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On the Microanatomy of the Cephalic Nervous System of Nereidae (Polychaeta), with a Preliminary Discussion of Some Earlier Theories on the Segmentation of the Polychaete Brain
Author(s) -
Orrhage Lars
Publication year - 1993
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.1463-6395.1993.tb01231.x
Subject(s) - polychaete , biology , appendage , commissure , nervous system , annelid , neuroscience , anatomy , central nervous system , zoology , ecology
Earlier papers dealing with the microanatomy of the nereid brain have been studied. On this basis a re‐investigation of the cephalic nervous system and of the innervation and homologues of the anterior end appendages of these animals appeared necessary: the existing literature proved insufficient for detailed comparisons with other polychaete families and many earlier statements were quite contradictory. In the present paper, the brain commissures and the innervation of, inter alia, the antennae and the palps of Neanthes virens and Nereis pelagica are described. Special attention was paid to the roots of the circum‐oesophageal connectives and the ganglia in this part of the nervous system. The results, summarized in schematic diagrams and tables, are compared with corresponding observations in 14 other polychaete families. In a discussion of the architecture of the polychaete nervous system as a phylogenetic instrument, the supposed segmentation of the polychaete brain is questioned and the idea that the configuration of the polychaete nervous system offers support to the cyclomer theory is rejected. Other conclusions concerning the relationships within the Polychaeta are pointed out.

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