Aporocotyle simplex (Odhner, 1900)

Poddubnaya, Larisa G., Hemmingsen, Willy & MacKenzie, Ken, 2023, Digestive system of the marine blood fluke, Aporocotyle simplex (Odhner, 1900) (Digenea: Aporocotylidae) with consideration of the digenean digestive morphology, Zoologischer Anzeiger 305, pp. 11-22 : 12

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jcz.2023.05.003

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10375355

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CA3B6F-F337-FFCD-FF82-D2B1FB8BC6D4

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Aporocotyle simplex
status

 

3.1. The anterior foregut of A. simplex View in CoL

With SEM, the anterior extremity of the A. simplex body has an anterior depression opening into the mouth cavity ( Fig. 1A View Fig ). In LM

Fig. 1B and C View Fig the long esophagus surrounded by the compact cellular masses, which extend up to the bifurcation of the H-shaped caecum, may be clearly seen, with shorter right and left anterior caeca and longer right and left posterior caeca, which end near the posterior extremity ( Fig. 1B View Fig ). In TEM longitudinal sections, the mouth cavity is funnelshaped ( Fig. 1D–F View Fig ), and the ciliated sensory endings are located around the mouth cavity ( Fig. 1E View Fig ). The syncytial lining of the anterior foregut is continuous with the distal syncytial tegumental cytoplasm of the body and both have similar cytoplasmic inclusions, electron-dense tegumental bodies and vesicular inclusions ( Fig. 1E and H View Fig ). The syncytial lining of the body and anterior foregut is surrounded by thin basal lamina and a thick extracellular basal matrix separates the syncytial cytoplasm from the underlying muscle fibres; their luminal surface bears irregular knob-like outgrowths ( Fig. 1E and H View Fig ). Behind the mouth cavity, the foregut syncytial lining (about 15–22 μm in the length) is surrounded by circular and radial muscle fibres ( Fig. 1D, F, G View Fig ). Directly beneath the extracellular matrix surrounding this foregut region (muscular anterior foregut), circular muscle fibres are arranged into 8–10 isolated bands on each canal side ( Fig. 1D–G View Fig ). Radial muscle fibres appear to run between the circular bands ( Fig. 1E, F, I View Fig ). These radial fibres represent the branchings of two powerful radial bands of antero-lateral orientation situated on both sides of this foregut region ( Fig. 1D F, G View Fig ). The distal margins of the radial muscles are attached by hemidesmosomes to the canal extracellular matrix ( Fig. 1I View Fig ). The muscle fibres of the anterior foregut are supplied with nerve fibres ( Fig. 1F View Fig ). Some deep lateral folds of the distal epithelial layer may be observed along the anterior foregut ( Fig. 1E, F, G View Fig ).

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