首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The ovarian structure, sexual maturation, annual reproductive cycle, and spawning periodicity of the shore scorpionfish, Scorpaenodes littoralis, in Uchiura Bay, central Japan, were examined using specimens collected between May 1995 and March 1998 and fishes reared in laboratory. The ovarian stroma and blood vessels run longitudinally through the center of each ovarian lobe. The ovarian peduncles radiate from the central stroma. During the spawning season, gelatinous material is secreted from the epithelia of both the ovarian peduncle and ovarian wall, and the epithelia show morphological changes accompanying the ovarian maturation cycle. The minimum standard length at maturity was 55.2mm for males and 40.2mm for females. Males with mature testes were collected from March to November. Females in the mature or post spawning stages were collected between May and October, when the mean gonadosomatic indices were also high. This indicates that the spawning season of this species occurs between May and October. Four successive types of oocytes were grouped in the mature ovary, comprised of mature, late and early vitellogenic and previtellogenic oocytes respectively, suggesting that this species is a multiple spawner. Four captive females spawned repeatedly at intervals of 2–8 days over a prolonged period (4–8 months); a 2-day spawning interval was the most common for all females. This suggests that female S. littoralis have a 48-h spawning cycle in captivity.  相似文献   

2.
The reproductive modes of the Scorpaenidae are extremely varied: oviparity, viviparity, and even spawning of internally fertilized eggs or embryos (zygoparity or embryoparity), as in Helicolenus, are known. The ovarian structure of this family is divided into two types by the arrangement of the stroma and the ovarian cavity. One type is the ovary in which the lamella-like stroma develops from the ovarian hilus located on the dorsal side and where the ovarian cavity is located on the ventral side of ovary, classified as “cystovarian type II-1” by Takano (1989). In the other type, the stroma in the ovary develops radially around the blood circulatory system that traverses the center of the ovary, and then the ovarian cavity surrounds all the ovary, classified as “cystovarian type II-3” by Takano (1989). In the present analysis, previous reports about ovarian structure and the relationship to the reproductive mode of scorpaenids were described, and the ovarian structure of eight genera of Scorpaenidae was examined. The ovary of cystovarian type II-1 is seen only in viviparous genera and is not seen in oviparous genera. However, the cystovarian type II-1 is a general structure in other families of Scorpaeniformes, and this structure could be considered a primitive type of ovary rather than that acquired by the process of evolution from oviparity to viviparity. The ovary of cystovarian type II-3 is seen in all six oviparous genera and the one zygoparous genus examined. The ovary of this type is not found in any other family of teleosts, so it could be a structure originally divided in Scorpaenidae. In the genera having the cystovarian type II-3 ovary, there is a common feature of spawning: a floating egg mass encompassed by the gelatinous material. We postulate that the evolution of reproductive mode in the scorpaenid fishes is as follows: Sebastes and Sebastiscus have a primitive ovary in which viviparity has developed, whereas the genera that spawn a floating egg mass evolved the ovarian structure from primitive type to cystovarian type II-3, and further zygoparity, such as in Helicolenus, evolved from them.  相似文献   

3.
Scorpaena notata is an oviparous species with external fertilization that deposits its eggs in a gelatinous matrix. The internal epithelium of the ovarian wall is chiefly responsible for the production of this matrix, which is particularly abundant and viscous during the spawning period. The oocytes lack lipid droplets, so flotation and transport of the eggs is probably accomplished by means of the matrix that surrounds them. The ovarian stroma is situated along the centre of the gonad and the developing oocytes are connected to it by peduncles. The paucity and small size of the cortical alveoli of the oocytes are notable, as is the thinness of the zona radiata. These are characteristics that would be typical of viviparous species. The histological and ultrastructural observations lead to the conclusion that this species presents a type of oviparity more highly specialized than that of the majority of teleosts.  相似文献   

4.
Some histological details of the adult ovary of Hyleoglomeris japonica are described for the first time in the glomerid diplopods. The ovary is a single, long sac-like organ extending from the 4th to the 12th body segment along the median body axis, lying between the alimentary canal and the ventral nerve cord. The ovarian wall consists of a layer of thin ovarian epithelium which surrounds a wide ovarian lumen. A pair of longitudinal “germ zones,” including female germ cells, runs in the lateral ovarian wall. Each germ zone consists of two types of oogenetic areas: 1) 8–12 narrow patch-shaped areas for oogonial proliferation, arranged metamerically in a row along each of the dorsal and ventral peripheries, and 2) the remaining wide area for oocyte growth. Oogonial proliferation areas include oogonia, very early previtellogenic oocytes, and young somatic interstitial cells, among the ovarian epithelial cells. The larger early previtellogenic oocytes in the oogonial proliferation areas are located nearer to the oocyte growth area, and migrate to the oocyte growth area. They are surrounded by a layer of follicle cells and are connected with the ovarian epithelium of the oocyte growth area by a portion of their follicles. They grow into the ovarian lumen, but their follicles are still connected with the oocyte growth area. Various sizes of the previtellogenic and vitellogenic oocytes in the ovarian lumen are connected with the oocyte growth area; the smaller oocytes are connected nearer to the dorsal and ventral oogonial proliferation areas, while the larger ones are connected nearer to the longitudinal middle line of the oocyte growth area. Following the completion of vitellogenesis and egg membrane formation in the largest primary oocytes, the germinal vesicles break down. Ripe oocytes are released from their follicles directly into the ovarian lumen to be transported into the oviducts. Ovarian structure and oogenesis of H. japonica are very similar to those of other chilognathan diplopods. At the same time, however, some characteristic features of the ovary of H. japonica are helpful for understanding the structure and evolution of the diplopod ovaries. Some aspects of the phylogenetic significance in the paired germ zones of H. japonica are discussed. J. Morphol 231:277–285, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Histological and ultrastructural investigations of diplopod ovary structure have revealed that oogonia and early meiotic oocytes develop only in the laterodorsal parts of the ovarian wall, where they form groups called germ nests. Euplasmic growth forces diplotene oocytes out of the ovarian wall and into the lumen of the ovary, which leads to the formation of ovarian sacs. Ovarian sacs constitute separate structural-functional units built of a centrally situated oocyte and the epithelial cover. Being turned with their basal parts to the surface of the oocyte and showing no signs of any synthetic nor secretory activity, the epithelial cells of the ovarian sac wall cannot be referred to as typical follicular cells. That is why oogenesis of diplopods must be regarded as solitary.  相似文献   

6.
The adult ovary of the branchiuran Argulus japonicus is a single, median, long sac-like organ located in the thorax above the alimentary canal. A long germarium, including oogonia, very early previtellogenic oocytes, and young somatic cells (interstitial cells), is embedded in the dorsal ovarian wall along the median longitudinal line of the ovary. The ovarian wall, consisting of a layer of the ovarian epithelial cells, is folded repeatedly and distinctively in the lateral and ventral portions of the ovary. Growing oocytes, previtellogenic and vitellogenic, occur on the outer surface of the ovarian wall, not in the ovarian lumen. The smaller oocytes are located nearer to the germarium and the larger ones on the more ventral surface of the ovary. These structural features of the branchiuran ovary are compared with those of other crustaceans and the pentastomids to consider their phylogenetic implications. J. Morphol. 231:29–39, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
《Journal of morphology》2017,278(12):1667-1681
The structure of the ovary and oogenesis of Poecilia mexicana from an active sulfur spring cave is documented. Poecilia mexicana is the only poeciliid adapted to a subterranean environment with high hydrogen sulfide levels and extreme hypoxic conditions. Twenty females were captured throughout one year at Cueva del Azufre, located in the State of Tabasco in Southern Mexico. Ovaries were processed with histological techniques. P. mexicana has a single, ovoid ovary with ovigerous lamella that project to the ovarian lumen. The ovarian wall presents abundant loose connective tissue, numerous melanomacrophage centers and large blood vessels, possibly associated with hypoxic conditions. The germinal epithelium bordering the ovarian lumen contains somatic and germ cells forming cell nests projecting into the stroma. P. mexicana stores sperm in ovarian folds associated with follicles at different developmental phases. Oogenesis in P. mexicana consisted of the following stages: (i) oogonial proliferation, (ii) chromatin nucleolus, (iii) primary growth, subdivided into: (a) one nucleolus, (b) multiple nucleoli, (c) droplet oils‐cortical alveoli steps; (iv) secondary growth, subdivided in: (a) early secondary growth, (b) late secondary growth, and (c) full grown. Follicular atresia was present in all stages of follicular development; it was characterized by oocyte degeneration, where follicle cells hypertrophy and differentiate in phagocytes. The ovary and oogenesis are similar to these seen in other poeciliids, but we found frequent atretic follicles, melanomacrophage centers, reduced fecundity and increased of offspring size.  相似文献   

8.
Cellular aspects of oocyte development of the Mexican rivulus Millerichthys robustus were morphologically described in order to analyze ovarian function and the cellular recruitment dynamics associating it with life history strategies of annual killifishes. Millerichthys is an iteroparous batch spawner with continuous oocyte recruitment and indeterminate fecundity with asynchronous development of the follicles. It has two ovaries of cystovarian type, with a central lumen, which communicates with the outside through the caudal region of the ovary, that is, the gonoduct. From the walls of the ovary, irregular lamellae composed of germinal epithelium and vascularized stroma project. Oogenesis starts with oogonial proliferation, found alone or in nests within the germinal epithelium. The oogonia come into meiosis becoming oocytes and advancing to the chromatin nucleolus stage and to early primary growth stage. Folliculogenesis is completed in the primary growth stage and cortical alveoli step. Follicles moves toward the stroma, but they continue to be attached to the germinal epithelium through the basement membrane until ovulation. The inclusion of fluid yolk in the follicles during the secondary growth stage was observed. During ovulation, the follicle collapsed, the oocyte was released into the lumen, and the constitutive elements of the post-ovulatory follicle complex remained in the stroma.  相似文献   

9.
Osedax is a genus of siboglinid annelids in which the females live on dead vertebrate bones on the seafloor. These females have a posterior end that lies within the bone and contains the ovarian tissue, as well as the “roots” involved with bone degradation and nutrition. The males are microscopic and live as “harems” in the lumen of the gelatinous tube that surrounds the female trunk, well away from the ovary. Females are known to spawn fertilized primary oocytes, suggesting internal fertilization. However, little is known about sperm transfer, sperm storage, or the location of fertilization, and the morphology of the female reproductive system has not been described and compared with the reproductive systems of other siboglinids. A 3D‐reconstruction of the ovisac of Osedax showed ovarian tissue with multiple lobes and mature oocytes stored in a “uterus” before being released through the single oviduct. The oviduct emerges as a gonopore on the trunk and travels along the trunk to finally open to the seawater as a thin cylindrical tube among the crown of palps. Light and transmission electron microscopy of mature Osedax sperm revealed elongate heads consisting of a nucleus with helical grooves occupied by mitochondria. In contrast to other Siboglinidae, Osedax sperm are not packaged into spermatophores or spermatozeugmata, and Osedax females lack a discrete region for sperm storage. Transmission electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy allowed detection of sperm associated with ovarian tissue of the female ovisac of four different Osedax species. This provides the first evidence for the site of internal fertilization in Osedax. A heart body was found in the circulatory system, as seen in other siboglinids and some other annelids. The possible presence of nephridia in the anterior ovisac region was also documented. These morphological features provide new insights for comparing the regionalization of Osedax females in relation to other siboglinids.  相似文献   

10.
In Hirudo medicinalis and Haemopis sanguisuga, two convoluted ovary cords are found within each ovary. Each ovary cord is a polarized structure composed of germ cells (oogonia, developing oocytes, nurse cells) and somatic cells (apical cell, follicular cells). One end of the ovary cord is club-shaped and comprises one huge apical cell, numerous oogonia, and small cysts (clusters) of interconnected germ cells. The main part of the cord contains fully developed cysts composed of numerous nurse cells connected via intercellular bridges with the cytophore, which in turn is connected by a cytoplasmic bridge with the growing oocyte. The opposite end of the cord degenerates. Cord integrity is ensured by flattened follicular cells enveloping the cord; moreover, inside the cord, some follicular cells (internal follicular cells) are distributed among germ cells. As oogenesis progresses, the growing oocytes gradually protrude into the ovary lumen; as a result, fully developed oocytes arrested in meiotic metaphase I float freely in the ovary lumen. This paper describes the successive stages of oogenesis of H. medicinalis in detail. Ovary organization in Hirudinea was classified within four different types: non-polarized ovary cords were found in glossiphoniids, egg follicles were described in piscicolids, ovarian bodies were found characteristic for erpobdellids, and polarized ovary cords in hirudiniforms. Ovaries with polarized structures equipped with apical cell (i.e. polarized ovary cords and ovarian bodies) (as found in arhynchobdellids) are considered as primary for Hirudinea while non-polarized ovary cords and the occurrence of egg follicles (rhynchobdellids) represent derived condition.  相似文献   

11.
Transmission electron microscopy reveals that the ovaries of Ferosagitta hispida contain four somatic tissues. A myoepithelial ovary wall, continuous with a thin layer of peritoneocytes lining the coelomic cavity, encloses a fluid-filled ovarian space in which oocytes develop. Lamellar extensions of a “follicular reticulum” branch throughout the ovarian space and ensheath developing oocytes. This tissue has been overlooked in most previous studies of chaetognath ovaries. A bipartite oviductal complex extends the length of each ovary just within the lateral ovary wall. It consists of a flattened, blindly ending cellular tube, herein referred to as the cellular sheath, and an enclosed syncytium. Sheath cells secrete an electron-dense product into the ovarian space. Those sheath cells directly bordering the syncytium are contractile and are joined to the to the syncytium by gap junctions and microvillar interdigitations. The syncytium contains a complex of membrane-bounded lumina. The latter sometimes enclose sperm received during mating or ovulated eggs. Thus the syncytium serves both as a seminal receptacle and as a duct for passage of eggs to the outside. Contrary to several classical reports, the cellular sheath and syncytium of the oviductal complex do not separate at ovulation to form a temporary oviductal lumen.  相似文献   

12.
The fine structure of the ovary in the serpulid Spirorbis borealis has been described. The ovarian wall consists of from one to several layers of peritoneal cells. Peritoneal cell processes extend deep into the ovary and may be seen between developing oocytes. Although young oocytes may also be in close apposition to one another, intercellular bridges have not been observed. When primary oocytes at the surface of the ovary reach a diameter of about 20 μ, they start to erupt into the coelom. Ovulation results from a simple separation of overlying peritoneal cells which lack specialized cell-to-cell contacts. Once a free surface of an ovulating oocyte is exposed to the coelom, microvilli and primary coat develop. Previtellogenic coelomic oocytes are often observed in close proximity to putative neoblasts (perivasal cells), which suggests a possible functional relationship. The confusion that extists between germ cells, peritoneal cells, and so-called neoblasts in polychaetes is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Postembryonic development of the ovary through the larval stages was studied in a penicillate diplopod, Eudigraphis nigricans. In the first instar larva a single young cell cluster, consisting of about 20 spherical gonial cells and some smaller interstitial cells, exists beneath the alimentary canal in the third body segment. The gonadal epithelium encompasses the upper surface of this young cell cluster by the end of the first instar. The epithelium then extends forward and backward to form a single long sac-like gonad, leaving the young cell cluster on the center of the gonadal floor as a mound-shaped germarium. In an early second-instar larva, very early previtellogenic oocytes accompanied by some interstitial cells appear in the front and rear surfaces of the ovarian germarium. During the period from the third through the seventh (the last) larval instar, some cell clusters containing several previtellogenic oocytes and interstitial cells successively separate forward and backward from the germarium to form a series of paired patch-shaped vitellarial areas on the extending ventral ovarian epithelium. In each vitellarial area, some of the interstitial cells surround the oocytes to form the follicles. In the seventh instar, the ovarian lumen is extremely expanded, and the late previtellogenic oocytes in the vitellarial areas encroach upward into the ovarian lumen. These oocytes floating in the ovarian lumen are still connected with their own vitellarial areas by partial extensions of their follicles. Some phylogenetic implications of the basic characteristics in structure and postembryonic development of the ovary are discussed. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Pseudoscorpion females carry fertilized eggs and embryos in specialized brood sacs, where embryos are fed with a nutritive fluid produced and secreted by somatic ovarian cells. We used various microscopic techniques to analyze the organization of the somatic cells in the ovary of a pseudoscorpion, Chelifer cancroides. In young specimens, the ovary is a cylindrical mass of internally located germline cells (oogonia and early previtellogenic oocytes) and two types of somatic cells: the epithelial cells of the ovarian wall and the internal interstitial cells. In subsequent stages of the ovary development, the oocytes grow and protrude from the ovary into the hemocoel (opisthosomal cavity). At the same time the interstitial cells differentiate into the follicular cells that directly cover the oocyte surface, whereas some epithelial cells of the ovarian wall form the oocyte stalks – tubular structures that connect the oocytes with the ovarian tube. The follicular cells do not seem to participate in oogenesis. In contrast, the cells of the stalk presumably have a dual function. During ovulation the stalk cells appear to contribute to the formation of the external egg envelope (chorion), while in the post-ovulatory phase of ovary function they cooperate with the other cells of the ovarian wall in the production of the nutritive fluid for the developing embryos.  相似文献   

15.
The study was aimed at understanding the process of reproduction and the changes happening in the ovary of Portunus pelagicus during maturation, which would be useful for its broodstock development for hatchery purposes. For that, tissue samples from different regions of the ovary at various stages of maturation were subjected to light and electron microscopy, and based on the changes revealed and the differences in ovarian morphology, the ovary was divided into five stages such as immature (previtellogenic oocytes), early maturing (early vitellogenic oocytes), late maturing (late vitellogenic oocytes), mature (vitellogenic oocytes), and spent (resorbing oocytes). The ovarian wall comprised of an outermost thin pavement epithelium, a middle layer of connective tissue, and an innermost layer of germinal epithelium. The oocytes matured as they moved from the centrally placed germinal zone toward the ovarian wall. The peripheral arrangement of nucleolar materials and the high incidence of cell organelles during the initial stages indicated vitellogenesis I. Movement of follicle cells toward oocytes in the early maturing stage and low incidence of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum in the ooplasm during late vitellogenic stage marked the commencement and end of vitellogenesis II, respectively. Yolk granules at various stages of development were seen in the ooplasm from late vitellogenic stage onwards. The spent ovary had an area with resorbing oocytes and empty follicle cells denoting the end of one reproductive cycle and another area with oogonial cells and previtellogenic oocytes indicating the beginning of the next.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract. The ultrastructural features of the ovary and oogenesis have been described in 6 species of patellid limpets from South Africa. The ovary is a complex organ that is divided radially into numerous compartments or lacunae by plate-like, blind-ended, hollow trabeculae that extend from the outer wall of the ovary to its central lumen. Trabeculae are composed of outer epithelial cells, intermittent smooth muscle bands, and extensive connective tissue. Oocytes arise within the walls of the trabeculae and progressively bulge outward into the ovarian lumen during growth while partially surrounded by squamous follicle cells. During early vitellogenesis, the follicle cells lift from the surface of the underlying oocytes and microvilli appear in the perivitelline space. Follicle cells restrict their contact with the oocytes to digitate foot processes that form desmosomes with the oolamina. When vitellogenesis is initiated, the trabecular epithelial cells hypertrophy and become proteosynthetically active. Yolk synthesis involves the direct incorporation of extraoocytic precursors from the lumen of the trabeculae (hemocoel) into yolk granules via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Lipid droplets arise de novo and Golgi complexes synthesize cortical granules that form a thin band beneath the oolamina. A fibrous jelly coat forms between the vitelline envelope and the overlying follicle cells in all species.  相似文献   

17.
This study presents the morphology of the ovary, as well as the process of the vitellogenesis in oocytes of the tick Rhipicephalus sanguineus. The ovary of these individuals is of the panoistic type; therefore, it lacks nurse cells. This organ consists of a single tubular structure, continuous, and composed of a wall formed by small epithelial cells with rounded nuclei which delimit the lumen. The oocytes in the different developmental stages in this tick species were classified into five stages (I-V). They remain attached to the ovary during vitellogenesis by a cellular pedicel and afterwards the mature oocytes (stage V) are released into the ovary lumen.  相似文献   

18.
Hypodermic insemination occurs in piscicolid leeches (Hirudinea, Rhynchobdellida, Piscicolidae). The spermatophore is implanted in a specialized region of the leech body, the copulatory area. Just beneath the copulatory area, there is a specialized connective tissue (vector tissue) that is considered to guide the sperm toward the ovaries. In this study, we show that the vector tissue in the four species of the genus Piscicola is composed of a mass of cells located directly beneath the copulatory area, and two thin strands extend toward the ovaries. The ultrastructure of the vector tissue has been described for the first time. Four cell types were identified, constructing the vector tissue. The envelope of this tissue is made up of extracellular fibrous matrix and two types of cells: vesicular and flat envelope cells, which are embedded within the matrix. The rest of the tissue is formed of granular and plasmatic cells. Both of these last cell types have prominent cytoplasmic projections, filled with a filamentous material. However, only granular cells have numerous small electron-dense granules in their cytoplasm. The vector tissue was described prior, during and following copulation. Sperm passes within free spaces between the granular and plasmatic cells. Characteristic vector tissue cells also occur within the ovary wall and inside the ovary lumen. This supports earlier data, which postulated that the vector tissue appears to be an outgrowth of the ovary wall.  相似文献   

19.
The development of male and female gonads in arrhenotokous and thelytokous species of Histiostoma was studied using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). All instars were examined: larvae, protonymphs, facultative heteromorphic deutonymphs (=hypopi), tritonymphs, and adults. In testis primordium, spermatogonia surrounding a testicular central cell (TCC) with a gradually enlarging, branched nucleus are present already at the larval stage. Spermatogonia and the TCC are connected via narrow, tubular intercellular bridges revealing that the TCC is a germline cell. Spermatocytes appear at the protonymphal stage. At the heteromorphic deutonymph stage, the testis primordium is similar to that of the protonymph, but in the tritonymph it is much larger and composed as in the adult: spermatids as well as sperm cells are present. The latter are congregated ventrally in the testis at the entrance of the deferent duct.In the larval ovary, an eccentrically located ovarian nutritive cell (ONC) is surrounded by oogonia which are connected with the ONC via tubular intercellular bridges. In later stages, the ovary grows and oocytes appear in the protonymph. Meiotic synaptonemal complexes in oocytes occur from the tritonymph stage. At about the time of the final molting, tubular intercellular bridges transform into peculiar diaphragm-crossed bridges known only in Histiostoma mites. In the adult female, growing oocytes at the end of previtellogenesis lose intercellular bridges and move ventro-laterally to the ovarian periphery towards the oviduct entrance. Vitellogenesis occurs in oviducts.Germinal cells in both the testis and ovary are embedded in a few somatic stroma cells which may be well discernible already in the larval ovary; in the testis, somatic stroma cells are evident not earlier than the end of the tritonymphal stage. The ovary has a thin wall of flat somatic cells, whereas the testis is covered by a basal lamina only.The obtained results suggest that gonads in Histiostoma and other Astigmata originate from two primordial cells only.  相似文献   

20.
Commensal pea crabs inhabiting bivalves have a high reproductive output due to the extension andfecundity of the ovary. We studied the underlying morphology of the female reproductive system in the Pinnotheridae Pinnotheres pisum, Pinnotheres pectunculi and Nepinnotheres pinnotheres using light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Eubrachyura have internal fertilization: the paired vaginas enlarge into storage structures, the spermathecae, which are connected to the ovaries by oviducts. Sperm is stored inside the spermathecae until the oocytes are mature. The oocytes are transported by oviducts into the spermathecae where fertilization takes place. In the investigated pinnotherids, the vagina is of the “concave pattern” (sensu Hartnoll 1968 ): musculature is attached alongside flexible parts of the vagina wall that controls the dimension of its lumen. The genital opening is closed by a muscular mobile operculum. The spermatheca can be divided into two distinct regions by function and morphology. The ventral part includes the connection with vagina and oviduct and is regarded as the zone where fertilization takes place. It is lined with cuticle except where the oviduct enters the spermatheca by the “holocrine transfer tissue.” At ovulation, the oocytes have to pass through this multilayered glandular epithelium performing holocrine secretion. The dorsal part of the spermatheca is considered as the main sperm storage area. It is lined by a highly secretory apocrine glandular epithelium. Thus, two different forms of secretion occur in the spermathecae of pinnotherids. The definite role of secretion in sperm storage and fertilization is not yet resolved, but it is notable that structure and function of spermathecal secretion are more complex in pinnotherids, and probably more efficient, than in other brachyuran crabs. J. Morphol., 2011. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号