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The Ultrastructure of the Spermatozoa of Squamata—I. Scincidae,Gekkonidae and Pygopodidae (Reptilia)
Authors:B. G. M. Jamieson  S. C. Oliver  D. M. Scheltinga
Abstract:Abstract Squamate autapomorphies seen in sperm of the Scincidae (e.g. Ctenotus robustus, Carlia pectoralis, Cryptoblepharus virgatus, and Lampropholis delicata) are penetration of the fibrous sheath of the axoneme into the midpiece, and the paracrystalline subacrosomal cone. Sphenomorphus group spermatozoa (e.g. Ctenotus) and the Egernia group (Tiliqua) differ from the more derived Eugongylus group (C. virgatus, L. delicata and C. pectoralis) in that the acrosome is elongate and apically depressed; the perforatorium is strongly oblique; the midpiece is relatively short, with four dense ring structures in longitudinal succession; mitochondria are columnar; and enlarged peripheral fibres 3 and 8 do not show the gross anterior enlargement seen in Carlia and Lampropholis. Heteronotia binoei (Gekkonidae) sperm have no epinuclear electron-lucent region; nuclear shoulders are smooth, as in sphenomorph but not Eugongylus group skinks; mitochondria are columnar; unlike skinks, the median surfaces of the mitochondria are indented by triangular, sometimes longitudinally, interconnected dense bodies. In Lialis burtonis (Pygopodidae) sperm, the perforatorium extends virtually to the tip of the fore-shortened apically domed acrosome; nuclear shoulders are absent; the mitochondria alternate singly or in groups with one or more dense bodies which also form an interrupted collar around the distal centriole. Spermatozoal ultrastructure suggests that a common ancestry of snakes and pygopods deserves consideration.
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