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Structure and evolution of the pharynx simplex in acoel flatworms (Acoela)
Authors:Christiane Todt
Institution:Department of Biology, University of Bergen, 5020 Bergen, Norway
Abstract:The homology of pharynges within the mostly pharynx‐less Acoela has been a matter of discussion for decades and even the basic question of whether a pharynx is a primitive trait within the Acoela and homologous to the pharynx of platyhelminth turbellarians is open. By using fluorescence staining of musculature, as well as conventional histological techniques and transmission electron microscopy, the present study sets focus on the mouth and pharynx (where present) of seven species of Acoela within Paratomellidae, Solenofilomorphidae, Hofsteniidae, Proporidae, and Convolutidae, as well as one species of Nemertodermatida and Catenulida, respectively. It is shown that among the investigated families of acoels there is a great variability in muscle systems associated with the mouth and pharynx and that pharynx histology and ultrastructural characters are widely diverse. There are no close similarities between the acoel pharynges and the catenulid pharynx but there is a general resemblance of the musculature associated with the mouth in the representatives of Paratomellidae and Nemertodermatida. On the basis of the profound differences in pharynx morphology, three major conclusions are drawn: 1) the pharynges as present in Recent acoels are not homologous to the pharynx simplex characteristic for Catenulida and Macrostomida within the Platyhelminthes; 2) the different muscular pharynx types of acoels are not homologous between higher taxa and thus a single acoel‐type pharynx simplex cannot be defined; 3) the presence of a muscular pharynx most likely does not represent the ancestral state. J. Morphol, 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:Turbellaria  foregut  digestive tract  confocal microscopy  ultrastructure
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