Spermiogenesis in Thysaniezia ovilla begins with the appearance of a differentiation zone equipped with peripheral microtubules, surrounded by arched membranes and containing two parallel centrioles surrounded by electron dense granular material. One of the centrioles aborts, the other gives rise to a flagellum which quickly grows in the cytoplasmic extension in which the nucleus migrates and protein granules form. During the nuclear migration crested-like bodies appear among the peripheral microtubules in the differentiation zone. The Th. ovilla spermatozoon is filiform. One of its extremities, which we show to be anterior, exhibits two helicoidal crested-like bodies, surrounded by electron dense material resembling an acrosome. Cortical microtubules run along almost the whole length of the spermatozoon. The cytoplasm has no mitochondria and contains protein granules. The axoneme is of the 9 + '1' pattern. It stops before reaching the posterior extremity of the gamete. The nucleus is wrapped round the axoneme, in the middle region of the spermatozoon. It generally stops before reaching the posterior extremity of the flagellum. This study has enabled us to describe precisely the orientation of the spermatozoon of cestodes in general.

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