Ultrastructural Observations on the Spermatozoa of Two Temnocephalids (Platyhelminthes) |
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Authors: | Jean-Lou Justine Rodrigo Ponce de Len Xavier Mattei |
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Institution: | Jean-Lou Justine,Rodrigo Ponce de León,Xavier Mattei |
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Abstract: | The spermatozoa of two Temnocephalidae collected in Uruguay, Temnocephala iheringi Haswell, 1893 (Host: Pomacea canaliculata) and Temnocephala axenos Monticelli, 1899 (Host: Parastacus varicosus), were studied with a transmission electron microscope. In both species the spermatozoon is made up of a long sperm body which bears at one extremity two free flagella of the 9+‘1’ flatworm pattern. The sperm body contains the nucleus, mitochondria, dense bodies and parallel, cortical, longitudinal singlet microtubules. Along a part of the sperm body the palissade of the microtubules displays a spiral pattern in transverse sections. A part of the perimeter of the cell is thus lined by two overlapping rows of microtubules. This spiral pattern of the singlets is considered as a synapomorphy of the family Temnocephalidae. The singlet microtubules are interconnected by two kinds of links: tangential links between neighbouring singlets in the same row and radial links between singlets belonging to two rows. The presence of these links suggests that this structure could be a motile system of singlets. |
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