Abstract
An accessory pulsatile organ located in the mesothoracic legs pumps hemolymph towards the tip of the leg ventrally and towards the body near the dorsal side. It consists of a muscle attached to the ventral side of the trochanter and to the central region of a transverse connective tissue diaphragm located at the trochanter-femur border. The diaphragm has a ventral outlet that permits efferent hemolymph flow through a narrow femoral sinus. A second dorsal outlet allows the afferent countercurrent back to the thorax through a separate hemolymph channel. During abdominal ventilation, the pumping rhythm of the leg fn2 fn2 heart muscle fibers, mn, main nerve of the leg, m104, leg–heart muscle, tr, trachea, N5, main leg nerve, 5B2a, terminal nerve to the leg–heart, m107b, tibial flexor muscle. heart is neurally synchronized with abdominal ventilation. Expiratory pressure expands tracheal air sacs in the ventral trochanter and helps driving hemolymph out of this space. In idle periods of resting ventilation, an autonomous myogenic rhythm of the leg–heart can maintain hemolymph circulation in the mesothoracic leg without neural control.
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