IMBECU   20882
INSTITUTO DE MEDICINA Y BIOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL DE CUYO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Functional anatomy of male copulatory organs of Pomacea canaliculata (Caenogastropoda, Ampullariidae)
Autor/es:
GIRAUD BILLOUD, MAXIMILIANO; GAMARRA-LUQUES, CARLOS; CASTRO-VAZQUEZ, ALFREDO
Revista:
ZOOMORPHOLOGY (BERLIN. PRINT)
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2013 vol. 132 p. 129 - 143
ISSN:
0720-213X
Resumen:
This study was aimed to investigate the functional morphology of copulation and sperm transfer in the invasive snail Pomacea canaliculata. Three-dimensional renderings of the male copulatory apparatus were made, and showed elaborate systems for innervation, and for hemolymph supply and drainage. A key component of the male copulatory apparatus is the penial sheath, which shows three specialized glands; the medial and distal glands may participate in adherence to the mantle cavity wall of the female during copulation. The outer gland has an epithelium composed of columnar cells with branched microvilli, mucous goblet cells and large granular secretory cells containing intragranular crystalloids, which produce an exocrine secretion during copulation. The interaction of male/female copulatory organs was studied in dissections of snap-frozen pairs. Sperm are left in the sperm pit, at the end of the pallial spermiduct. Afterwards, the muscular action of the penial bulb takes the sperm up to the vermiform penis, which slides from the penial pouch into the central groove of the penial sheath, and it later emerges through a T-shaped sulcus of this structure and enters the female vagina. Then it climbs through the capsule duct and its tip reaches the proximity of the seminal receptacle. A model of copulation and sperm transfer is presented on the basis of the new findings and on published literature.