Abstract

The digestive system structure in pre-zoea and zoea I larvae of the red king crab Paralithodes camtschaticus has been examined. During this development period, the digestive system consists of an esophagus, a stomach, a midgut (where the hepatopancreas ducts open), and a hindgut. The esophagus begins from the oral slit on the animal's ventral side and extends vertically up to the junction with the cardiac stomach. The latter is followed by the pyloric stomach. At the stages under study, crabs have a cardiac-pyloric valve and a pyloric filter in the stomach already developed. The midgut begins with an expansion in the cephalothorax, enters the pleon, grows narrower there, and extends to somite 3 of pleon. The hepatopancreas is represented by a symmetrical paired gland which occupies almost the entire cephalothorax space and opens with its ducts at the junction of the pyloric stomach with the midgut. The hepatopancreas is divided into the anterior and posterior lobes. At the pre-zoea stage, the anterior lobes are large and filled with yolk. At the zoea I stage, the anterior lobes are smaller relative to the entire hepatopancreas, and the posterior lobes increase and form tubular outgrowths. It has been shown that during the transition from pre-zoea to zoea I, the number of mitochondria in enterocytes increases and a peritrophic membrane forms in the midgut. These changes are probably associated with the transition to independent living and feeding.

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