Abstract

Spermatozoa from several members of the closely related Mycetophilidae and Keroplatidae were examined by electron microscopy using a fixative that contains glutaraldehyde and tannic acid, followed by a post-fixative that consists of uranyl acetate rather than osmium tetroxide. With this fixative, the detailed architecture of the flagellar axoneme and its various microtubules could be resolved. The so-called accessory tubules, which surround the central 9+2 unit of the sperm axoneme, were found to have 16 protofilaments in several examined Mycetophiloidea, but in no other Diptera. As 16 is the common number in holometabolic insects, it is presumably the plesiomorphic condition in Diptera. Other fungus gnats have accessory tubules with 15 or 14 protofilaments. The intertubular material situated between the accessory tubules is smaller in the examined members of the Mycetophilidae than in the Keroplatidae. The acrosome consists of an apical vesicle, which in one species, Macrorhyncha ancae, has three microtubular doublets in its anterior part and two large and three small extensions which extend posteriorly along the sperm axoneme.

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