Functional morphology of the female reproductive tract ofPseudoterranova decipiens (Nematoda) raised in vivo and in vitro |
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Authors: | Barbara M MacKinnon Michael D B Burt |
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Institution: | (1) Huntsman Marine Science Centre, Brandy Cove Road, E0G 2X0 St. Andrews, N.B., Canada;(2) Department of Biology, University of New Brunswick, E3B 6E1 Fredericton, N.B., Canada |
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Abstract: | Summary Entire reproductive tracts dissected from live femalePseudoterranova decipiens, some collected from grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) and some raised in vitro, were examined using light and electron microscopy. The reproductive tracts from both samples are similar in that the oogonia accumulate cytoplasmic inclusion granules and remain attached to the rachis until just before entering the oviduct. Sperm stored in the oviduct fertilize the oocytes, which then pass into the uterus where elaboration of the shell occurs. Two polar bodies are evident in recently fertilized eggs, suggesting that reduction division proceeds as in most nematode eggs. The epithelial cells of the oviduct appear to secrete material that surrounds the oocytes, and the epithelial cells of the uterus secrete a fibrous material that adheres to the outside of the egg shell. The two samples differ in that the oocytes of in vivo-raised nematodes contain curious conglomerates of organelles: areas of membranous whorls in association with electron-dense inclusion granules and glycogen granules. The samples differ also in that the ovarian epithelial cells in the in vitro-raised specimens phagocytose necrotic oogonia at the tip of the ovary. |
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