scholarly journals Ultrastructure of the buccal capsule in the adult female Anguillicoloides crassus (Nematoda: Anguillicolidae)

2010 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 170-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bruňanská ◽  
H. Fagerholm ◽  
F. Moravec ◽  
Z. Vasilková

Abstract The fine structure of the buccal capsule of the adult female nematode Anguillicoloides crassus (Spirurina) was studied for the first time. Results are based on serial section (longitudinal and transverse) light and transmission electron microscopy. The buccal capsule of A. crassus is a cuticular-lined structure. It can be divided into three main parts: cheilostom, gymnostom and stegostom. The cheilostom is the anterior region of the buccal capsule with the cuticular lining continuous with the body wall cuticle and underlain by epidermal syncytia. The gymnostom is a cuticular region with portions of it very electron dense and underlain by arcade syncytia. A dense circumoral cylinder together with the circumpharyngeal ring represent the prominent characters of the gymnostom. The stegostom is formed by anterior pharyngeal cuticle underlain by muscular radial cells and epithelial marginal cells. The cephalic cuticle of A. crassus makes a direct contact with the pharyngeal cuticle at the base of the circumoral cylinder, within a circumpharyngeal ring containing projections of pharyngeal muscular and marginal cells. The circumoral cylinder, circumpharyngeal ring and pharynx are connected to the body epidermis by junctional complexes. The buccal capsule includes occasionally 3 projections of the pharynx evidently observed in serial cross sections. These ultrastructural characters may provide useful data for comparative, functional as well as evolutionary studies within the Chromadorea.

Zoosymposia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-70
Author(s):  
EMERIC GILLET ◽  
BERTRAND LEFEBVRE ◽  
VERONIQUE GARDIEN ◽  
EMILIE STEIMETZ ◽  
CHRISTOPHE DURLET ◽  
...  

Bolboporites is an enigmatic Ordovician cone-shaped fossil, the precise nature and systematic affinities of which have been controversial over almost two centuries. For the first time, a wide range of techniques (CT-scan, SEM, cathodoluminescence, XPL, UV epifluorescence, EBSD, FT-IR and XRF spectrometry) were applied to well-preserved specimens of Bolboporites from Norway and Russia. Our main finding confirms its echinoderm affinities, as shown by its stereomic microstructure and by the first definitive evidence of its monocrystalline nature. Each cone consists in a single, microporous calcitic crystal with a narrow longitudinal internal canal. These results are combined with all previous data on Bolboporites to critically discuss five alternative interpretations of this fossil, namely theca, basal cone, spine, columnal, and holdfast, respectively. The most parsimonious scenario considers Bolboporites as an isolated spine, which was articulated in life by a short biserial appendage to the body wall of an unknown echinoderm, possibly of echinozoan affinities.


2013 ◽  
Vol 27 (19) ◽  
pp. 1341018 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. LIANG ◽  
L. L. HE ◽  
Z. Q. SHEN ◽  
D. L. ZHANG

Europium doped CaAl 2 O 4 nanocones have been grown first time by thermal evaporation method. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM) were used to analyze the morphology, size and crystal structure of the nanocones. The body of the nanocones are about 2–20 μm in length and their diameters are 200 nm to 1 μm at one end and tapers off to a ~ 40–200 nm at the tip end. The as-synthesized nanocones are single crystalline in monoclinic structure and grow along the [010] direction and the normal direction of (100) and (001). The room temperature photoluminescence (PL) and cathodoluminescence (CL) spectrum measurement reveals that CaAl 2 O 4: Eu 2+ nanocones emit light at about 440 nm.


2016 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-96
Author(s):  
Atanu Bhattacharyya ◽  
Shashidhar Viraktamath ◽  
Fani Hatjina ◽  
Santanu Bhattacharyya ◽  
Bhaktibhavana Rajankar ◽  
...  

Abstract The presence of nanoparticles on the body of the honeybee Apis dorsata Fabricius, was investigated for the first time to better understand the bee’s behaviour. These have been observed by using Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and confirmed by Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). Our study clearly denotes that the Indian rock honey bee Apis dorsata possess calcium silicate and calcium phosphate nanoparticles on its body surface of 5-50 nm in diameter. In particular, the nanoparticles on the abdomen and thorax of A. dorsata have an average diameter of about 10 nanometers and they are smaller than those found on wings of the same bees which are about 20 nanometers. The nanoparticles found are different of the ones previously observed on honey bees or other insects. The origin and role of these natural nanoparticles on the body of the Indian rock bee need to be to be further investigated; more research in the subject might raise important aspects in relation to the conservation of these unique pollinators.


1974 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Wright

The anterior alimentary tract of Capillaria hepatica participates in formation of the buccal capsule and shows different cellular organization along its length. The buccal capsule is composed of both invaginated body-wall cuticle (stomodeum) and the expanded anterior esophageal cuticle and contains a small dorsal stylet. Suction action of the buccal capsule is controlled by two sets of buccal dilator muscles and three esophageal suspensor muscles. The anteriormost esophagus consists of three elongate marginal cells and three units of radial tissue. At the level of the nerve ring, radial tissue divides into six units, two between each marginal cell. Posterior to the nerve ring, the esophagus is surrounded by a muscle sheath that continues for the rest of the esophagus. Radial tissue has both longitudinal and radial myofilaments, as does the midregion of marginal cells. Marginal cells terminate some distance posterior to the nerve ring and radial-tissue units fuse to form a single cytoplasmic mass around the cuticle. Posteriorly, myofilaments are reduced from the radial tissue. Peristalsis of the esophagus is probably maintained by the outer muscle sheath. Three nerve cells are located in the wall of the esophagus, posterior to die level of marginal cells, and send processes both anteriorly and posteriorly. Synapses between axons and radial tissue have been identified only in the anterior esophagus. Because of the degree of organization of myofilaments, and the presence of sacroplasmic reticulum diads and synapses, it is suggested that the region of the esophagus just posterior to the nerve ring may serve as a pacemaker region for esophageal activity. Three satellite cells located in the anterior esophagus may represent vestigial stylet retractor muscles.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. A. Dick ◽  
K. A. Wright

The head region of the pinworm Syphacia obvelata (Rudolphi, 1802) has been examined to determine the nature of modification of the cuticle responsible for, or associated with, lips and buccal capsule, cephalic papillae and amphids, cephalic inflations, and cervical alae. The median zone of the cuticle was found to be the most modified and variation in the extent and distribution of striated material is compatible with its proposed structural role. The variations found are probably related to compensation for stresses that may develop in the cuticle during the complex movements of the head end. Lips are only inconspicuous expansions of the body wall cuticle, while esophageal cuticle is strikingly different in appearance. It is proposed to refer to all regions of the mouth cavity bounded by both the lips and esophagus as the buccal capsule while only the limited region bounded by body wall cuticle may be referred to as stoma. A mechanism involving three groups of intrahypodermal cytoskeletal filaments attached to the tips of somatic muscles, esophagus, and cuticle is proposed to move the lips.


1945 ◽  
Vol s2-85 (340) ◽  
pp. 343-389
Author(s):  
KARM NARAYAN BAHL

1. In an earthworm, as in most aquatic invertebrates, urea and ammonia form the main bulk of nitrogenous excretion and there is no trace of uric acid. These excretory products are first formed in the body-wall and gut-wall, pass therefrom into the coelomic fluid and blood, and are thence eliminated to the exterior by the nephridia. In Pheretima urea and ammonia pass out from the nephridia to the exterior either directly through the skin or through the two ends of the gut. 2. Ammonia and urea have been estimated for the first time in the blood, coelomic fluid, and urine of the earthworm. It has been shown that blood is not a mere carrier of oxygen, as Rogers believed, but that it also takes part in carrying urea and ammonia from the body-wall and gut-wall to the nephridia. The blood of the earthworm does not coagulate, indicating absence of fibrinogen. 3. The role of the nephridia in excretion and osmotic regulation has been determined. A comparison of the osmotic pressures of blood, coelomic fluid, and urine shows that the coelomic fluid is hypotonic to the blood, and that urine is markedly hypotonic both to the blood and coelomic fluid. The protein and chloride contents of the blood, coelomic fluid, and urine have been determined with a view to elucidate the differences in their osmotic pressures. It has been found that the urine contains the merest trace of protein, but that the amount of proteins in the blood is about eight times that contained in the plasma of the coelomic fluid. On the contrary, the chloride content of the coelomic fluid-plasma is about 60 per cent, higher than that of the blood-plasma. 4. The part of urine which is excreted from the blood is probably a protein-free filtrate, but the nephridia reabsorb all the proteins passing into them with the coelomic fluid-plasma. Similarly, there is a reabsorption of chlorides on a large scale from the initial nephridial filtrate during its passage through the nephridia. 5. A convenient method has been devised for collecting urine of the earthworm, which has made it possible to collect as much as 25 c.c. of urine in two and a half hours. The rate of excretion of the urine has been determined and it has been found that in an earthworm living in water the outflow of urine in twenty-four hours must be more than 45 per cent, of its body-weight. 6. It seems that an earthworm, when submerged in water, can live like a fresh water animal, and its gut acts as an osmoregulatory organ in addition to the nephridia, but in the soil it lives like a terrestrial animal and the osmo-regulatory function is adequately discharged by the nephridia alone which reabsorb chlorides and proteins, and are also active in the conservation of water. In Pheretima and other earthworms with an enteronephric type of nephridial system, the gut takes a prominent part in reabsorbing the water of the nephridial fluid and conserving water to its maximum extent. 7. The phagocytic section (ciliated middle tube) believed by Schneider to be absent in the nephridia of Pheretima has been shown to be distinctly present; it is also present in the nephridia of Lampito , Eutyphoeus, and Tonoscolex. The brownish yellow granules characteristic of this phagocytic section form a heavy deposit in the septal nephridia of Pheretima posthuma, heavier than that described in Lumbricus. The deposit increases with the age of the earthworm and forms a ‘storage excretory product’. 8. Spectroscopic examination has revealed that these brownish yellow granules, so far believed to be of guanine, are really blood-pigment granules, since a pyridine solution of them shows the two characteristic bands of haemochromogen. With regard to the blood-pigment, the nephridia function as ‘storage kidneys’. 9. The mechanism of nephridial excretion of the earthworm can be analysed into processes of filtration, reabsorption, and chemical transformation. 10. It is probable that the dorsal and ventral phagocytic organs of earthworms are additional excretory organs.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 689-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Wright

The histology of the oesophageal region of the plant parasitic nematode Xiphinema index Thorne and Allen, 1950 has been studied in cross sections of KMnO4-fixed nematodes. The stoma consists of cuticle, which is of different types anterior and posterior to the guide ring, and its underlying hypodermis. The latter tissue is connected through the dorsal, ventral, and lateral hypodermal chords to the interchordal hypodermis of the body wall. It is suggested that the dilator buccae muscles may act to close the stoma around the odontostyle. Stylet retractor muscles are identified. Observations on the guide ring complex support the interpretation that the guide sheath is an eversible portion of the posterior stoma cuticle. The odontostyle is embedded within the tip of the extension, which appears to be similar in composition and continuous with the posterior stoma cuticle. Cellular circumoesophageal membranes occur around the oesophagus. Those surrounding the oesophageal bulb are modified as muscle cells.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (11) ◽  
pp. 2821-2833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl M. Bartlett ◽  
R. C. Anderson

Subspecies of Pelecitus fulicaeatrae (Diesing, 1861) Lopez-Néyra, 1956 are proposed for the first time. The parasite in the original type host, i.e., the Common Coot (Fulica atra L.) in Great Britain, becomes the nominotypical subspecies, namely Pelecitus fulicaeatrae fulicaeatrae (Diesing, 1861) n.subsp.; it requires further taxonomic study. Subspecies in two sympatric North American hosts are described, and transmission by lice (Mallophaga: Amblycera) is suggested to have played a role in their evolution. Pelecitus fulicaeatrae americanae n.subsp. in the American Coot (Fulica americana Gmelin) has narrower lateral alae at midbody in the male, tighter helical twisting and more rotations in the body of the adult female, and a vulva that tends to be closer to the end of the oesophagus than that of Pelecitus fulicaeatrae grisegenae n.subsp. in the Red-necked Grebe (Podiceps grisegena (Boddaert)). Development of P. f. americanae was followed in experimentally infected American Coots. At 20 days postinfection, worms had migrated to the definitive site in the ankles and developed to the adult stage; these worms were sexually immature and also differed in other morphologic ways from mature specimens. Worms at 210 and 265 d resembled those from wild-caught coots, and females contained microfilariae. Pelecitus f. americanae is reported for the first time in Wisconsin, North Dakota, and California and probably is widespread in coots in North America. Both nesting and wintering coots contained three age-classes of adult female worms (too young to produce microfilariae, producing microfilariae, senescent), suggesting that transmission is not restricted to any particular period during the year. In general, no evidence of infection was apparent upon external examination of intact wild-caught infected coots, whereas ankles of intact wild-caught infected grebes were frequently swollen. Upon internal examination of coots, a visible response to worms was also generally not observed. In a few coots, however, worms were within soft, thin-walled capsules and histologic examination revealed chronic proliferative tenosynovitis.


Parasitology ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 559-569 ◽  
Author(s):  
George O. Poinar

After penetrating through the body wall into the haemocoel of Bradysia paupera, the fertilized female of Tipius sciarae increased in size and slowly expelled the enlarging uterine cells through the vulva.Within 7 days of penetration, the females were mature and began laying eggs into the haemocoel of the host. The eggs hatched in 3 days and, within 2 weeks, the host–s body was swarming with juvenile nematodes. The juveniles moulted three times in the body cavity of the host and 4th-stage forms emerged through ruptures in the intestine or body wall (in larval hosts) or were deposited on the surface of the soil (by adult female flies). They then moulted to adult forms while remaining ensheathed in their last juvenile cuticle, mated, and the fertilized infective females were ready to enter a new host.Most parasitized fly larvae died before reaching the pupal stage but some emerged as adults, still carrying the nematodes within them. All parasitized adult flies were sterile. Infested larvae had smaller fat bodies and adult histoblasts than normal larvae and took twice as long to develop.Preliminary tests suggested that this nematode may be useful in controlling sciarid gnats in glasshouses.T. sciarae (Bovien) and T. gibbosus (Leuckart) were compared.This work was done at Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts, England, while the author held a postdoctoral grant from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. I thank Mr F. G. W. Jones for a place in the Nematology Department, Dr Audrey Shepherd for supplying the New Blue R stain, Dr J. B. Goodey for advice, and Dr K. Lindhardt, Denmark, for the loaning of the late Dr Bovien–s slides of T. sciarae.


2019 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
Author(s):  
I.M. Podvyaznaya ◽  
A.A. Petrov ◽  
K.V. Galaktionov

Abstract Bunocotyle progenetica is a hemiuroid digenean whose sexual adults become fully developed and lay their eggs inside the rediae in the molluscan host. In this study, the fine structure of the germinal mass, brood cavity and birth canal in the B. progenetica rediae was examined using transmission electron and confocal microscopy. The large germinal mass attached to the body wall has a cellular composition typical for this organ. The characteristic traits of this germinal mass are weakly developed supporting tissue and the presence of deep lacunae opening into the brood cavity. These lacunae presumably participate in feeding the deeply lying embryos and facilitate their release into the brood cavity. The germinal mass is also characterized by intensive degeneration of cellular elements, which may represent a mechanism controlling the offspring number, limited in this species by the size of the redial brood cavity. The brood-cavity lining consists of flattened cells bearing lamellar projections and is connected anteriorly with the epithelium of the birth canal. The brood-cavity musculature, which is well developed in other hemiuroid digeneans, is significantly reduced in B. progenetica, most likely because their cystophorous cercariae remain inside the rediae, removing the need for muscle contractions pushing them through the brood cavity. The birth canal comprises three regions distinguished by the structure of the lining and muscle arrangement. The comparison of rediae of B. progenetica with parthenitae of other digeneans has shown that the organization of the redial reproductive apparatus in this species may have been influenced by life-cycle modification.


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