Larvae removed at one-day intervals from laboratory infected intermediate hosts provided material for a comparative study of presomal development in Prosthorhynchus formosus (Van Cleave, '18) Travassos, '26, Prosthenorchis elegans (Diesing, 1851) Travassos, '15, and Moniliformis dubius Meyer, '33. Acanthellae begin development soon after entering intermediate hosts' hemocoels, and by the 18th day all three species possess three nuclear masses representing primordia of the proboscis, proboscis receptacle and ganglion, and trunk musculature and genitalia. Presomal development of P. formosus and P. elegans results in structures concurring with morphology of other adult palaeacanthocephalans and archiacanthocephalans. Development of M. dubius, however, differs from that of other archiacanthocephalans in that the muscular receptacle wall lines the entire surface of the nonmuscular sheath, failing to form a ventral cleft characteristic of other archiacanthocephalans. Unlike receptacle protrusor muscles of other archiacanthocephalan species, those of M. dubius spiral around the receptacle as they extend posteriad to attach individually to a pouchlike, muscular thickening at the receptacle's base. These protrusor muscles are distinct from the receptacle wall, as attested by their development alongside neck retractor muscles, not from the receptacle primordium, and the manner in which they are left to trail behind the receptacle when it is drawn anteriorly into the proboscis during larval development. The proboscis receptacle of M. dubius should not be thought of as being double-walled, as envisioned by previous workers.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmor.1051450105DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

development prosthorhynchus
8
prosthorhynchus formosus
8
prosthenorchis elegans
8
moniliformis dubius
8
presomal development
8
receptacle
8
proboscis receptacle
8
receptacle wall
8
protrusor muscles
8
development
7

Similar Publications

Larvae removed at one-day intervals from laboratory infected intermediate hosts provided material for a comparative study of presomal development in Prosthorhynchus formosus (Van Cleave, '18) Travassos, '26, Prosthenorchis elegans (Diesing, 1851) Travassos, '15, and Moniliformis dubius Meyer, '33. Acanthellae begin development soon after entering intermediate hosts' hemocoels, and by the 18th day all three species possess three nuclear masses representing primordia of the proboscis, proboscis receptacle and ganglion, and trunk musculature and genitalia. Presomal development of P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!