Abstract

The resorption of unemitted gametes during the post-spawning period of the male and female reproductive cycles in Lithognathus mormyrus was studied by histochemical, histological and cytological methods. The resorption of residual spermatozoa involved the phagocytotic activity of Sertoli cells bounding the seminiferous cysts of spermatozoa, and those associated with spermatogonia lining the lobular lumen. Spermatozoa remaining in the sperm duct were phagocytozed by the lining epithelial cells. Eosinophilic granulocytes and macrophages were identified in the vicinity of residual spermatozoa. The remnants of oocytes underwent an atretic phenomenon in which follicle cells were firstly involved, inducing a progressive fragmentation of the oocyte cytoplasm. Subsequently, eosinophilic granulocytes invaded oocyte degenerative areas and clung to the remaining vitelline inclusions ensuring their biotransformation into waste products (brown bodies). The analogy of the resorption processes of both male and female unemitted gametes during the post-spawning period of natural reproductive cycle, involving first the enveloping somatic cells and then immune cells, is emphasized.

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