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  • Turbellaria  (37)
  • Springer  (37)
  • American Institute of Physics
  • 2010-2014
  • 1985-1989  (37)
  • 1940-1944
  • 1986  (37)
Collection
Publisher
  • Springer  (37)
  • American Institute of Physics
Years
  • 2010-2014
  • 1985-1989  (37)
  • 1940-1944
Year
  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; land planarians ; copulatory organ development ; systematics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Seven specimens of Rhynchodemus sylvaticus (Leidy) collected from a variety of localities in the US and having variously developed copulatory organs are believed to represent stages in the development of the copulatory apparatus. Four specimens were juveniles with under-developed male components, one specimen had a well-developed female atrium and small male component, and two specimens were mature with a male organ twice the size of the female part. In early stages, the male component had sperm ducts, seminal vesicle, and narrow atrium; more mature stages had a considerable elongated atrium with thick folds in its muscularized wall, a massive muscular bulbus; and a sigmoid ejaculatory duct opening into the large bulbar cavity. Morphological features of mature male copulatory organs in all species of the genus Rhynchodemus are basically similar whereas external body features (color and number of dorsal stripes) of these same species differ.
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  • 2
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 165-173 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Proseriata ; ultrastructure ; copulatory organ ; hard structures
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The ultrastructure of male copulatory organs having a stylet has been studied in some genera of the Proseriata. Within the Monocelididae there was a variety of stylet-like hard structures. The stylet in Monocelis fusca was a differentiation of the basement membrane of the epithelium lining a penis-like muscular papilla. The penis papilla in Ectocotyla consisted of circular muscles surrounded by a thickened basement membrane and an epithelium. Archilopsis sp. and Archilina sp. with a duplex copulatory bulb, had a stylet within a spiny cirrus. The stylet in Archilopsis sp. was a cylindrical muscular protrusion with a thickened basement lamina that lined the cirrus lumen. The stylet structure in Archilina sp. was composed of four long spines which were derivatives of the basement membrane. In Ectocotyla multitesticulata and Dupliminona corsicana, the accessory prostatoid organ was provided with a hook-shaped stylet that was differentiated in the basement membrane and of which the material was continuous with the fibrous matrix between the muscles of the prostatic bulb. The stylet and needles in the Archimonocelis species were intracellular differentiations. The copulatory organ in Carenscoilia biforamen consisted of a tubiform stylet and four needles, all of which were also intracellular specializations. I consider copulatory hard structures in the Turbellaria to be taxonomically significant in terms of structure, differentiation, and location (whether subcellular, in the basement membrane, or intracellular).
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  • 3
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 181-188 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; wound healing ; regeneration ; [3H]T-autoradiography ; differentiation ; Macrostomida
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Using transmission electron microscopy and serial sections with light-microscopic autoradiography, I have investigated the ultrastructure of wound healing, the distribution of cells preparing for proliferation, and the fates of cells labelled with exogenous tritiated thymidine ([3H]T) in Microstomum lineare undergoing wound healing and regeneration. Immediately after decapitation the open wound was reduced to a minimum by strong contraction of circular muscle fibers. The wound epidermis was cellular, consisting of thin parts of epidermal cells from the epidermis around the wound. These epidermal cells maintained close adhesive contact with one another through zonulae adherentes and septate junctions. No proliferating cells were found in the old epidermis. The only cells taking up [3H]T were mesenchymal and gastrodermal neoblasts which proliferated and migrated towards the surface. The final epidermis was formed by conjunction of the wound epidermis and newly differentiated epidermal cells. Regeneration in Microstomum, in contrast to that of planarians, occurs mainly by morphallaxis, without the formation of a regeneration blastema, but also through continuous cell proliferation, migration, and differentiation.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Acoela ; histology ; cell proliferation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Autoradiography has been applied to two acoel turbellarians, Convoluta convoluta and Oxyposthia praedator, to determine the distribution and fate of proliferative cells. In C. convoluta, mitotic figures and nuclei that labelled with [3H]thymidine could be observed in the peripheral parenchyma but not in the middle zone of the central parenchyma. The time required for regeneration of physiologically competent digestive cells was about 10–15 days. In O. praedator, mitotic figures (in metaphase and telophase) were observed in the peripheral parenchyma while none were found in the epidermis either in untreated animals or after treatment with colchicine. Mitotic figures were found only rarely in the central parenchyma and only in its marginal zone. Autoradiographs of O. praedator demonstrated [3H]thymidine incorporation into both the nuclei and the cytoplasm of peripheral parenchymal cells. In the central parenchyma, no nuclei with primary labelling were observed. The digestive parenchyma of the acoels is regarded as a unique histological system involving both specialized cells of the central parenchyma and stem cells located in the peripheral parenchyma.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Dugesia ; gonad ; transplantation ; regeneration ; positional information
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The planarian Dugesia lugubris is a balanced hermaphrodite, meaning that male genetic factors are in equilibrium with female factors. Differentiation of the gonads is controlled by the region in which they develop. According to the classical theory of germ cell formation, these cells stem from neoblasts that are induced to differentiate by factors specific to the gonadal regions, factors presumably due to gradients formed by neurosecretory activity of the cephalic ganglia and longitudinal nerve cords. A more recently proposed theory holds that germ cells in regenerates originate not from neoblasts but from dedifferentiated cells and that characteristics of the gonadal regions are determined by direct interactions of cells here. Results of our experiments with homo- and autoplastic grafst support the classical theory. Prepharyngeal portions grafted onto posterior body portions retained their ability to maintain or induce development of ovaries. Postpharyngeal portions grafted onto anterior portions produced only testes even though the brain developed normally in these regenerates. Under these experimental conditions, gonad regeneration took longer than it does in normal regeneration (i.e., that in which body regions are not displaced).
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  • 6
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 217-222 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Dugesia japonica ; regeneration ; gastrodermis ; ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The earliest detectable change during regeneration of the gastrodermis in Dugesia japonica was an aggregation of regenerative cells underneath the gastrodermis remaining at the wound margin. The gastrodermal cells in experimental regenerates retained some of their original characters and presented no indication of cell dedifferentiation. The regenerative cells came into contact with the basal surface of gastrodermal cells, forming stratified cell layers. Differentiation of these cells into gastrodermal cells was initiated by the development of synthetic organelles within their cytoplasm. These differentiating cells gave rise to two different types of gastrodermal cells, namely phagocytic cells and sphere cells. In later stages, there was an apparent movement of differentiated gastrodermal cells towards the parenchyma.
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  • 7
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 287-293 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Tricladida ; Dugesia ; rhabdoids
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The ontogenetic changes in the distribution, abundance, and size of rhabdoids were examined in an undisturbed laboratory population of Dugesia polychroa. Irrespective of triclad age, rhabdoids in the epidermis and parenchyma were more abundant on the dorsal than the ventral side of the body. No significant differences were found in the abundance of epidermal or parenchymal rhabdoids among the anterior, medial, and posterior regions of the body. Rhabdoid number and size changed significantly with triclad age, with a marked depression coinciding with the onset of cocoon production. Rhabdoid discharge was correlated with physical and/or physiological disturbance and occurred in the absence of any overt environmental disturbance. Simple allometric relationships were observed between rhabdoid size and number on one hand and body plan area on the other. Different allometric trends were observed from field-collected individuals compared to the undisturbed laboratory population. The potential function of rhabdoids in the Tricladida is discussed in light of these findings.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; triclads ; salinity ; temperature ; tolerance ; distribution ; habitat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The tolerance of adult specimens of Dugesia lugubris and D. polychroa for 13 different chlorinities ranging from 15.0–3.8‰ and for two temperatures, viz. 4 and 23 °C, was tested. At chlorinities of 7.5‰ and lower, the survival time of both species was considerably longer than at higher chlorinities (a few hours at 7.5‰, one to several days at 6.6‰ and lower concentrations). It is assumed that this is determined by the osmoregulatory capacity of the planarians. It was found that at low chlorinities combined with a high temperature D. polychroa survived longer than D. lugubris, while at the same chlorinities the opposite was true for a low temperature. The effect of temperature on survival at low chlorinities was more drastic for D. lugubris than for D. polychroa. The results correlate with data on the distribution of both species in The Netherlands. Outside areas with an average chlorinity below 2‰ the two species were rarely found.
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  • 9
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 31-33 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; evolutionary morphology ; phylogeny
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The most profound structural variety in morphofunctional systems and morphogenetic mechanisms, i.e. the highest morphological diversity, is observed in those groups where these systems and mechanisms are evolutionarily most primitive. Here, such variety can involve the basic body plan of a given phylum and the types of morphogenesis characteristic of it. This correlation provides a new criterion of evolutionary primitiveness, namely, the criterion of initial morphological diversity. The highest morphological diversity among turbellarian groups is observed in the order Acoela. Acoel turbellarians are archaic in most of their features, apparently being a group near the base of the turbellarian phylogenetic tree. Among other turbellarians there are a few groups that also are archaic in some few features (above all, the Catenulida), although on the whole they are more advanced than the Acoela. The Turbellaria as a whole is notable for its morphological diversity in comparison with other classes of the Scolecida.
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  • 10
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 157-163 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Haplopharyngida ; ultrastructure ; reproductive system ; stylet
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The copulatory organ of Haplopharynx quadristimulus Ax, 1971 (Carolina form, Rieger, 1977) consists of a proximal prostatic vesicle and a distal stylet apparatus comprising a central tubular stylet and four to five peripheral accessory spines. By electron microscopy it could be seen that the stylet and spines were intracellular specializations. The copulatory organ can be interpreted as a specialization of an epithelial canal extending from the testes to the body wall. In the complex stylet apparatus, the epithelium was differentiated into six cell types. The stylet, which was formed in a matrix syncytium next to the prostatic vesicle, extended into the lumen of the stylet canal. The interior of the stylet apparatus contained one group of cells that had thick ciliary rootlets and another that had rootlet-like ribbons. The cells that contain the rootlets enveloped bundles of longitudinally arranged muscles. The accessory spines were formed in cells which lay peripheral to the muscle bundles. The spines, stylet, rootlet-like ribbons, and rootlets had similar patterns of periodic cross striations. The similarity in striation patterns suggests that the accessory spines and stylet are composed of modified ciliary rootlets.
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  • 11
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 53-58 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; spermatozoa ; phylogeny ; lower Metazoa ; Trematoda ; Cestoda
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The phylogenetic significance of flatworm sperm morphology is discussed against the background of general spermatology. The modified type of spermatozoon of the Nemertodermatida, a group of primitive flatworms, indicates that the Platyhelminthes evolved from forms characterized by the primitive type of metazoan sperm and by the primitive mode of fertilization, implying the release of sperm freely into sea water. The occurrence of aberrant types of spermatozoa in most platyhelminths is obviously a consequence of early evolution of the internal mode of fertilization, which characterizes all true members of this group. It can be concluded, from the ultrastructure of these aberrant spermatozoa that ‘higher’ metazoans cannot have evolved from ‘seriated’ flatworms related to the recent Seriata (Proseriata and Tricladida). Even the seemingly primitive Acoela have such aberrant spermatozoa that evolution of ‘higher’ metazoans from acoels related to the recent Acoela seems highly improbable. The ultrastructure of the spermatozoa of the parasitic groups of flatworms (Monogenea, Digenea, Cestoda) is very similar to that found in the Kalyptorhynchia, a further indication that the parasitic groups are related to the rhabdocoel turbellarians.
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  • 12
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 79-87 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; central nervous system ; evolution ; neuroanatomy ; neurobiology ; Polycladida
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The nervous system of the polyclad turbellarian Notoplana acticola consists of a series of nerve plexuses and a central ganglion, the brain. The brain contains a variety of cell types including multipolar heteropolar and bipolar neurons. These cell types are rare in other invertebrate ganglia. Individual neurons also contain a variety of different ion channels. both spiking and nonspiking neurons are found. Some neurons are multimodal interneurons. Habituation appears to be a postsynaptic phenomenon. Sensitization and long-term potentiation have not been demonstrated. Polyclads appear to represent a stage in the evolution of centralized nervous systems where much of the neuronal machinery underlying behavior occurs in the peripheral nervous system and the brain's main functions are the coordination and sequencing of peripherally placed reflexes. Even at this stage, however, the brain already contains cells that seem as advanced as those found in higher organisms.
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  • 13
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 71-78 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Acoela ; Nemertodermatida ; ultrastructure ; mucous gland ; sensory
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Using characters discernible through electron microscopy, we redefine the organ traditionally identified as the frontal organ in acoelomorph turbellarians as being a collection of two to several large mucus-secreting glands whose necks emerge together through a frontal pore at the exact apical pole of the body, i.e. at the point where the pattern of epidermal ciliary rootlets converges. Representatives that we have studied of each of the acoel families Paratomellidae, Diopisthoporidae, Solenofilomorphidae, Convolutidae, Otocelidae, and Mecynostomidae, as well as a representative of the Nemertodermatida, have such glands. Up to five additional types of glands that open anteriorly outside of the frontal pore, some of which are indistinguishable from glands of the general body wall, could be seen in the nemertodermatid, in Hesiolicium inops (Paratomellidae), and in representatives of the latter four acoel families. In Paratomella, three different types of glands open in diffuse fashion in a frontal glandular complex reminiscent of that in the Macrostomida. Sensory elements near the frontal pore appear to be independent of the gland necks, and so the organ cannot be considered a sensory organ. The frontal organ, as described above, appears very likely to be homologous within the Acoelomorpha, and represents another strong (although unrooted) autapomorphy for this line of turbellarian evolution.
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  • 14
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Cestoda ; Neuropeptides ; Serotonin ; Immunocytochemistry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The nervous systems of the turbellarians Microstomum lineare and Polycelis nigra and of the cestodes Diphyllobothrium dendriticum and Schistocephalus solidus were studied by means of the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) immunocytochemical method, with the use of antisera to the neuropeptides FMRF-amide, vasotocin, leu-enkephalin, met-enkephalin, neurotensin, somatostatin, and VIP, and to the bioamine serotonin. Anti-FMRF-amide positive perikarya and fibers occurred in all species, while the occurrence of the vertebrate brain-gut peptides and serotonin varied between the species. Anti-somatostatin and anti-VIP gave a negative result. Anti-FMRF-amide and anti-vasotocin positive immunoreactivity was found in the brain and gut of M. lineare, and in the CNS and the peripheral nerve net of the cestodes. We suggest that the brain-gut peptides of free-living flatworms act on the subtegumental region in the cestodes, which lack a gut but absorb their nutrients directly through the tegument.
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  • 15
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Platyhelminthes ; Paravortex ; symbiosis ; photoreceptor ; phototaxis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photoreceptor structure and function in the Platyhelminthes has traditionally been treated separately in the Turbellaria on one hand and the conventional parasitic classes on the other. In this paper, an attempt is made to bring together data from the literature and to highlight deficiencies and areas where a more integrated approach would be beneficial. This is done with particular reference to the endosymbiont genus Paravortex which belongs to the Turbellaria but which functionally has more similarities to the parasitic platyhelminths especially with regard to the host-finding requirement of the larval stages.
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  • 16
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 121-126 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Polycladida ; development ; epidermal eye ; cerebral eye ; ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The appearance and development of the embryonic and larval eyes of the polyclad turbellarian Stylochus mediterraneus were studied. In the embryo, the left epidermal eye appears first. Subsequently, the right epidermal eye appears, and within hours it sinks into the parenchyma and turns into a cerebral eye. Newly hatched Götte's larvae possess both the left epidermal and the right cerebral eye. Three days after hatching, an incomplete eye appears adjacent to the left epidermal eye. The left cerebral eye then originates from this incomplete eye as it sinks into the parenchyma. This third eye is believed to originate through a process of induction.
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  • 17
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 117-119 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Polycladida ; development ; spiral cleavage ; mosaicism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Cell-deletion experiments were carried out on the embryo of the polyclad turbellarian Hoploplana inquilina to examine further the nature of development in primitive spiralians. The polyclads are of particular interest because they provide a link between the regulative development of acoels and the determinative development of annelids and molluscs. Single blastomeres were deleted at the two- and four-cell stages by puncture through the eggshell membrane with tungsten needles. All deletions resulted in abnormal larvae with consistent characteristics representing half or three-quarter Müller's larvae. The number of larval eyes was a particularly useful character in revealing mosaicism. This study establishes the polyclad embryo as determinative, but with important cell interactions also occurring during early development, and provides evidence that mosaicism became associated with spiral cleavage in the quartet form during the evolution of the Turbellaria.
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  • 18
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 105-115 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; phylogeny ; embryology ; cleavage ; gastrulation ; eggshell granules
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Developmental characters — including oocyte and yolk cell structure, patterns of cleavage, and modes of gastrulation — are presented and examined in relation to the phylogeny of the Turbellaria. Eggshell granules, which have been demonstrated to occur in the oocytes of entolecithal eggs and the yolk cells of ectolecithal eggs, are compared among species, and their potential value as a taxonomic character is discussed. The quartet 4d spiral cleavage of the entolecithal egg of polyclads is described as reminiscent of the primitive pattern of early development for the Turbellaria. This is compared to duet spiral cleavage of acoels, and possible phylogenetic schemes involving the two types of spiral cleavage are reviewed. The link between the precise spiral cleavage, which characterizes development of most archoophorans, and blastomere separation (Blastomeren-Anarchie), which occurs in several neoophoran orders, is established by the occurrence of quartet 4d spiral cleavage in one neoophoran order, and of both quartet spiral cleavage and Blastomeren-Anarchie in different species of a second neoophoran order. The epibolic gastrulation of polyclads is described as primitive for the Turbellaria because of its similarity to that of other members of the Spiralia. Although no identical process occurs in neoophoran development, the earlier event of formation of the hull membrane in some neoophorans, and the later event of formation of the definitive epidermis in all neoophorans studied are presented as processes of possible homology to the epibolic gastrulation of polyclads. The lack of correspondence between polyclads and neoophorans in the relationship of the definitive body axes to the egg axis is discussed, and an hypothesis is advanced to account for the differences. The phylogenetic relationships indicated by known developmental phenomena differ only slightly from the scheme presented by Karling in 1974.
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  • 19
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 127-135 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; polyclads ; eggshell ; shell formation ; sclerotin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Eggshell formation in polyclads was studied by means of transmission electron microscopy and histochemistry. Shell-forming granules (SFG) in the egg, as well as secretions of shell glands (SGS), play roles in eggshell formation. As the oocytes pass through the portion of the female tract where the shell glands open, they are surronded by a two-layered envelope of SGS. This envelope prevents the dispersion of SFGs discharged after oviposition, and its inner layer participates in eggshell formation with the SFGs. In Pseudostylochus sp., most SFGs consist of five parts. Similarities in staining between the parts of the SFGs and the parts of the eggshell indicate that discrete parts of the shell are derived from specific SFG components. Hardening of the eggshell and egg-plate matrix takes place through primary tanning of a sclerotin-like protein.
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  • 20
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 145-150 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; neoophora ; oogenesis ; vitellogenesis ; ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An ultrastructural study of oogenesis has been undertaken in some marine species of neoophoran turbellarians belonging to the Tricladida, Proseriata, and Prolecithophora. Among marine triclads, Cercyra hastata has oocytes with a remarkable amount of what appears to be autosynthetic proteinaceous yolk, while Procerodes dohrni and P. lobata have alecithal oocytes. Among the Proseriata, several species of the primitive family Monocelididae (subfamily Monocelidinae) have oocytes with a discrete amount of what appears to be autosynthetic yolk, while Parotoplana macrostyla, of the derived family Otoplanidae, has alecithal eggs. Finally preliminary observations on Plagiostomum maculatum (order Prolecithophora) suggest that oocytes have autosynthetic yolk globules. These results support the hypothesis (previously formulated on the basis of similar ultrastructural investigations on freshwater triclads) that the presence of autosynthetic yolk in some neoophoran turbellarians can be interpreted as a primitive character inherited from an ancestor with archoophoran organization. This plesiomorphic character would still be maintained in some species while lost in others following differentiation of vitellaria which are characteristic of the Neoophora.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Platyhelminthes ; ultrastructure ; differentiation ; copulatory organ ; hard structure ; phylogenetic system
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Ultrastructure and differentiation of penis stylets and stylet needles have been investigated in representatives of various groups of free-living platyhelminths, viz. the Acoela, Macrostomida, Typhloplanoida, Kalyptorhynchia, and Dalyellioida. In all these groups, the differentiation of such hard parts occurs intracellularly but in different ways in the different groups. The ultrastructure of the bursal mouth piece in an acoel platyhelminth is not comparable to the hard structures in male copulatory organs. The presence of penial copulatory organs having intracellular hard structures appears to be an autapomorphy of the Euplatyhelminthes. Several characters in the ultrastructure and development of these structures can be used as autapomorphies for various platyhelminth groups.
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  • 22
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 229-232 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Bipalium ; fragmentation ; reproduction ; identification
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The common short-bodied species of Bipalium does not fragment, but individuals of two newly discovered long-bodied species — B. nobile Kawakatsu & Makino, 1982, and B. multilineatum Makino & Shirasawa, 1983 — do regularly fission, usually behind the mouth or genital pore. Some experimental regenerates of these species form rings by adhesion of the anterior with the posterior cut surface. We found two other forms of Bipalium, perhaps representing a further two species, in Hino City, Tokyo, in 1983; and we have preliminarily arranged the forms of Bipalium known in the region into four groups distinguished on the basis of body coloring, position of the mouth, and structure of the copulatory organ.
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  • 23
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Rhabdocoela ; karyology ; aneuploidy ; chromosomal evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Karyology and reproductive biology of a marine population of the species complex Gyratrix hermaphroditus, from Roscoff (Brittany, France), have been investigated. A diploid complement of six chromosomes was determined from spermatogonial mitotic figures. One chromosome pair is metacentric, the second is intermediate between meta- and submetacentric, and the third is subtelocentric. In this population, regular meiosis occurs in both female and male germ lines, and the animals reproduce only by means of amphimictic eggs. Certain specimens of the population showed the elimination of one of the three bivalents during the first meiotic division in spermatogenesis. It seems that such animals produce normal and aneuploid sperm simultaneously; the aneuploid sperm are not capable of fertilization. The Roscoff population differs in its karyotype (2n = 6) from freshwater populations, which are either diploid (2n = 4) or polyploid (3n = 6, 4n = 8). These results suggest that aneuploidy played a role in the differentiation of freshwater populations from an originally marine species complex.
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  • 24
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 35-45 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; asexual reproduction ; paratomy ; Myomacrostomum ; archetype
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The turbellarian archetype is widely believed to have been a hermaphrodite lacking asexual reproduction, and such asexual reproduction as is now seen in the Turbellaria (as paratomy and architomy) is generally assumed to have arisen secondarily several times independently. Asexual reproduction clearly prevails among the most primitive metazoans such as the placozoans, sponges, and radiates, however, and if the Platyhelminthes is indeed an early offshoot of bilaterian evolution, as some have claimed, then it is reasonable to expect asexual reproduction to be a primitive feature of the Turbellaria. Asexual reproduction by paratomy or architomy is found in all three main evolutionary lines of the Turbellaria and is most common among primitive groups such as the Catenulida and Macrostomida. The discovery of a new, apparently primitive marine genus of Macrostomida having paratomy widens the known incidence of asexual reproduction within that order. The presence of a muscle ring around the gut of several distantly related genera of the Macrostomida and similarities this ring shows with septa in the division plane of paratomizing species are evidence that paratomy was a feature of the stem species for this order — a feature only secondarily lost in most macrostomids — and suggest that asexual reproduction is a primitive feature for the Platyhelminthes as a whole.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; frontal organ ; mucus gland ; sensory ; Acoela ; Macrostomida
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Present models of turbellarian evolution depict the organism with a frontal organ — a complex of glands whose necks emerge at the anterior tip of the body — and therefore imply that this organ is homologous throughout the Turbellaria. However, comparisons of representatives of the Acoela and Macrostomida, two putatively primitive orders of the Turbellaria, show that frontal organs in these two are not similar in ultrastructure or histochemistry. The acoel Convoluta ‘pulchra’ had a prominent cluster of frontal mucous glands whose necks emerged together in a frontal pore at the exact apical pole of the organism, and an array of smaller glands of at least five other types opened at the anterior end, separately from and ventral to this pore. The ‘frontal organs’ (Stirndrüsen) of two species of Macrostomum on the other hand, comprised an array of discretely emerging necks of at least two gland types including one with rhabdiform (rhammite) and one with globular mucous secretion granules neither of which emerge at the apical pole. In neither species did the organ appear to be sensory. Our findings indicate a low probability of homology between the frontal glands of the Acoela and Macrostomida.
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  • 26
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 69-70 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Acoela ; ultrastructure ; digestive system
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The central parenchyma in Oxyposthia praedator consists of multifunctional cells. These cells digest food material intracellularly, can effect extracellular digestion through release of digestive enzymes by cell lysis and clasmatosis, and synthesize reserve nutritional substances.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; stream ; temperature ; food ; reproduction ; phenology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Rapid streams in southern Sweden are often inhabited by the triclad Dendrocoelum lacteum. Outside Fennoscandia, this species is mainly restricted to lentic habitats. The ‘normal’ food refuge for D. lacteum, the isopod Asellus aquaticus, is seldom found in the stream habitats, and probably the prey here is the amphipod Gammarus pulex. With respect to spatial and trophic niche components, it seems that D. lacteum has taken the place of Crenobia alpina in southern Sweden. Two parameters of reproduction, namely production of cocoons and of hatchlings, both peaked approximately one month later in a stream than in an adjacent lake. This difference was attributed to a low temperature regime in the stream. Number of hatchlings per cocoon and cocoon sterility were higher in the stream than in the lake. Similar cocoon and hatchling output per adult was found in the two habitats, indicating a similar reproductive effort for the two triclad populations. I suggest that D. lacteum, by virtue of its choice of microhabitat, viz., under stones, is not so vulnerable to the more severe stream environment.
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  • 28
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 295-303 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Meiofauna ; Ecology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Recent data and opinions on meiofaunal ecology are briefly reviewed; and from scattered data, the place of turbellarians in the meiobenthic community is discussed. Turbellarian diversity, density, and biomass are higher in sandy habitats than in muddy bottoms. In sand, turbellarian diversity is of the same magnitude as that of other important meiofaunal taxa, while densities range between 7–25% of the total meiofauna. Mean individual turbellarian dry weight seems to be four times that of nematodes and in sandy habitats turbellarian biomass may be equal to or excede that of nematodes. Most turbellarian species may be considered as predators and in this respect may take the place occupied by macrofaunal species in muddy sediments. mens.
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  • 29
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 239-242 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; karyology ; chromosome ; evolution
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract From an analysis of chromosomal mutations in seven species among five genera of marine triclads and polyclads, three different types of mechanisms of such mutations are identified: 1) rearrangement involving the centromere such that its position is changed, 2) rearrangement of whole chromosome arms, and 3) Robertsonian mechanisms. These mechanisms are the same as those reported for freshwater turbellarians, but aneuploidy and polyploidy, which are common in freshwater species, were not detected in these marine turbellarians.
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  • 30
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 243-249 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Tricladida ; Dugesia ; karyology ; Japan
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An analysis of the karyotypes of Dugesia japonica japonica Ichikawa et Kawakatsu, 1964, from 30 localities of seven river systems in Ôsaka Prefecture, Central Japan, revealed a total of 26 karyotypes of which 12 are new-found varieties. More than two karyotypes were found in many localities. The mixoaneuploidic triploid karyotype showed the widest distribution (21 localities), orthoploidic diploid karyotype and orthoploidic mixoploid of diploid and triploid karyotype were next (13 localities, respectively), and other karyotypes (triploidic aneuploid, orthoploidic triploid and mixoploid of triploid & tetraploid) were also found. Some correlation of karyotype with elevation was also detected.
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  • 31
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 251-256 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Dugesia gonocephala s.l. ; karyology ; aneuploidy ; B-chromosomes ; chromosomal heteromorphism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Two species belonging to the Dugesia gonocephala group are found in the area of Montpellier, France. The karyology of these two species, D. gonocephala s. str. and S. subtentaculata, and of fissiparous Dugesia races has been studied. Two populations belonging to D. gonocephala s. str. are diploids with a chromosome number of 16, whereas the specimens of a third population are sexual aneuploids; the majority of cells possess 24 chromosomes, but some cells contain 23 or 25. The specimens attributable to D. subtentaculata are triploids, the most notable karyological feature being the presence of a single unmatched acrocentric chromosome. The fissiparous Dugesia strains are all aneuploids, the most common chromosome number being 27 with up to three small B-chromosomes.
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  • 32
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 257-262 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Tricladida ; Procerodes ; taxonomy ; biogeography
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The genus Procerodes forms a heterogeneous assemblage of taxa. Although it is premature to attempt phylogenetic weighting of the characters, the genus contains three well delimited subgroups, one with a subantarctic, panaustral distribution, one world-wide in distribution, and one occurring principally in the northern hemisphere. Outside of these subgroups, species in this genus are problematic since a number of their features also occurs in other procerodids. All recognized groups exhibit a wide distributional range. Many of the world-wide taxonomic relations lie on the species level and some at the level of genera. Poor dispersal capacity of extant species of Procerodes suggests that the biogeographic patterns may be very old.
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 59-67 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; Temnocephaloidea ; ultrastructure ; epidermis ; spermatozoa ; parenchyma
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Temnocephala novaezealandiae (family Temnocephalidae) and Troglocaridicola mrazeki and Scutariella georgica (family Scutariellidae) were studied by electron microscopy in an attempt to reveal characters that would indicate their phylogenetic relationship to other members of the Platyhelminthes. Ultrastructural features of the epidermis in these temnocephaloideans are like those of the neoophoran turbellarians. The epidermis is syncytial, is honeycombed by a multitude of gland necks whose secretions produce an epidermal surface film, and is underlaid by a thick basement membrane. Some cells in the parenchyma are compartmentalized by intrusive cell processes from neighboring parenchymal cells in a fashion similar to parenchymal structure in the Monogenea and Digenea. The spermatozoa have a pair of free 9+1 flagella and contain aligned dense bodies. The Temnocephaloidea is evidently derived from an early rhabdocoel-turbellarian-like ancestor.
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  • 34
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 89-92 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; nervous system ; comparative morphology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Initial stages of the centralization of the nervous apparatus in the Turbellaria can be traced through a comparison of the structure of the nervous system in various representatives of the class. The most primitive state, found in the Acoela, is predominantly plexiform with a varying number of longitudinal trunks. Three, and in some cases four, longitudinal trunks are found in the Proseriata and Temnocephalida. Commissures appear in the Macrostomida and all higher orders and form an orthogon. Brain shape varies from ring-shaped in the Acoela to bilobed in the Neorhabdocoela. While the nervous system of the Polycladida is peculiar, having numerous lateral trunks and separation of dorsal and ventral parts of the nervous system, the development of the nervous system in Müller's larvae of polyclads shows it is of an orthogonal type comparable to other platyhelminths. Transition to parasitism is accompanied by some progressive transformations in the structure of the nervous system.
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  • 35
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 311-315 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Urastoma ; Turbellaria ; Mollusca ; commensalism ; Paravortex
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Crassostrea virginica was collected from several locations where it is cultured, both along the Northumberland Strait of New Brunswick and Malpeque Bay on the coast of Prince Edward Island. The oysters were found with two turbellarians on their gills. Urastoma cyprinae (Graff) was found in the oysters mostly during the warmer months of the year in numbers averaging as high as 50 worms per host (N = 50) and with as much as 78% of the host population infected (N = 100). Paravortex gemellipara (Linton) was also found during warmer months, but much less frequently or abundantly. Both male and female oysters were found to have U. cyprinae. No eggs or recent young of U. cyprinae were found in hosts; female-mature individuals of P. gemellipara with young were found from June through August.
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  • 36
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; planaria ; history ; China ; Taiwan ; Japan
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The history of the study of turbellarians in China and Japan through the early twentieth Century is reviewed. Up to the middle of the 19th Century, knowledge of the natural history of these countries, including several records of planarians from each, is to be found only in manuscripts and books of the so-called ‘Materia Medica.’ During the latter half of the 19th Century and into the early part of the 20th Century, several Western zoologists laid the foundation for the Western approach to the study of turbellarians in China and Japan.
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  • 37
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    Hydrobiologia 132 (1986), S. 13-21 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Turbellaria ; phylogenetic systematics ; Platyhelminthes ; polyphyly ; ultrastructure ; epidermis ; cilia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Within the last two decades, syntheses of both light-microscopic and ultrastructural characters have shown that there are three well-defined monophyletic groups within the Platyhelminthes: 1) the Catenulidale, 2) the Nemertodermatida-Acoela, and 3) the Haplopharyngida-Macrostomida-Polycladida-Neoophora (+ parasitic platyhelminth classes). However, the relationships among these three groups are problematic. The possible apomorphies that would unite them are either not true homologues (i.e. frontal organ), are mutually conflicting (i.e. 9+1 axoneme in spermatozoa vs. biflagellate spermatozoa, epidermal ciliary rootlet structure, and protonephridia), or are unrooted with any outgroup and hence untestable or uncertain as apomorphies (protonephridia, mode of epidermal replacement, absence of accessory centrioles on cilia). The chief obstacle to deciphering the relationships of these groups is the lack of information on them; presently available information is insufficient to test potential synapomorphies and insufficient also to allow agreement upon a narrowly defined outgroup for the Turbellaria. A view consistent with the present evidence (and admittedly an unsatisfactory view) is to regard the Turbellaria (and hence the Platyhelminthes) as polyphyletic, consisting of three separate and unrelatable groups.
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