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1.
The labrum of decapod crustaceans is a soft lobe overhanging the mouth. The labral skeleton, musculature and innervation of Homarus gammarus are described. There are three bilateral groups of sensory neurons innervating the floor, lobe and lateral walls of the labrum. These are probably responsible for the phasic afferent activity that can be recorded from the inner labral nerve on mechanical deformation of the labrum. The labrum undergoes rhythmical retraction-protraction movements during ingestion and is shown to be active during both mandibular activity and oesophageal peristalsis. Studies were made on the duration and frequency of labral "swallowing" activity. The role of the labrum in feeding is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

Larvae of the New Zealand culicid species Opifex fuscus and Aedes australis have previously been reported to show dimorphism in the structure of their labral brushes, some larvae having pectinate bristles and others only simple hairs. In the scanning electron microscope all larvae showed some degree of pectination of hairs in these brushes. There is also a gradation in the pectination. Some bristles are only sparsely pectinate; because the dimensions of their teeth are close to the limit of resolution by the compound microscope, the pectination had previously gone undetected. The mouthparts of both species are intermediate in character between those typical of filter-feeding larvae and those typical of browsing larvae. The SEM appearance of maxillary sensoria and bristles on the ventral surfaces of the mandibular brushes is described; the latter bristles comb food particles out of the labral brushes and towards the mouth. Features of the mouthparts are illustrated with scanning electron micrographs.  相似文献   

3.
Phlebotomine sandflies (Diptera: Psychodidae) from the Oriental Region   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
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4.
SUMMARY The insect upper lip—the labrum—is a lobe-like structure anterior to the mouth opening. Whether the labrum represents a fused pair of segmental appendages or evolved independently is heavily debated. Here, we identify additional similarities of the regulatory gene network active in labrum and trunk appendages. However, we do not find a labral parasegment boundary and we show that labral Tc-Dll expression is independent of Tc-wg and Tc-hh signals. In contrast, Tc-Dll expression in all trunk appendages does require these signals. Finally, we identify crucial differences between the location of the labrum and trunk appendages: the labrum develops in median rather than lateral tissues and is part of an anterior nonsegmental tissue marked by and dependent on Tc-six3 activity. To reconcile these seeming contradictory results, we propose that the genetic network evolved in either labrum or trunk appendages and became redeployed at a novel location to form the other structure.  相似文献   

5.
The nature and extent of the cuticular membranes of the mouthparts of females of Simuiium venustum are described. These membranes are arranged into four groups: (1) cuticular membranes of the labium/hypopharynx; (2) membranes of the apical labrum; (3) those of basal portions of the mandibles and laciniae; and (4) the labral flaps within the syntrophial food canal. From their external and internal structure it is concluded that membranes of the first three groups go through inflation/deflation cycles directly related to the food-pumping rhythm. It is further concluded that these membranes line the inner and outer syntrophial and proboscis surfaces, acting as pressure seals both to prevent blood loss from the wound and air entry into the food canal during feeding. The labral flaps within the food canal appear to act as one-way valves, keeping blood from leaking out between the mouthparts during the pumping downstroke but allowing pooled blood to enter during the upstroke.  相似文献   

6.
16 taxa of gastropods are described from the Lower and Middle Jurassic of Germany and northwestern Poland. They belong to seven genera. Two species (Pommerozygia aspera, Costazygia bilzi) and two genera (Brevizygia, Costazygia) are new. The family Pommerozygiidae is new as well. Compared to the Zygopleuridae, the Pommerozygiidae have a rather short and broad shell with only few teleoconch whorls. The protoconch is broad conical with a rounded apex (because the first whorls are nearly planispiral). From the Zygopleuridae only members of the Zygopleurinae have been found. Most Jurassic species have a smooth protoconch. Within the Zygopleuridae, the development possibly began with protoconchs carrying collabral axial ribs (and spirals) and led to smooth protoconchs. The genera of the Pommerozygiidae are rather similar to each other. The planktotrophic larval shell has a subsutural row of nodes like many species of Triassic Zygopleuridae. Therefore, both families are closely related. The Pommerozygiidae are possibly a separate branch of the Zygopleuroidea without descendants. The main branch is probably the evolutionary line Zygopleuriidae — Janthinoidea.  相似文献   

7.
Chandran  A.  Nair  N. B. 《Hydrobiologia》1988,167(1):629-634
A detailed account of the structure and musculature of the mouth tube and mode of feeding in P. narcinae is presented. The double-walled mouth tube is formed by a close fitting of the lateral, longitudinal ridges of the labium into the longitudinal groove of the inner, lateral edges of the labrum. The musculature of the mouth tube consists of two pairs of retractores oris, four pairs of compressores labri and two pairs of levatores labii. The host tissues are scraped off by the mandibles repeating a very characteristic movement brought about by roto adductor mandibulae and roto abductor mandibulae pair of muscles. The tissue particles are forced into the buccal cavity with the help of labral muscles. The suction is broken by the contraction of levatores labii group of muscles.  相似文献   

8.
The phagostimulants from the cellular fraction of blood induce gorging of Aedes aegypti (L.), and this process is enhanced by some plasma components. This project examines the responses of the labral apical chemoreceptors to plasma components enhancing phagostimulation. From the electrophysiological responses of the labral apical chemoreceptors four cells were identified by the waveform of their action potentials. Three of the cells (Cell 2, Cell 3 and Cell 4) responded in a dose dependent manner to NaCl. The responses of Cell 2 and Cell 3 to NaCl concentrations from 1 to 500 mmol/l can be described by a logarithmic equation. The response of Cell 2 to 150 mmol/l NaCl is modulated when a buffer is added. The magnitude of the modulation of the response is determined by the nature of the buffer: NaHCO(3) inhibits while Na(2)HPO(4) enhances the response. High osmotic pressure inhibits the response of Cell 4, regardless of how it is achieved. Cell 4 responds with a high frequency to the presence of L-alanine, the C-terminal amino acid of albumin, but shows a reduced response to the same concentration of albumin. From these results it can be concluded that labral apical chemoreceptors of A. aegypti are capable of detecting the plasma components involved in blood recognition.  相似文献   

9.
Labral spines are sharp projections of the apertural lip found in some marine gastropods that are used to penetrate hard-shelled prey. The majority of gastropod genera that contain labral spine-bearing species are found in the subfamily Ocenebrinae (Gastropoda: Muricidae). To reconstruct the evolutionary history of labral spine-bearing and labral spine-lacking gastropods in the eastern Pacific (EP) Ocean, partial sequences of two mitochondrial genes (cytochrome oxidase I and 12S rRNA) were obtained from representative taxa. Despite high nucleotide bias, a variety of phylogenetic reconstruction methods produced the same tree topology. The traditional taxonomic view that all "Nucella-like" spine-bearing taxa in the EP belong to a monophyletic "Acanthina" is rejected due to nonmonophyly of this group. The more recently recognized "Acanthinucella" is also not monophyletic, and we therefore propose the new genus Mexacanthina for two Mexican species formerly assigned to Acanthinucella. The genus Ocinebrina, which first appears in the middle Eocene, is not a stem EP ocenebrine lineage and may also not be a monophyletic clade. Tracing the evolutionary history of labral spines among extant lineages indicates that the absence of a labral spine is ancestral for all EP ocenebrines. Ancestral conditions could not be resolved unambiguously for all nodes of the phylogeny based on extant taxa. However, by jointly considering both molecular phylogenetic relationships and the phylogenetic affinities of several extinct taxa, all remaining character state transformation can be inferred unambiguously. Based on this analysis, a labral spine likely evolved independently in at least four lineages of EP ocenebrines. Although homoplasy appears to characterize labral spine evolution among ocenebrine gastropods, the structural position of a labral spine was evolutionarily altered in one lineage, indicating that different types of labral spines do not necessarily reflect convergent evolution.  相似文献   

10.
11.
BackgroundTears of the acetabular labrum are frequently present in patients with groin pain. While it is clear that the labrum contributes to the surface area articulating with the femoral head, it is not clear whether labral repair yields different load distribution in the hip compared to labral resection.PurposeDetermine whether labral repair reduces cartilage strain more effectively than labral resection.MethodsSix human cadaveric hips (mean age 37 years) were loaded in a simulated single-leg stance within the bore of a 7 T MR scanner. After cartilage had reached a steady-state thickness distribution, a scan of the cartilage was acquired with a voxel size of 0.1×0.1×0.3 mm. This method was repeated for each of six specimens when the labrum was intact, after a surgically simulated labral tear, after an arthroscopic labral repair and after labral resection. Cartilage thickness and strain in an anterosuperior region of interest were measured from the MR scans. A paired t-test was used to compare mean and maximum cartilage strain when the labrum was intact vs. torn, torn vs. repaired and repaired vs. resected. Three-dimensional patterns of cartilage strain distribution were qualitatively compared for the different labral conditions.ResultsFor the number of specimens tested we found no change in mean and maximum cartilage strain, and little obvious change in the pattern of cartilage strain distribution after a simulated labral tear. Labral repair caused a 2% decrease in mean cartilage strain compared to a torn labrum (p=0.014). Labral resection caused a 4% and 6% increase in mean and maximum cartilage strain, respectively, compared to labral repair (p=0.02), and the cartilage strain distribution was elevated throughout the region of interest.ConclusionBased on our ex vivo findings of increased cartilage strain after labral resection when compared to labral repair, we have demonstrated the associated consequences to the mechanical environment of the cartilage following surgical treatment of the labrum.  相似文献   

12.
Nuku-Hiva and Eiao are the only islands of the Marquesas archipelago where blackflies bite humans. Knowledge of the geographic distribution of species is necessary to optimize control operations. Looking at frequency distributions of labral fan rays numbers from a large sample of larvae allowed redefinition of species. Simulium sechani Craig & Fossati, 1995, become the only species represented in Eiao. This species live in Nuku-Hiva too, but is limited to the external part of the main caldera. Presence of S. buissoni Roubaud, 1906, in all part of the island is confirmed, as is presence of S. hukaense Séchan, 1983 but in reduced number. Large samples of S. sechani extends its labral fan rays numbers. Stability of the described repartition over several decades is shown.  相似文献   

13.
I combined data from the taxonomy, phytogeny, functional morphology, biogeography, and fossil record of gastropods to probe the origins, distribution, and fates of predatory gastropod clades characterized by the presence of a labral tooth, a downwardly projecting tooth or spine formed at the edge of the outer lip of the shell. A labral tooth occurs in at least 608 species, of which 251 are Recent. Studies of the type and position of the labral tooth, along with other characters, indicate that the labral tooth has evolved independently at least 58 times, beginning in the Campanian epoch of the late Cretaceous. The labral tooth plays a more or less active part in predation on relatively large prey animals that are protected by a hard skeleton. In the Recent fauna, tooth‐bearing species are overwhelmingly warm‐temperate to tropical in distribution (240 of 251 species; 96%). Within Muricidae (excluding Coralliophilinae), however, there is no discernible latitudinal gradient in the number of tooth‐bearing species relative to total regional diversity. First appearances of clades with a labral tooth are overwhelmingly concentrated in the late Oligocene to Pleistocene interval, with the largest number appearing during the early Miocene (12 clades). The temporal pattern differs significantly from that expected on the basis of the number of faunas available per time interval, and is therefore not an artifact of sampling or fossil preservation. The most consistent factor associated with, and permitting the repeated evolution of, the labral tooth is high planktonic primary productivity. Two factors may account for the link between primary productivity and the evolution of labral téeth: (1) the general economic opportunity afforded by ready availability of an access to nutrients, and (2) the greater abundance and sizes range of available suspension‐féeding prey animals. Incumbency–the presence of already well‐adapted species–often controls evolutionary opportunity. The complementary distributions of major tooth‐bearing clades in many parts of the world point to the role of well‐adapted incumbents in limiting the adaptive exploration by other clades that could in principle evolve a labral tooth. The elimination of incumbents by extinction, however, does not provide opportunities for other clades to fill the adaptive void.  相似文献   

14.
A comparative survey of the epipharynx and hypopharynx of lithobiomorph centipedes by light and scanning electron microscopy examines 18 species that sample the major groups of both families, the Lithobiidae and Henicopidae. Cladistic analysis of 11 characters of the peristomatic structures together with 29 additional morphological characters serves as a basis for interpreting the evolution of the lithobiomorph peristomatic structures. Scutigeromorpha is used for outgroup comparison in the framework of a homology scheme for the basic components of the epi- and hypopharynx. Compared to other chilopods, the monophyly of Lithobiomorpha is supported by a row of distinctive bottle-shaped gland openings at the border between the labral and clypeal parts of the epipharynx, as well as by a distinctive shape of the hypopharynx. Paired rows of elongate spines on the clypeal part of the epipharynx are an apomorphic character of Lithobiidae. The transformation of these spine rows into a few groups of branching spines is characteristic for the Monotarsobius group sensu Verhoeff. Similar groups of branching clypeal spines characterize the Anopsobiinae within Henicopidae, whereas Henicopinae possess a dense cluster of short, simple spines instead. The recently described genus Dzhungaria is resolved closer to Henicopinae than to Anopsobiinae, a hypothesis supported by a field of grooves on the medial labral part of the epipharynx. Monophyly of Henicopidae does not receive unique support from the peristomatic structures although two homoplastic characters contribute to this node; among these, the reduction of a median spine field between clypeal and labral parts of the epipharynx to a narrow transverse band also supports a close relationship between the Ezembius group and Hessebius within Lithobiidae. An Ezembius+Hessebius clade is additionally supported by the absence of a transverse bulge between the clypeal and labral parts of the epipharynx, a character otherwise present in all lithobiomorph species studied so far. Lithobius is resolved as polyphyletic, with different species being most closely related to such genera as Australobius, Hessebius and Pleurolithobius.  相似文献   

15.
中国长属一新种(弹尾目:长科)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
本文记述了长虫兆属西藏1新种:黄氏长虫兆Entomobryahuangi,sp.nov.(图1~17)。本种与E.marginataTulberg,1871和E.lanuginosaNicolet,1842在体色上很相似,但它们可从第4腹节与第3腹节的长度比、上唇乳突、生殖板等特征相区别。正模♀,西藏错美,海拔4200米,1974-VI-26,采集号8100;副模:2♀♀,同正模;5♀♀,2♂♂,西藏错美哲古湖附近,海拔4600米,1974-IV-28,采集号8117。除部分副模保存于南京大学生物系外,模式标本均保存于中国科学院动物研究所。  相似文献   

16.
Abstract. The larval head of Agathiphaga vitiensis is described. There is a complete hypostomal bridge but no hypostomal ridges. Adfrontal ridges and distinct ecdysial lines are absent. There are two vestigial stemmata (without lenses) on each side. The antenna is one-segmented. All ‘typical lepidopteran’ head setae have been identified. The corporotentorium is very slender; dorsal tentorial arms are present. Intrinsic labral muscles are lacking. The mandible has retained a tentorial muscle. The maxilla is without a discrete cardo and has but a single endite lobe; ‘intrinsic maxillary muscles’ and the ‘cranial flexor of the dististipes’ are lacking. The postlabium is undivided and without setae, the labial palp is one-segmented and the lateral prelabio-hypopharyngeal sclerotization is continued into an oral arm. Some of the ventral pharyngeal dilators arise on the tentorium; mouth-angle retractors and dorsal post-cerebral pharynx dilators are absent. The two brain lobes have almost parallel long axes and are united by a narrow (almost pure neuropile) bridge. The corpora cardiaca and callata are contiguous. The aorta is an open gutter in front of the retrocerebral complex. Available evidence on the ground plan structure of the lepidopteran larval head is reviewed. The ancestral head supposedly was prognathous and was autapomorphic in having the cranio-cardinal articulation far behind the mandible; it had a complete hypostomal bridge but neither hypostomal nor adfrontal ridges, its tentorium was probably stout and with dorsal arms. Paulus & Schmid (1978, Z. zool. Syst. EvolForsch. 16) described a lepidopteran/trichopteran synapomorphy in stemma structure. A tentative table of homologies between cranial setae in Lepidoptera and Trichoptera is presented; it differs considerably from the scheme of Williams & Wiggins (1981, Proc. 3rd Symp. Trichopt.). The mouth parts and their musculature must have been overall very primitive for a panorpid larva, but the number of maxillary palp segments was reduced (three). The ‘dististipes’sensu Hinton is considered to consist of complexly fused parts of the stipes and basal palp segments. The cephalic stomodaeum must have possessed all primitive groups of extrinsic muscles. The incomplete available information on Micropterigidae impedes reconstruction of some details of the lepidopteran ground plan. Larval head structures support the monophyly of an entity comprising the Agathiphagidae + Heterobathmiidae + Glossata. There is one suite of derived characters shared by Heterobathmiidae and Agathiphagidae only and another shared by Heterobathmiidae and the Glossata only; one of these must represent parallelisms.  相似文献   

17.
Synopsis The diets of 13 species of ariid catfishes from the tropical waters of the Gulf of Carpentaria are described and compared. Fishes were collected from two estuaries and inshore and offshore marine areas. Up to 10 species have been recorded from a single estuary. Although all are carnivorous and consume a variety of prey, diet analyses and statistical ordination reveal three feeding guilds - piscivores, polychaete-eaters and molluscivores. The diets of most species are similar between sites. There are strong relationships between dietary guild and the size and arrangement of the palatine teeth. The piscivorous group of catfish (guild 1) have large mouths with relatively large multiple palatine tooth plates, either in a band or in a triangular pattern and armed with sharp recurved teeth. The primarily polychaete-feeding group (guild 2) have a variable mouth size but it is usually smaller than that of guild 1 fish; their palatine teeth plates are fewer and smaller, and they have small, sharp recurved teeth. Guild 3 eat mainly molluscs, and have a small mouth and large posteriorly situated palatine plates with globular, truncated teeth. Overlaps in diet between species are probably reduced by differential distribution patterns within estuaries and different habitat preferences. The mouth-width and tooth-plate arrangements of ariids in tropical Australia are suitable for dealing with broad classes of prey rather than specific items, conferring dietary flexibility. This probably optimizes the trade-off for most species between occupation of broad feeding niches and the ability to shift diet easily.  相似文献   

18.
Alexey A. Kotov 《Hydrobiologia》2003,490(1-3):147-168
The aim of the present article was to contribute to the systematics of the leydigi-like species of Leydigia consisting of a few (probably 3) formal species with: (1) a large basal spine on the postabdominal claw (as long as claw thickness at the base); (2) a short setulation at anterior margin of labral keel; (3) no longitudinal striation on the female valves; (4) at least three lateral setae in each fascicle on the postabdomen; (5) three large lateral setae on exopodite III. The morphology of L. leydigi (Schoedler, 1863) and L. louisi Jenkin, 1934 are redescribed, and type material of L. macrodonta Sars, 1916 is studied. In contrast to previous suggestions (Jenkin, 1934; Smirnov, 1971), I found that: (1) L. louisi is a valid species, not a subspecies of L. macrodonta; (2) L. macrodonta is not a member of the L. leydigi-group. The third member of leydigi-group, Leydigia macrodonta longiseta Chen Shou-zhong, 1992, was described from China. It is not a subspecies of L. macrodonta, but a relative of L. leydigi; most probably, it is a valid species, but this opinion must to be confirmed by examination of original Asian material. In this article, the presence of L. leydigi in Palearctic only, and that of L. louisi in only Africa was confirmed. A new subspecies of L. louisi, found in Mexico, will be reported separately.  相似文献   

19.
There is a mean incidence of osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip in 8% of the overall population. In the presence of focal chondral defects, defined as localized damage to the articular cartilage, there is an increased risk of symptomatic progression toward OA. This relationship between chondral defects and subsequent development of OA has led to substantial efforts to develop effective procedures for surgical cartilage repair. This study examined the effects of chondral defects and labral delamination on cartilage mechanics in the dysplastic hip during the gait cycle using subject-specific finite element analysis. Models were generated from volumetric CT data and analyzed with simulated chondral defects at the chondrolabral junction on the posterior acetabulum during five distinct points in the gait cycle. Focal chondral defects increased maximum shear stress on the osteochondral surface of the acetabular cartilage, when compared to the intact case. This effect was amplified with labral delamination. Additionally, chondral defects increased the first principal Lagrange strain on the articular surface of the acetabular cartilage and labrum. Labral delamination relieved some of this tensile strain. As defect size was increased, contact stress increased in the medial zone of the acetabulum, while it decreased anteriorly. The results suggest that in the presence of chondral defects and labral delamination the cartilage experiences elevated tensile strains and shear and contact stress, which could lead to further damage of the cartilage, and subsequent arthritic progression. The framework presented here will serve as the procedure for future finite element studies on cartilage mechanics in hips with varying disease states with simulated chondral defects and labral tears.  相似文献   

20.
A new species, Homidia pseudoformosana from Korea is described in the present paper. The new species is characterized by labral papillae, ciliated labial seta L1 and dorsal chaetotaxy of abdominal segment IV. The detailed differences between similar Homidia species are provided.  相似文献   

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