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Journal of morphology (1931), 2021-01, Vol.282 (1), p.98-114
2021
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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Microorganization of ovaries and oogenesis of Haplotaxis sp. (Clitellata: Haplotaxidae)
Ist Teil von
  • Journal of morphology (1931), 2021-01, Vol.282 (1), p.98-114
Ort / Verlag
Hoboken, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Quelle
Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Ovaries of Haplotaxis sp. were studied in active and nonactive states, that is, in a sexually mature specimen and in specimens outside of the reproductive period. Two pairs of ovaries were found in segments XI and XII. Especially in the nonactive state, they were in close contact with copulatory glands. Each ovary was composed of germ cells interconnected with syncytial cysts, which were enveloped by a layer of somatic cells. Within cysts each germ cell had one ring canal connecting it to the common anuclear cytoplasmic mass called a cytophore. During oogenesis clustering germ cells differentiated into nurse cells and oocytes; thus, the oogenesis was recognized as meroistic. Vitellogenic oocytes were detached from the ovaries and continued yolk absorption within the body cavity. Because recent studies have shown the variety of ovaries and germ line cyst organization in clitellates and suggest their evolutionary conservatism at the family or subfamily level, the data presented here can be valid in understanding the phylogenetic relationships among Clitellata. In this context, ovaries found in Haplotaxis sp. resembled those of the “Tubifex” type. “Tubifex” ovaries are characteristic for numerous microdrile taxa (tubificines, limnodriloidines, propappids, lumbriculids, and leech‐like branchiobdellids) and can be regarded as the primary character for these Clitellata in which germ‐line cysts are formed during early oogenesis. As the family Haplotaxidae is currently considered to be paraphyletic and the species studied here belongs to Haplotaxidae sensu stricto, our results support the close relationship of Haplotaxidae sensu stricto to the clade consisting of Lumbriculidae, Branchiobdellida, and Hirudinida, in which lumbriculids are sister to the latter two. In Haplotaxis sp., the ovary (purple) was in close contact with copulatory gland (red). On the ovary surface, a thin envelope made up of somatic cells is present; short arrows indicate somatic cell nuclei. Copulatory gland is composed of a secretory part (scg) and a duct (dcg) that opens at the ventral side of the body wall. In the active ovary, a multicellular germ‐line cyst with the developmental gradient of germ cells is present (anterior end on the left, posterior end on the right). Clustering germ cells differentiate into nurse cells (nc) and oocytes. Young previtellogenic oocytes (pvo) protrude at the ovary surface. Each germ cell has one intercellular bridge (long arrows) connecting it to the common elongated and branched mass of cytoplasm termed the cytophore (cy). Such ovary micromorphology is broadly similar to the “Tubifex” ovary type that is known from several other microdrile taxa. It seems that the “Tubifex” ovary type is the basal morphological type of ovaries in microdriles and allied taxa. Our study also supports the close relation of haplotaxids sensu stricto to the lumbriculids + branchiobdellids + hirudinids clade.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISSN: 0362-2525
eISSN: 1097-4687
DOI: 10.1002/jmor.21285
Titel-ID: cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_2452092262
Format
Schlagworte
Annelida, cyst, germ‐line, nurse cells, oocyte

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