Abstract

Among insect species, the male genitalia evolved many different anatomical features to ensure reproductive success. Males of primitive insects do not copulate but transfer sperm packaged in a spermatophore to the female, whereas males of the most advanced insects copulate and deliver free sperm to the storage organ, the spermatheca, in the female reproductive tract. Based on previous studies on several species of triatomine bugs (Rhodnius prolixus included), Triatominae are thought to use an intermediate form of sperm transfer in which the male genitalia have evolved to carry out both copulation and spermatophore formation. Previous observations on chemically fixed tissue of R. prolixus appear to show that the penis, the aedeagus, contains a much-folded internal cuticle which is a collapsed sac that everts from the aedeagus during copulation for the formation and delivery of the spermatophore directly to the female genital chamber. However, observations on living tissue of these structures in R. prolixus show that this internal cuticle functions as a tube through which male secretions pass through the aedeagus to the vagina. The organization of this cuticle in the context of the various anatomical structures of the aedeagus, its different morpho-functional meaning during sperm transfer in R. prolixus, the use of living versus chemically fixed tissue and a new understanding of previous observations are discussed.

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