Functional morphology of the mouthparts and alimentary tract of the slipper lobster Thenus orientalis (Decapoda : Scyllaridae)

1999 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danielle J. Johnston ◽  
Christopher G. Alexander

The mouthparts and proventriculus of Thenus orientalis Lund are adapted to ingest soft flesh, which is consistent with the diet of this and other scyllarids. The crista dentata are reduced, with food transfer into the oesophagus facilitated by large stout setae on the second and third maxillipeds. The mandibles exert little force and most food maceration is effected by the gastric mill. Ingestion is aided by mucus secreted by rosette glands in the paragnaths and membranous lobe, as well as expansion of four longitudinal folds in the oesophageal wall. The cardiac stomach has considerable food storage capacity by extension of its membranous walls, reduced ossicles and simplified ventral filtration channels. The filtering ability of the pyloric filter press is consistent with other macrophagous decapods. The dorsal caecum above the pyloric stomach has an absorptive columnar epithelium that contains acid mucin granules and protein. Muscular walls and longitudinal folds in the hindgut facilitate faecal pellet extrusion.

Author(s):  
S. Hart ◽  
A. Wrathmell ◽  
J. E. Harris

The alimentary tract of the common dogfish, Scyliorhinus canicula L. was examined for the presence of gut associated lymphoid tissue (GALT). GALT was present in the buccal cavity, oesophagus, pyloric stomach, intestine containing the spiral valve, rectum and cloaca, but absent from the cardiac stomach. In the intestine containing the spiral valve the highest levels of GALT were recorded. The GALT occupied three tissue niches: as individual leucocytes in the lamina propria as accumulations in the lamina propria and as individual leucocytes in the ephithelium. Four leucocyte types were identified lymphocytes, granular cells, macrophages and plasma cells. The presence of lymphoid tissue at such high levels in the gut suggests it has a potentially important immunological function.


1959 ◽  
Vol s3-100 (50) ◽  
pp. 183-198
Author(s):  
G. BURNSTOCK

1. In the trout gut a short oesophagus containing only striated circular muscles opens into a large cardiac stomach possessing inner circular and outer longitudinal smooth muscle-coats, as well as a musculsris mucosse. Ahout 45 pyloric caeca come off the intestine, which, while containing muscle-coats, does not possess a muscularis mucosae. In the rectum, the longitudinal muscle is as thick as the circular muscle-coat, hut in other regions the circular muscle is dominant, especially in the pyloric stomach where it is over 10 times as thick ss the longitudinal layer. 2. The mucosa is distinguished by the presence of a prominent layer of dense collagen, the stratum compactum, which is perforated only by nerves and blood-vessels. This layer forms a firm and relatively inextensible (approximately 10% extensibility) basis to the gut-wall. It limits the extensibility of the smooth muscle to 75% radially in the stomach and 25% radially and longitudinally in the intestine. In contrast, the stomachs of the pike and perch, which do not possess a stratum compactum, extend up so 200%. 3. A detailed description of the regional junctions and sphincters gives a basis for the interpretation of events occurring in the living system. Valves at the junction of the pneumatic duct with the oesophagus, and between the duodenum and pyloric stomach, serve to prevent the regurgitation of gas and semi-digested food respectively. A complex sphincter mechanism exists at the pylorus, and to a lesser extent at the antrum. A series of about five circular muscle-constrictors represents the anus. 4. It is suggested that the cells forming the stratum granulosum, a layer closely associated with the stratum compactum, are composed of active fibroblast cells producing collagen. 5. The rectum contains a muscular annulo-spiral septum of unknown function which protrudes into the lumen.


2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. 714-736 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Morgan

AbstractAnalyses of the capacity and rates of different acorn storage techniques employed by the Western Mono of California’s Sierra Nevada during the very late Holacene indicate hunter-gatherers store food in at least three main modes: central-place storage, dispersed caching, and dispersed bulk caching. The advantage of caching modes over central-place ones is that they entail faster storage rates and thus the chance to maximize storage capacity when seasonality and scheduling conflicts limit storing opportunities. They also result in predictable stores of acorn separate from winter population aggregations but oftentimes near seasonally occupied camps. Central-place storage thus appears most directly related to coping with single-year seasonal variability in environmental productivity and sedentary overwintering strategies; caching, and especially bulk caching, with multi-year environmental unpredictability, overwintering and seasonal residential moves. Storage thus appears to generally develop as a response to seasonality and unpredictable environmental productivity, but its various forms are conditioned mainly by how they articulate with different mobility types. Complex Mono storage behaviors, however, were associated with regionally low population densities and relatively uncomplicated social structures nonetheless characterized by chiefs who maintained their positions by throwing feasts of stored acorn. The connections between storage, population density, and sociocultural complexity thus appear less direct and predicated on specific sociopolitical circumstance. Recognizing different modes of hunter-gatherer storage is consequently critical to assessing the roles ecology, mobility, group size, and social distinctions play in the development of disparate storage behaviors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 116-120
Author(s):  
Shaik Riyaz Basha

Thermal energy storage (TES) based on hidden heat concept is good substitute for sensible heat storage because of its dense storage capacity and almost constant temperature heat transfers during the charging and discharging cycle. During no load and low cooling load conditions the system stores the thermal energy in the storage medium (phase change material) which will be used latter to meet the requirement in off cycle conditions. The intention of present work is to increase the system off cycle time, maintain required temperatures during power cuts by joining a few inch thick layer of phase change material on the outer surface of the evaporator. For investigation purpose a deep freezer which runs on vapor compression system of 50 liters storage capacity is fabricated with and without phase change materials. The eutectic compositions nearly 23 wt% salt (NaCl) dissolved in water and aluminium nitrate around 26 wt% dissolved in water are used as phase change materials. By the end of all experimental investigations it was noticed that the off cycle time system with phase change material is increased by 5.5 hours compared to system without phase change material, food storage time is enhanced by 8 to 14 hrs and a little power saving also achieved.


1933 ◽  
Vol s2-75 (300) ◽  
pp. 571-624
Author(s):  
JOHN Z. YOUNG

1. The rami cornmunicantes of Selachians contain only preganglionic fibres; there are no recurrent grey rami and therefore no sympathetic nerves to the skin, chromatophores, or somatic muscles. This probably accounts for the absence of the sympathetic from the head and tail regions. 2. In accordance with (1) it was found that cutting of the spinal nerves produced no local colour changes in the skin, neither was adrenaline found to have any action on the chromatophores. 3. There are no long pre- or post-ganglionic pathways in the sympathetic and therefore no true sympathetic chains, though the ganglia of adjoining segments are sometimes connected. The arrangement is thus more nearly segmental than that of Teleosts or Tetrapods. 4. No sympathetic ganglia were found in the tail of adult Scyllium or Torpedo, but in embryos of these forms scattered motor neurones were found in connexion with the caudal blood-vessels. 5. Stimulation of the vagus caused movements of the cardiac stomach, of the anterior splanchnic nerves movements of the pylorus and pyloric stomach. Stimulation of the middle and posterior splanchnic nerves caused movements of the intestine, colon, and rectum. Pinching the intestine evoked a characteristic progressive reflex contraction, ending in the extrusion of faeces. 6. The posterior suprarenal bodies differ in the two sexes, those of the male being much the larger, although the number of cells giving the chrome reaction is the same in both. 7. The suprarenal tissue is very plentifully supplied with post-ganglionic fibres, which could be seen actually in connexion with their cell-bodies. The hypothesis of Elliott that the chromophil cells themselves represent post-ganglionics is therefore disproved in this case. 8. The structure of the autonomic neurones is described in detail, especially the methods by which contacts are made between them. 9. No motor cells were found in the vagus ganglion of embryo or adult Scyllium, but they do occur on the post-trematic rami of all the branchial nerves. 10. A small profundus nerve was found to be present in Scyllium, though not in all individuals. 11. There is little evidence for the existence in fish of functionally antagonistic sympathetic and parasympathetic systems, and it is suggested that these systems in Tetrapods represent specializations within a single segmental set of visceral motor fibres, running primarily through the dorsal roots but coming to pass through the ventral roots in those segments in which the roots join.


A comparative study has been made of the mouthparts, mandibular mechanism, feeding mechanism and proventricular functional morphology of stomatopods. The mandibles have well developed, cusped, molar processes that extend into the proventriculus. In A. laevis , the mandibles retain a near-vertical axis of swing and a promotor-remotor rolling action. The mandibular musculature is basically similar to those of Chirocepalus, Anaspide, Paranaspides and Hemimysis but is uniquely modified for mastication. Functionally important differences in the stomatopod mandibular arrangement include the replacement of the transverse mandibular tendon with an extensive endophragmal bridge and the enlargement of muscles 4, 5 b and 6 (Manton’s terminology). The persistence in stomatopods of well developed molar processes and a primitive musculature is related to the use of the molar processes as the major masticatory structures within the proventriculus. Prior to ingestion, food is held between the incisor processes of the mandibles and torn apart by the maxillipeds. These fragments are passed into the proventriculus by the rolling action of the mandibles in combination with anterior movements of the labrum. Mastication is achieved by the powerful promotor-remotor rolling actions of the mandibular molar processes operated by enlarged muscles 3, 5 b and 6. Muscles 4, 5 a and 5 c are also large and provide strong transverse adduction of the incisor processes in the absence of a wide mandibular gape. Transverse movements of the incisor processes grip the food; they do not masticate it. Comparisons of the diet and structure of the mouthparts of A. laevis with those of Anchisquilla fasciata, Oratosquilla nepa, Harpissquilla stephensuni, Odontodactylus cultrifer and Gonodactylus graphurus indicate differences in trophic specialization both within and between the families Squillidae and Gonodactylidae. Feeding in stomatopods is subdivided into three phases: prey-capture by the raptorial limbs; manipulation by the third, fourth and fifth maxillipeds; and ingestion. Morphological and functional differences are associated with the ‘spearing’ and ‘smashing’ mechanisms of prey-capture in squillids and gonodactylids respectively. Similarly, the degree of food manipulation and associated movements of the maxillipeds differ between the two families. The palaeontological, ontogenetic and morphological evidence concerning the structure and function of feeding limbs in extinct and extant hoplocaridans is assessed. There is no evidence for a filter-feeding ancestor of the Hoplocarida. The lack of specialized endites or exopods in extinct and extant forms, the simple setal structure and arrangement in larval and adult stomatopods and a consideration of functionally possible intermediate forms indicate that stomatopods probably arose from simple raptatory ancestors. The anatomy and function of the proventriculus of A. laevis is described in detail. The cardiac stomach lacks masticatory ossicles. Mastication is achieved by the actions of the molar processes of the mandibles together with contractions of the gastric mill. The breakdown of food is aided by digestive juices pumped into the cardiac stomach from the digestive gland. The posterior cardiac plate is a complex filtratory structure through which all macerated food passes before entering the pyloric stomach. The dorsal pyloric stomach is vestigial and does not provide direct communication with the midgut. Finely suspended material from the cardiac stomach flows through the ampullae directly into the digestive gland. This posterior flow is a result of contractions of gastric muscles investing the wall of the cardiac stomach. Although partial filtration of material occurs during posterior flow, the material in both the upper and lower ampullary chambers is admixed in the postampullary chamber before passage into the digestive gland. The ampullae act primarily as a mechanism to filter digestive fluids flowing forwards from the digestive gland and to pump these into the cardiac stomach. Partially digested food particles are thus prevented from passing anteriorly into the cardiac stomach. The digestive cycle from ingestion to defaecation is phasic, characterized by discrete sequences of ampullary forward pumping, posterior flow from the cardiac stomach to the digestive glands and transfer of unassimilated particles into the midgut. The entire process occupies between 24 and 48 h in experimental animals. Indigestible fragments stored in the folds of the cardiac stomach are regurgitated when all digestible material has been pumped into the digestive gland. The structure and function of the proventriculus in the Hoplocarida is uniquely different from those of other Malacostraca. A.fasciata, 0 . nepa, H. stephnoi, 0 . cultrifer and G. graphurus are generally similar in pro ventricular structure to A. laevis. Minor differences in the structure of the ossicles of the cardiac stomach, cuticular processes and relative proportions of the cardiac and pyloric regions are related to trophic specializations and the size of the animal. Histological, histochemical and transmission electron microscope investigations of the digestive gland and midgut of A. laevis indicate that the digestive gland is the sole source of digestive enzymes and the major site of absorption and storage of the products of digestion. E-, R- and B-cells are present in the epithelial lining of the digestive gland. No F-cells were found. Secretion is holocrine, correlating the intermittent feeding and digestive cycle in stomatopods. The diagnostic characters of the Eumalacostraca and the available information on hoplocaridan evolutionary relationships are reviewed in the light of the information obtained in the present study. The removal of the Hoplocarida from the Eumalacostraca is supported and a polyphyletic origin of the Phyllocarida, Hoplocarida and Eumalacostraca is proposed.


PeerJ ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. e8005
Author(s):  
Mikhail M. Solovyev ◽  
Elena N. Kashinskaya ◽  
Nickolai A. Bochkarev ◽  
Karl B. Andree ◽  
Evgeniy Simonov

In the Coregonus lavaretus complex may be found lacustrine sympatric pairs, which serves as an intriguing model for studying different aspects of fish evolutionary biology. One such sympatric whitefish pair inhabits Teletskoye Lake (West Siberia, Russia) and includes a “large” form (Coregonus lavaretus pidschian (Gmelin, 1789)) and a “small” form (C. l. pravdinellus (Dulkeit, 1949)). C. l. pravdinellus has a narrow trophic specialization and feeds on zooplankton, whereas the diet of C. l. pidschian is based on benthic prey. In the present study we aimed to address the question of how the gut microbial community reflects the divergence in diet of a sympatric pair of whitefish. Studied samples included the mucosa and content were collected for cardiac and pyloric stomach, anterior, middle, and posterior intestine, but only mucosa was collected for the pyloric caeca. In addition, water, sediment, macrophyte (environmental microbiota) and invertebrate (microbiota of prey) samples were collected in the same location. The V3–V4 region of the 16S rRNA genes was chosen for microbiome analysis and the software PICRUSt used to estimate the difference functional roles of the microbiota. The number of OTUs and Chao1 index in mucosa and content of cardiac and pyloric stomach were significantly different between whitefish. Significant differences were observed between whitefish for content from different parts of the intestine in terms of OTU number and Chao1 indices, whereas for mucosa from the same parts of intestine these differences were absent. No significant differences were found for diversity estimates of mucosa and content of different parts of the gut (there were a few exceptions) between whitefish. The form of whitefish and the segment of the digestive system were factors with a significant determinative effect on the structure of the microbiota from gut mucosa and content. The most dominant phyla in mucosa and content of cardiac and pyloric stomach was Proteobacteria (57.0–84.0%) for both whitefish. Throughout the intestine of C. l. pidschian the dominant phyla in mucosa were Proteobacteria (38.8%) and Firmicutes (15.6%), whereas for C. l. pravdinellus–Tenericutes (49.6%) and Proteobacteria (28.1%). For both forms, the phylum Spirochaetes was found in a significant amount (20.0–25.0%) in the mucosa of the posterior intestine. While for the content obtained from anterior, middle and posterior intestines, the dominant bacterial phyla were the same as those described for mucosa from the same parts of the intestine for both whitefish. The bacterial community of the prey and environment was significantly different from bacterial communities found for all parts of the gut mucosa for both whitefish, with the exception of the mucosa of the cardiac stomach. According to PICRUSt the highest level of differences between whitefish at the L3 level were found for the intestinal mucosa (75.3%), whereas the lowest one was registered for stomach content (38.8%).


1995 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Englisch ◽  
V. Mastropietro ◽  
B. Tirozzi
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document