Relationship of Homolidae and Dromiidae: Evidence from Spermatozoal Ultrastructure (Crustacea,Decapoda) |
| |
Authors: | D. Guinot B. G. M. Jamieson B. Richer de Forges |
| |
Abstract: | Abstract The homolid spermatozoon, as exemplified by Homolasp., Paromolasp. and Paromola petterdi, differs markedly from spermatozoa of crabs of the Heterotremata–Thoracotremata assemblage but agrees with the sperm of dromiids, in the strongly anteroposteriorly depressed acrosome (apomorphy?) and the capitate form of the perforatorium (a major synapomorphy seen nowhere else in the Crustacea). These similarities support inclusion of the Dromiidae and Homolidae in a single grouping, the Podotremata. The homolid perforatorium differs from that of dromiids in the autapomorphic spiked–wheel form of the anterior expansion. Homolid spermatozoa show nuclear arms symplesiomorphic of all investigated crabs (small or questionably sometimes absent in Dromiidae), and corresponding loss of purely microtubular arms seen in other reptants. Homolid sperm agree with those of dromiids (synapomorphy?), raninids, higher heterotremes and thoracotremes (homoplasies?) but differ from lower heterotremes, in lacking microtubules in the nuclear arms. A posterior median process of the nucleus in homolids, not seen in dromiids, is shared with anomurans and lower heterotremes. No features in the ultrastructure of homolid or dromiid sperm have been detected which associate them exclusively with either the Raninidae or the heterotreme and thoracotreme Brachyura. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|