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1.
Silver Lamprey (Ichthyomyzon unicuspis) in the Wisconsin River attached within the branchial cavity of Paddlefish (Polyodon spathula) significantly more often (6.5% of 1,578 attachments) than would be expected by chance on the basis of its relative surface area (3.7%), with as many as four lampreys found together within the branchial cavity of the same Paddlefish. Similar behavior has occasionally been noted for lampreys in other systems, but the phenomenon may be underreported when the lampreys are concealed from view. As suggested previously for some parasitic trychomycterid catfishes, lampreys in the branchial cavity may benefit from accessing blood under pressure, especially in the ventral aorta. In addition, Silver Lamprey within the branchial cavities of Paddlefish may be relatively protected from any negative effects that might result from Paddlefish breaching.  相似文献   

2.
《Geobios》1986,19(5):647-652
A second fossil lamprey is described from the Lower Carboniferous (Namurian) locality of Bear Gulch (Montana, U.S.A.), which had already yielded the type specimen of Hardistiella montanensis, the oldest and, probably, the most primitive of all known lampreys. This new specimen, which may possibly belong to the latter species, is badly preserved, but clearly shows the impressions of four to six branchial pouches which are relatively small and closely set, like those of the other Carboniferous lamprey Mayomyzon pieckoensis. They differ thus from extant lampreys, in which the branchial apparatus extends relatively far behing the eyeballs. This concentration of the branchial apparatus in early lampreys is regarded here as a primitive condition, which is also met with in many anaspids, as evidenced from their closely-set external branchial openings. The presence of an impression which recalls the loop of the trabecles in larval extant lampreys suggests that this specimen was a larval individual.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract The head and branchial regions of larval and adult lampreys and hagfish were studied histologically in serial sections. The most remarkable feature in these extant agnathans was the occurrence of large blood-sinuses. In larval lampreys, blood-sinuses are well developed in the velum, an organ that functions to introduce water and accompanying food particles from the mouth into the gill and alimentary regions. The sinuses in the velum may act to transduce the force of contraction of velar muscles to the stroke-like movement of the velum; without these sinuses muscular contractions might simply cause the velum to collapse. In adult lampreys, blood-sinuses are well developed in the peribranchial space that surrounds the branchial (gill) sac and is surrounded by the branchial pouch. It is possible that the force of contractions of the branchial-pouch muscles is transduced effectively to the branchial sac via the peribranchial blood-sinus and facilitates the expiration of water through the external gill pores. If the peribranchial sinus were absent, the muscular contraction might deform the branchial sac in an inappropriate manner. In the hagfish, the blood-sinus system is also well developed in the velum and peribranchial space, although the peribranchial sinus lies outside the muscular branchial pouch. In agnathans, the blood-sinus system may function, at least in part, as a kind of hydrostatic skeleton that transduces the force generated by muscular contraction.  相似文献   

4.
1. A method is described for injecting CAs into the caudal vein of unanaesthetized lampreys and monitoring any subsequent changes in branchial and cardiac electrical recordings.2. While a dose of 5–6 μg kg−1 body wt of norepinephrine increased the rate and amplitude of branchial and cardiac electrical recordings, the same dose of epinephrine produced a comparable effect only on the heart recordings.3. A dose of 5–6 μg kg−1 body wt of dopamine had a relatively small effect on branchial and cardiac electrical recordings.4. The response to CAs by lampreys is apparently dose related.5. The above results have been used to suggest possible ways by which CAs influence cardiac and respiratory functions in lampreys.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Synopsis The urogenital papillae of 30 species of Holarctic lampreys were examined to determine if this structure has any taxonornic use. Total length, branchial length and papilla length were measured. A correlation between mean papilla length and mean total length of the species existed in males for parasitic species but not nonparasitic species, indicating a potential use in nonparasitic species. In nonparasitic species the most obvious differences existed in the papilla length: branchial length ratio. From the limited material available there appeared to be no geographic variation in this ratio, although there is a seasonal variation with the ratio increasing as, spawning approaches. It therefore appears that urogenital papilla length has taxonomic value in male nonparasitic lampreys, provided the specimens are collected in spawning condition. The female papilla is too small to be of use.  相似文献   

7.
8.
We have analyzed morphological changes affecting the lympho-hemopoietic organs of the anadromous sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus throughout its life span. For this analysis, ammocoetes (2–4 years), premetamorphosing lampreys (nearly 5 years), metamorphosing lampreys, macrophtalmia stages (young adults) and parasitic adults (nearly 7 years) were used. The principal lympho-hemopoietic organs in the ammocoete are typhlosole, larval opisthonephros and nephros-associated adipose tissue. After metamorphosis, these organs degenerate, and their lympho-hemopoietic tissue is replaced by dense connective tissue. The supraneural body and to a lesser degree, the definitive opisthonephros, are the main blood-forming organs in adult lampreys. During larval life, lympho-hemopoietic cells appear in the branchial area, associated with pharyngeal epithelium. These loci are not morphologically homologous to the thymus gland of jawed vertebrates. These results are discussed, with special emphasis on the importance of cell microenvironments in eluciding changes in different blood-forming loci throughout the life cycle and their significance for the lamprey's immune capacity.  相似文献   

9.
Fish gill morphology: inside out   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
In this short review of fish gill morphology we cover some basic gross anatomy as well as in some more detail the microscopic anatomy of the branchial epithelia from representatives of the major extant groups of fishes (Agnathans, Elasmobranchs, and Teleosts). The agnathan hagfishes have primitive gill pouches, while the lampreys have arch-like gills similar to the higher fishes. In the lampreys and elasmobranchs, the gill filaments are supported by a complete interbranchial septum and water exits via external branchial slits or pores. In contrast, the teleost interbranchial septum is much reduced, leaving the ends of the filaments unattached, and the multiple gill openings are replaced by the single caudal opening of the operculum. The basic functional unit of the gill is the filament, which supports rows of plate-like lamellae. The lamellae are designed for gas exchange with a large surface area and a thin epithelium surrounding a well-vascularized core of pillar cell capillaries. The lamellae are positioned for the blood flow to be counter-current to the water flow over the gills. Despite marked differences in the gross anatomy of the gill among the various groups, the cellular constituents of the epithelium are remarkably similar. The lamellar gas-exchange surface is covered by squamous pavement cells, while large, mitochondria-rich, ionocytes and mucocytes are found in greatest frequency in the filament epithelium. Demands for ionoregulation can often upset this balance. There has been much study of the structure and function of the branchial mitochondria-rich cells. These cells are generally characterized by a high mitochondrial density and an amplification of the basolateral membrane through folding or the presence of an intracellular tubular system. Morphological subtypes of MRCs as well as some methods of MRC detection are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The intestinal contents of adults of 12 of the 18 species of parasitic lampreys were examined microscopically and tested for blood to determine whether a species fed mainly on blood, flesh or blood and flesh. The diets of each species are shown to be related to characteristics of their dentition, buccal glands and velar tentacles. The trends exhibited by those relationships were used to hypothesize as to the diets of those six species for which there were anatomical but not dietary data. The dentition aids the suctorial disc in attaching the lamprey to its host and removing host material, while velar tentacles prevent material entering the branchial cavity and buccal glands produce lamphredin that has anticoagulant and lytic properties. In blood feeders, such as Petromyzon marinus and Mordacia species, the w-shaped transverse lingual lamina and hook-shaped longitudinal laminae bear numerous, fine cusps, which are ideal for rasping a hole in the host. In contrast, in flesh feeders, such as Lampetra fluviatilis and Geotria australis , the transverse lingual lamina is u shaped and the longitudinal laminae are straighter and possess at least one stout cusp, thereby facilitating the removal of host flesh through gouging. The buccal glands are generally larger in blood feeders than flesh feeders, presumably reflecting a need to produce anticoagulant continuously. Each velar tentacle contains a central cartilaginous rod, surrounded by a space which, during feeding, becomes engorged with blood and thus more rigid. They are small (≤1 mm long) and few (2–6) in blood feeders and large (typically ≥2 mm long) and numerous (3–42) in flesh feeders, which, in particular, require a mechanism for preventing solid material entering the branchial pouches and thus potentially clogging the gills. On the basis of recent cladistic analysis, blood feeding is ancestral to flesh feeding in Northern Hemisphere lampreys (Petromyzontidae).  相似文献   

11.
Ventilation and the origin of jawed vertebrates: a new mouth   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
This study investigates the origin of jaws by re-assessing homologies between the oropharyngeal regions of Agnatha and Chondrichthyes. In accordance with classical theory, jaws are interpreted as the most anterior arches of the ventilatory branchial basket. It is proposed that jaws first enlarged for a ventilatory function, i.e. closing the jaws prevented reflux of water through the mouth during forceful expiration. Next, they enlarged further to grasp prey in feeding. As they enlarged, the jaws tilted forward, squeezing the ancestral oral cavity in front of them ('old mouth') into a slit between the jaws and lips. Simultaneously, the anterior part of the pharynx behind the jaws was pulled forward and became a 'new mouth' (the buccal part of the buccopharyngeal cavity of gnathostomes). During the transition to gnamostomes, the premandibular cheeks and lips of the old mouth remained in place, and are represented in ammocoete lampreys, chimaeroids, and sharks. The stages in the evolution of gnathostomes, driven by selection for increasing activity, are modelled as: ancestral vertebrate (with unjointed branchial arches) to early pre-gnathostome (jointed internal arches and stronger ventilation) to late pre-gnadiostome (with mouth-closing, ventilatory 'jaws') to early gnathostome (feeding jaws).  相似文献   

12.
13.
The distribution and ultrastructure of the mitochondria-rich (MR) cells in the gills of larval (ammocoetes) and adult lampreys (Petromyzon marinus and Geotria australis) have been studied. One type of MR cell, which is found only in ammocoetes, occurs in groups on and between gill lamellae. Freeze-fracture replicas show that the apical membrane of this ammocoete MR cell contains globular particles. The second type of MR cell, which is present in both ammocoetes and adults in freshwater, is located between lamellae and at the base of the filament. This cell usually occurs singly and is typically intercalated between ammocoete MR cells in larval lampreys and between pavement cells and pavement and chloride cells in adult lampreys. It contains rod-shaped particles in either the apical membrane (subtype A) or, far less frequently, the lateral membrane (subtype B) and in membranes of cytoplasmic vesicles and tubules. These features characterize this intercalated MR cell as a member of a group of MR cells that are also found in urinary epithelia of tetrapods and the amphibian epidermis, where they are involved in H+ and HCO3 - secretion. Because this type of MR cell disappears when the young adult lamprey enters the sea and reappears immediately after the fully grown adult re-enters freshwater on its spawning run, it is presumably essential for osmoregulation in freshwater. On the basis of electrophysiological studies on frog skin, it is proposed that the subtype A of the branchial intercalated MR cell of lampreys provides the driving force for the Na+ uptake by active H+ secretion. By analogy with urinary epithelia, the subtype B cells may exchange Cl- for HCO3 -.  相似文献   

14.
Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural methods were used to examine the distribution of elastin and the fine structure of the trabecular, nasal, branchial, and pericardial cartilages in the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus. The cells and matrix, as well as the overall organization of these components, in larval and adult trabecular cartilage resemble those of adult annular and piston cartilages (Wright and Youson: Am. J. Anat., 167:59-70, 1983) Chondrocytes are similar to those in hyaline cartilage. Lamprin fibrils and matrix granules, but no collagen fibrils, are found in a matrix arranged into pericellular, territorial, and interterritorial zones. Branchial, pericardial, and nasal cartilages differ from trabecular, annular, and piston cartilages in the organization of their matrix and in the structural components of their matrix and perichondria. Furthermore, immunoreactive elastin-like material is present within the perichondria and peripheral matrices of nasal, branchial, and pericardial cartilages in both larval and adult lampreys. Oxytalan, elaunin, and elastic-like fibers are dispersed between collagen fibers in the perichondrium. The matrix contains lamprin fibrils, matrix granules, and a band of amorphous material, which is reminiscent of elastin, in the periphery bordering the perichondrium. The presence of elastic-like fibers and elastin-like material within some lamprey cartilages implies that this protein may have evolved earlier in vertebrate history than has been previously suggested.  相似文献   

15.
At the gross anatomical level, hagfish gills show unusual features not seen in any other fish gills. Our study was undertaken to determine if peculiarities also characterize the microscopic anatomy and ultrastructure of hagfish gills. To the contrary, branchial respiratory lamellae of Pacific hagfish were found to resemble the lamellae of lampreys, elasmobranchs, and teleosts, often down to the finest subcellular details. As in other fish, hagfish lamellae are lined by epithelium containing pavement cells with organelles indicative of a secretory function, basal cells showing undifferentiated cell features, and branchial ionocytes. The ionocytes are identical to chloride cells of teleosts in cytostructure, distribution, and abundance. There are pillar and marginal capillaries in hagfish gill lamellae. Pillar cells contain bundles of 5-nm microfilaments, and they associate with collagen columns as in other fish. Hagfish pillar cells do exhibit odd features, however: They cluster (groups of up to nine were seen), and their extracellular collagen columns are rarer than in other fish gills (averaging only two columns per three pillar cells). Other special features of hagfish gills are the following: lipid droplets and smooth endoplasmic reticulum are well developed in all cell types; pavement cells secrete a lipomucous product (stains with periodic acid-Schiff, Alcian blue, and Sudan black B); and goblet cells are absent. The presence of "chloride cells" in hagfish is puzzling, as hagfish body fluids are iso-osmotic to seawater and there is no need to osmoregulate for sodium chloride; the ionocytes contain carbonic anhydrase, suggesting a function in acid/base regulation.  相似文献   

16.
Conodont anatomy, chordate phylogeny and vertebrate classification   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Interpretations of conodont anatomy and affinity continue to generate controversy. Fossilized soft-tissue evidence indicates that conodonts possessed eyes, extrinsic eye muscles, a notochord, myomeres, a differentiated tail with fin radiais, possible otic capsules and possible branchial structures. Indirect evidence suggests a differentiated brain and cartilaginous head skeleton. The multi-component phosphatic tissue complexes of the conodont feeding apparatus cannot be compared to the amorphous apatite of extant agnathan otoliths. By limiting cladistic analysis to a restricted selection of these characters the hypothesis that conodonts are a sister group of the clade comprising extant hagfish, lampreys and gnathostomes can be supported. However, exhaustive analysis of a more complete character-set strongly supports the hypothesis that conodonts are more derived than hagfish. From a taxonomic perspective, these two hypotheses have no effect on how conodonts should be classified. Whether they are a stem group (the former hypothesis) or part of the crown group (the latter), conodonts are clearly part of the total group Vertebrata (=Craniata).  相似文献   

17.
We characterized the behavioral and neuroendocrine responses of adult sea lampreys (Petromyzon marinus) to weak electric fields. Adult sea lampreys, captured during upstream spawning migration, exhibited limited active behaviors during exposure to weak electric fields and spent the most time attached to the wall of the testing arena near the cathode (−). For adult male sea lampreys, exposure to weak electric fields resulted in increased lamprey (l) GnRH-I mRNA expression but decreased lGnRH-I immunoreactivities in the forebrain, and decreased Jun (a neuronal activation marker) mRNA levels in the brain stem. Similar effects were not observed in the brains of female sea lampreys after weak electric field stimulation. The influence of electroreception on forebrain lGnRH suggests that electroreception may modulate the reproductive systems in adult male sea lampreys. The changes in Jun expression may be associated with swimming inhibition during weak electric field stimulation. The results for adult sea lampreys are the opposite of those obtained using parasitic-stage sea lampreys, which displayed increased activity during and after cathodal stimulation. Our results demonstrate that adult sea lampreys are sensitive to weak electric fields, which may play a role in reproduction. They also suggest that electrical stimuli mediate different behaviors in feeding-stage and spawning-stage sea lampreys.  相似文献   

18.
The jawless fish, the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), spends part of its life as a burrow-dwelling, suspension-feeding larva (ammocoete) before undergoing a metamorphosis into a free swimming, parasitic juvenile that feeds on the blood of fishes. We predicted that animals in this juvenile, parasitic stage have a great capacity for catabolizing amino acids when large quantities of protein-rich blood are ingested. The sixfold to 20-fold greater ammonia excretion rates (J(Amm)) in postmetamorphic (nonfeeding) and parasitic lampreys compared with ammocoetes suggested that basal rates of amino acid catabolism increased following metamorphosis. This was likely due to a greater basal amino acid catabolizing capacity in which there was a sixfold higher hepatic glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activity in parasitic lampreys compared with ammocoetes. Immunoblotting also revealed that GDH quantity was 10-fold and threefold greater in parasitic lampreys than in ammocoetes and upstream migrant lampreys, respectively. Higher hepatic alanine and aspartate aminotransferase activities in the parasitic lampreys also suggested an enhanced amino acid catabolizing capacity in this life stage. In contrast to parasitic lampreys, the twofold larger free amino acid pool in the muscle of upstream migrant lampreys confirmed that this period of natural starvation is accompanied by a prominent proteolysis. Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase III was detected at low levels in the liver of parasitic and upstream migrant lampreys, but there was no evidence of extrahepatic (muscle, intestine) urea production via the ornithine urea cycle. However, detection of arginase activity and high concentrations of arginine in the liver at all life stages examined infers that arginine hydrolysis is an important source of urea. We conclude that metamorphosis is accompanied by a metabolic reorganization that increases the capacity of parasitic sea lampreys to catabolize intermittently large amino acid loads arising from the ingestion of protein rich blood from their prey/hosts. The subsequent generation of energy-rich carbon skeletons can then be oxidized or retained for glycogen and fatty acid synthesis, which are essential fuels for the upstream migratory and spawning phases of the sea lamprey's life cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Between 15 days and 3 months in age, the ‘elastica externa’ of the notochord sheath of larval lampreys develops from patches of moderately dense and amorphous material into a thick, continuous and electron-dense layer. In both lampreys and hagfish, this layer stains strongly with Verhoeff's elastic stain and aldehyde fuchsin and is penetrated by collagen fibrils on both its outer and inner boundaries. Peroxidase labelling using an antibody raised against human elastin specifically labels both the notochord ‘elastica externa’ and the elastic fibre system of lampreys. The diameters of the microfibrils (10–13 nm) of the oxytalan, elaunin and elastic fibres of lampreys and hagfish are the same as those of higher vertebrates. The connective tissue immediately dorsal and ventral to the notochord of lampreys contains mainly oxytalan fibres in very young ammocoetes, a combination of oxytalan, elaunin and elastic fibres in older ammocoetes, and predominantly elastic fibres in adult lampreys. While the region of the endomeninx at the base of the spinal cord contains almost exclusively oxytalan fibres in young ammocoetes, it also possesses numerous elastic fibres in adult lampreys. These findings indicate that, as in higher vertebrates, the elastic fibres of lampreys develop from oxytalan fibres via elaunin fibres.  相似文献   

20.
Light avoidance in larval lampreys is mediated by dermal photoreceptors located in the tail. These photoreceptors continue to function in adults, but they seem redundant because post-metamorphic lampreys possess well-developed eyes. This study examined the role of dermal photoreceptors in adult sea lampreys by testing whether temperature-induced changes in refuge-seeking behavior are mediated by a reduction in dermal photosensitivity. In a lighted arena containing a single shaded refuge platform, lampreys at 22°C displayed five times less search activity and were less likely to attach beneath the refuge platform than lampreys at either 7 or 15°C. A behavioral assay for tail photosensitivity (locomotor response to tail illumination) revealed a corresponding reduction in dermal photosensitivity at 22°C. Moreover, the responses to head illumination (eyes and pineal) did not correspond with the observed light avoidance behaviors. The head was less responsive to light than the tail and was not influenced by temperature. These results provide strong evidence that the dermal photoreceptors continue to mediate light avoidance in adult lampreys, even though adults possess fully functional eyes. The fact that the eyes apparently do not take on this role suggests that there is functional specialization between these two light sensing systems.  相似文献   

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