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Early morphogenesis in the platyhelminthes with special reference to egg development and development of cestode larvae
Authors:M D Burt
Affiliation:2. Department of Animal Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907;3. North Central Research and Outreach Center, University of Minnesota, Grand Rapids 55744
Abstract:Early development of fertilized eggs is reviewed for the main groups within the phylum Platyhelminthes (Turbellaria, Temnocephaloidea, Monogenea, Digenea, Cestodaria and Cestoda). The Turbellaria show two different patterns of embryological development consequent on whether yolk material is contained within the ovum membrane (endolecithal) or whether yolk is added to the outside of the ovum (ectolecithal). In the parasitic groups, those that are oviparous or ovoviviparous produce shelled eggs of the ectolecithal type and, in addition, there are viviparous forms in which egg development shows variations and the amount of yolk, where present, is reduced. In every case examined, however, cleavage is of the spiral type. Within the Cestoda, clear distinction is made between those groups (orders) of worms which are oviparous as compared to those which are viviparous. It is suggested that oviparity is more primitive (ancestral) than viviparity based on adult morphology and on the evidence of life-cycle studies.The continued, post-oncospheral development of cestodes is described as is the ultrastructure of various representative cercoid larval forms. These include: the procercoid of Pseudophyllidea and Haplobothrioidea; the cercoid of Tetraphyllidea; and, within the Cyclophyllidea, the cercoscolex of the Dilepididae, the cysticercoid of the Hymenolepidae, and the cysticercus of the Taeniidae. During post-oncospheral development, in every case examined the posterior part of the developing larva, the cercomer, can be characterized by a microvillar tegument (at least during early development) whereas the more anterior larval body itself, destined to develop in the definitive host, develops microtriches. Modifications to the cercomer, and its microvilli, in the later stages of post-oncospheral development, occur particularly in the more advanced Cyclophyllidea such as the Taeniidae and in some Hymenolepididae.
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