which both male ducts open, but it bears resemblance to a copulatory structure, which usually forms from a secondary invagination, rather than to a proper atrium. We therefore conclude that M. rubroniveus lacks an atrium. The copulatory structure is termed the male bursa. Both species have diffuse prostate glands that differentiate from peritoneal (mesodermal) cells surrounding the male duct. In R. coccineus the cells cover the atrium, whereas in M. rubroniveus they cover only a part of the vas deferens. The development of the spermathecae and female ducts is also examined. The spermatheca is of ectodermal origin in both studied species, i.e., it forms as an invagination of the epidermis. The female duct develops from peritoneal (mesodermal) cells in the posterior septum of the ovary segment. However, in M. rubroniveus the first sign of the duct disappears and a proper duct never develops.  相似文献   

12.
马氏巴蜗牛的生殖系统由十二个器官组成。作者利用组织切片技术对各个器官的组织学特点进行了研究。作者发现,马氏巴蜗牛输精管与输卵管的初始段是愈合的。阴道管壁肌肉层发达,管道柔软。指状腺腺体数目为四个。处于非生殖时期的蜗牛个体,恋矢囊内无石灰质恋矢。  相似文献   

13.
The Childiidae sensu Dörjes 1968 comprises the acoel worms characterized by a cone‐shaped penis with muscular or sclerotized elements. Based on differences in body‐wall musculature arrangement, Hooge (2001) recently restricted the family to the genus Childia Graff, 1910 and placed the remaining genera to his new family Actinoposthiidae Hooge 2001 . This rearrangement has been questioned ( Raikova et al. 2004 ). We reconstructed the phylogeny of the Childiidae sensu Dörjes 1968 by means of a total evidence analysis including Histone H3, 28S rDNA and new 18S rDNA sequences, as well as 50 morphological characters. New characters of the muscular system and copulatory organs discovered through confocal laser scanning microscopy of phalloidin‐stained specimens are included in the phylogenetic analysis. A total of 12 taxa (nine ingroup and three outgroup) were used in the parsimony analysis of the 18S data set, which was aligned with different parameters for a sensitivity analysis, and the combined data set (18S + 28S + H3 + morphology). Incongruence in the node support of the groups among the four partitions was very low in the total evidence tree; except for the H3 partition. The conflict observed in the H3 partition is likely due to large homoplasy observed in the synonymous alternatives at both first and third codon positions. All data partitions demonstrated that Actinoposthia beklemischevi Mamkaev 1965 , and the newly defined taxon Childiidae (comprising Childia and Paraphanostoma Westblad 1942 ) are not close relatives. The monophyly of Childia and Paraphanostoma is strongly supported by both the 18S and 28S data partitions. Our study also reveals additional apomorphies uniting Childia with Paraphanostoma from body‐wall musculature, statocyst muscles and male copulatory organ. Muscular system, statocyst muscles, male copulatory organ and nervous system characters proved to be the best characters for taxonomic delimitations of subtaxa within the Childiidae, whereas the seminal bursa (a frequently used character in the taxonomy of Acoela) was highly homoplastic. We also described the body‐wall musculature of six Paraphanostoma species, which is characterized by the reversed arrangement of the longitudinal and circular muscle layers, and by the absence of diagonal muscles on the ventral side of the body and the presence of two types of diagonal muscles on the dorsal side. Childia groenlandica (Levinsen, 1879) is nested among the Paraphanostoma species in our total evidence tree, so we synonymize Paraphanostoma with Childia; all former members of Paraphanostoma are transferred to Childia.  相似文献   

14.
Four new species of the genus Perepsilonema are described. They are characterized by general habitus, cuticular ornamentation, shape and sexual dimorphism of the amphideal fovea, shape and number of ventral copulatory spines and the shape of the spicules. The female genital system comprises two reflexed ovaries, a left and a right spermatheca and a median uterine chamber filled with sperm cells. The distal part of the uteri have secretory wall cells which contain in some specimen spherical refractive bodies.  相似文献   

15.
The new genus Melogonimus is defined and adults of its type-species, M. rhodanometra n. sp., are described from Rhina ancylostoma from Moreton Bay, Queensland. This is the first record of a digenean from this host species. It is argued that metacercariae from the portunid crab Portunus pelagicus from Hervey Bay, off Queensland, belong to M. rhodanometra. The definition of the family Ptychogonimidae is amended, and a key to its two genera is given. Melogonimus is characterised by a smooth genital atrium wall, a large sinus-organ, a large muscular seminal vesicle, a weakly developed pars prostatica, a pre-testicular uterus and confluent post-testicular vitelline fields.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Seven species of cestodes and two of nematodes are reported from Phoeniconaias minor from Lake Nakuru, Kenya. Phoenicolepis nakurensis n.g., n.sp. (Hymenolepididae) is characterized by the size and shape of the hooks, scolex and strobila, structure of the terminal genital ducts, presence of an accessory sac, external seminal vesicle and stylet, and absence of an internal seminal vesicle. Gynandrotaenia stammeri. Cladogynia phoeniconaiadis, Flamingolepis tengizi, F. dolguschini and Striatofilaria phoenicopteri are redescribed; all except C. phoeniconaiadis are new for this host and for Kenya. ac]19800210Abbreviations as accessory sac - c cirrus - cs cirrus sac - esv external seminal vesicle - g gland cells - gs glandular sheath - isv internal seminal vesicle - md muscular duct - Mg Mehlis' gland - o ovary - pg prostate gland cells - s stylet - sr seminal receptacle - u uterus - v vagina - vd vas deferens - vg vitelline gland  相似文献   

17.
The attachment complex of brachiolaria larvae of the asteroid Asterias rubens comprises three brachiolar arms and an adhesive disc located on the preoral lobe. The former are used in temporary attachment and sensory testing of the substratum, whereas the latter is used for permanent fixation to the substratum at the onset of metamorphosis. Brachiolar arms are hollow structures consisting of an extensible stem tipped by a crown of dome-like ciliated papillae. The papilla epidermis is composed of secretory cells (type A, B and C cells), non-secretory ciliated cells, neurosecretory-like cells and support cells. Type A and B secretory cells fill a large part of the papilla epidermis and are always closely associated. They presumably form a duo-gland adhesive system in which type A and B cells are respectively adhesive and de-adhesive in function. The adhesive disc is an epidermal structure mainly composed of secretory cells and support cells. Secretory cells produce the cement, which anchor the metamorphic larva to the substratum until the podia are developed. The relatedness between the composition of the adhesive material in the brachiolaria attachment complex and in the podia of adults was investigated by immunocytochemistry using antibodies raised against podial adhesive secretions of A. rubens. Type A secretory cells were the only immunolabelled cells indicating that their temporary adhesive shares common epitopes with the one of podia. The attachment pattern displayed by the individuals of A. rubens during the perimetamorphic period—temporary, permanent, temporary—is unique among marine non-vertebrate Metazoa.  相似文献   

18.
Terminal portions of the male copulatory apparatus of Planorbis planorbis, Segmentina oelandica, and Anisus vortex were studied using whole-mount preparations, serial semi-thin sections, and transmission electron microscopy. In the latter species, stylet formation was investigated at several stages of postembryonic development. Organization of the penial distal portion in the species studied varies greatly. In P. planorbis, the distal end of the penis lacks developed papillae and is armed with a stylet built up of the covering epithelial cells of the penis proper. In A. vortex, the stylet is formed by the secretory activity of the middle cells of the distal portion of the penis. To the time of maturation, the cells encompassing the stylet are broken down exposing its solid chitinous structure and characteristic shape. In S. oelandica, the distal end of the penis bears the long probably flexible papilla with the characteristics of an internal ‘skeleton,’ organized as a line of connective tissue cells and a system of hydrocoelic cavities.  相似文献   

19.
 The reproductive organs of the simultaneous hermaphrodite Sphaerosyllis hermaphrodita (Syllidae, Exogoninae) were examined by TEM and reconstructed from ultrathin serial sections. Oocytes are produced in the 11–13th chaetigerous segments and then attached to the outer body surface. The male organs comprise a seminal vesicle, testes, sperm ducts and copulatory chaetae. The unpaired seminal vesicle is an uncompartmented cavity above the gut and within the chaetigerous segments 8–10. Its interior is lined with a layer of gland cells that degenerate as spermatogenesis in the vesicle proceeds. The testes are situated ventrolaterally, close to the seminal vesicle in the 9th chaetigerous segment. They contain cells at early stages of spermatogenesis, which are connected to one another by zonulae collares. The testes and seminal vesicle are enclosed in epithelia. Paired sperm ducts run ventrally from about the midline of the body under the seminal vesicle and into the parapodia of the 9th chaetigerous segment. There they open, together with the protonephridia of this segment, to the outside next to the stout copulatory chaeta. Each sperm duct consists of six cells, the luminal surface of which bears microvilli but no cilia. Only in animals with fully differentiated sperm does the small opening of the proximal duct cell in each duct give access to the seminal vesicle. The mode of sperm transfer is discussed. Accepted: 9 December 1996  相似文献   

20.
The spermatheca of Dipsocoridae is described and compared in the three known genera of the family (Cryptostemma, Harpago n. stat. and Pachycoleus); it consists of three distinct parts: a long coiled duct including a short apically differentiated segment (pars intermedialis) of unknown function, a spherical seminal capsule, and a small bulb-shaped apical gland with a muscular pump at its base. The structure of the spermatheca remains very uniform in the family, especially the apical gland that is anatomically distinct from the seminal capsule and which seems to be an apomorphy for the whole Dipsocoromorpha. A recently discovered structure, named here the loculus capsulae, appears to exist only in the two known species of the genus Harpago. This internal cuticular structure is situated on the left side of the seventh tergite. It consists of two broad expansions, extending from the tergite and laterotergite respectively, which maintain the seminal capsule near the abdominal wall. This structure appears as a kind of supporting armature impeding the spherical seminal capsule from free movement in the abdominal cavity. The form and function of this strange structure are discussed in this paper.  相似文献   

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