Features of the architectonics of the microstructure of the primary remex of Owls (Strigiformes) due to the specifics of the flight

Author(s):  
E. O. Fadeeva

Conducted electron microscopic investigation of the primary remex fine structure of thirteen species of Owls (Strigiformes), using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). It is shown that Owls (Strigiformes) have a number of specific primary remex microstructural characteristics. First of all, these are the features of the structure of the pennaceous barb: a cross section configuration, a pith architectonics on the cross section and longitudinal sections, a cuticular structur of the barb. A number of the unique features in the microstructure of the vanules of the pennaceous barb have been found for the first time (at the scanning electron microscope level, at a large SEM magnification). First of all, these are the structural features of the distal barbules and the structure of the apical portion of the barb with the elongated proximal barbules and the distal barbules tightly contiguous to the ramus and closed with each other. Mentioned characteristics make for the thick velvet-like dorsal surface of the vane and the presence of a complex of peculiar “bunches” (fringes) forming the cleft edge (a fringed edge) of the inner vane – exceptionally specific adaptive characteristics in Strigiformes. Рresentenced original research results suggest that Owls (Strigiformes) have a number specific microstructural characteristics of the primary remex and also a number of the unique features in the microstructure of the primary remex which reflecting the ecological and morphological adaptations conditioned by the flight specificity.

Author(s):  
M.D. Graham

The recent development of the scanning electron microscope has added great impetus to the study of ultrastructural details of normal human ossicles. A thorough description of the ultrastructure of the human ossicles is required in order to determine changes associated with disease processes following medical or surgical treatment.Human stapes crura were obtained at the time of surgery for clinical otosclerosis and from human cadaver material. The specimens to be examined by the scanning electron microscope were fixed immediately in the operating room in a cold phosphate buffered 2% gluteraldehyde solution, washed with Ringers, post fixed in cold 1% osmic acid and dehydrated in graded alcohol. Specimens were transferred from alcohol to a series of increasing concentrations of ethyl alcohol and amyl acetate. The tissue was then critical point dried, secured to aluminum stubs and coated with gold, approximately 150A thick on a rotating stage in a vacuum evaporator. The specimens were then studied with the Kent-Cambridge S4-10 Scanning Electron Microscope at an accelerating voltage of 20KV.


2016 ◽  
Vol 90 (4) ◽  
pp. 741-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian L. Hoffman ◽  
Scott A. Hageman ◽  
Gregory D. Claycomb

AbstractAlthough Ptychodus teeth are well known in Late Cretaceous marine deposits in North America and Europe and a few specimens with jaw elements have been discovered, the taxonomic position of the shark genus Ptychodus is enigmatic due to the lack of preservation of diagnostic material other than teeth. These sharks possessed a pavement dentition suited to a diet of hard-shelled macroinvertebrates (durophagy), leading several studies to variously describe Ptychodus as a batoid, a hybodont shark, or a selachimorph. Members of the Selachimorpha share one dental synapomorphy, a triple-layered enameloid (TLE) consisting of an outer shiny-layered enameloid (SLE) of randomly oriented hydroxyapatite crystallites, a middle layer of parallel-bundled enameloid (PBE), and an inner layer of tangled-bundled enameloid (TBE). Batoids and hybodonts both have teeth with single crystallite enameloid (SCE). We examined teeth from Ptychodus collected from the Lincoln Limestone of the Greenhorn Formation of Barton County, Kansas, and compared their enameloid ultrastructure with that of a Carboniferous hybodontiform and the Cretaceous lamniform shark Squalicorax curvatus Williston, 1900. Scanning electron microscopic examination of Ptychodus shows that crystallite bundling in the form of a TLE is evident in these teeth. The PBE is most apparent at transverse enameloid ridges of Ptychodus teeth. Columns of dentine penetrate into the tooth enameloid, and the crystallites near the dentine are randomly oriented. These observations bolster the argument that Ptychodus is a genus of highly specialized selachimorph shark, rather than a hybodont or batoid.


1997 ◽  
Vol 3 (S2) ◽  
pp. 113-114
Author(s):  
C. Baker ◽  
E.D. Green

The large eggs of Haematopinus phacochoeri are found attached to the long dorsal mane bristles of the diurnal warthog. The eggs are generally exposed to great environmental stresses such as excessive sunlight and temperature as well as the occasional plunge under water or mud during grooming. This investigation was therefore undertaken to determine how the eggs of H. phococoeri are adapted to tolerate the various environmental changes it is constantly exposed to. To our knowledge no other SEM study on the eggs of this species has been performed.Specimens still attached to the bristles were fixed in 70% ethanol, dehydrated and ultrasonically cleaned. Some eggs were longitudinally sectioned with a razor blade to expose the chorionic layers. The eggs were critical point dried in liquid CO2, mounted and viewed by means of a Leica Stereoscan 420 scanning electron microscope.The general structure of the shell consists of two layers of chorion, i.e. the endo-and exochorion. These two layers are attached at the pre-formed line of weakness at the operculum and again near the hydropyle. Elsewhere these two layers are completely separated by the respiratory layer.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (5) ◽  
pp. 647-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard R. Baum

This paper describes and evaluates the results of a scanning electron microscopic study of the sculpture of the surfaces of caryopses, glumes, lemmas, awn columns, and awn subules of Avena fatua, normal cultivated oats (A. sativa), fatuoids, and F1 hybrids A. fatua × sativa. Only qualitative differences were sought, and none were detected in the glumes and on the caryopses. The prickles on the lemmas, on the awn columns, and on the awn subules all appear in two character states. In the case of the lemmas one state is found in the normal cultivated oats, fatuoids, and F1 hybrids, and the other in A. fatua. On the other hand in the awn subules one state is found in the normal cultivated oats and the other in fatuoids, F1 hybrids, and A. fatua, while in the awn columns one state occurs in cultivated oats and the other in A. fatua, but in the F1 hybrids and fatuoids both states occur. These findings provide taxonomic evidence additional to that described earlier based on lodicules coupled with traditional characters.


1997 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 157-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcelo FAVA ◽  
Ii-Sei WATANABE ◽  
Flávio FAVA DE MORAES ◽  
Luciane RIBEIRO DE REZENDE SUCASAS DA COSTA

Under the scanning electron microscope, the characteristics of the buccal surface enamel of human non-erupted deciduous molars were evaluated after using 15, 30, and 45 seconds of phosphoric acid etching time. The teeth were extracted, kept in a 70% alcohol solution and later dehydrated and metallized for analysis with the scanning electron microscope JEOL, JSM-6.100. The in vitro experiment with 35% phosphoric acid revealed that there is a tendency of predominance of interprismatic enamel dissolution or type II pattern with 15 and 45 seconds etching time. The dissolution of the interprismatic enamel was more pronounced when an acid etching time of 45 seconds was used. The enamel surface demonstrated type I and type II patterns when acid etching time was 30 seconds


Development ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-227
Author(s):  
Leszek Kordylewski

The development of the paraxial mesoderm in tadpoles of Xenopus, Bufo and Rana was observed with a scanning electron microscope. In addition to examination of the differentiation of the surface and the interior of the somites, some attention was also paid to the transformation of the material of the neural crests and to the innervation of the developing myotome.


Author(s):  
K. Balasundaram ◽  
S. Sivagnanam ◽  
S. Paramasivan

The white pulp of the spleen in adult goats was thoroughly screened under the scanning electron microscope (VEGA3 TESCAN). The study revealed the presence of lymphoid and non-lymphoid cells. The T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes could morphologically be differentiated under the magnification of 8000 to 20000 times by Scanning electron microscopy. The changes in number of cells in relation to the age was also recorded. The peri arterial lymphatic sheath and its structural connections with Reticular cells and other non-lymphoid cells were clearly demonstrated. The types of lymphoid cells and their arrangement around the central arteries upto the marginal zones were observed in detail. A conclusion about the type of circulation in the spleen of goats was arrived after three dimentional observation of the tissue under scanning electron microscope.


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