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An Ultrastructural Account of Otoplanid Turbellaria Neuroanatomy II. The statocyst design: evolutionary and functional implications
Author(s) -
Ferrero Enrico Antonio,
Bedini Celina,
Lanfranchi Alberto
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
acta zoologica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.414
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1463-6395
pISSN - 0001-7272
DOI - 10.1111/j.1463-6395.1985.tb00826.x
Subject(s) - turbellaria , biology , anatomy , ultrastructure , flatworm , coelom , zoology
The statocyst architecture in the three otoplanid species Notocaryoturbella bigermaria Lanfranchi, 1969, Otoplana truncaspina Lanfranchi, 1969 and Parotoplanella heterorhabditica Lanfranchi, 1969 is compared. Common features are: (a) a fibrillar collagen‐like, 0.2 μm thick, investing capsule continuous with the brain capsule; (b) an inner wall made up of six or more flattened and overlapping parietal cells; (c) a statolith forming cell hanging from the dorsal side down in the lumen, with a large statolith containing vacuole; (d) a bilateral pair of spindle shaped accessory cell groups, adjoining the statolith cell and sending projections to the wall—nerve projections run through the capsule; (e) one accessory cell enveloping the other cells of the group has a filament containing cytoplasm, the filaments coverging into a hemidesmosome making contact with a projection coming from a parietal cell; (f) muscles from the longitudinal body musculature inserting onto the capsule externally. The lack of ciliary structures differentiates the turbellarian statocyst from the majority of invertebrate statocysts. The developmental origin, the phylogenetical meaning and the functional and adaptive value of the statocyst in Turbellaria are here commented on.

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