Abstract

The salivary glands and salivary pumps were investigated by means of dissection and serial semithin sections in order to expose the anatomy and histology of Nymphalidae in relation to feeding ecology. The paired salivary glands are tubular, they begin in the head, and extend through the thorax into the abdomen. The epithelium is a unicellular layer consisting of a single cell type. Despite the uniform composition, each salivary gland can be divided into five anatomically and histologically distinct regions. The bulbous end region of the gland lies within the abdomen and is composed of highly prismatic glandular cells with large vacuoles in their cell bodies. The tubular secretion region extends into the thorax where it forms large loops running backward and forward. It is composed of glandular cells that lack large vacuoles. The salivary duct lies in the thorax and also shows a looped formation but is composed of flat epithelial cells. The salivary reservoir begins in the prothorax and reaches the head. Its cells are hemispherical and bulge out into the large lumen of the tube. In the head the outlet tube connects the left and right halves of the salivary gland, and its epithelial cells are flat. The salivary pump lies in the head ventral to the sucking pump and leads directly into the food canal of the proboscis. It is not part of the salivary gland but is derived from the salivarium. Both the thin cuticle of the roof of the salivary pump and the thick bottom are ventrally arched. Paired muscles extend from the hypopharyngeal ridges and obviously serve as dilators for the pump. A functional interpretation of the salivary pump suggests that when not in use, the dilators are not contracted and the pump is tightly closed due to its own elasticity. When the dilator muscles repeatedly contract, the saliva is forced forward into the food canal of the proboscis. The salivary gland anatomy was found to be similar to other Lepidoptera. Furthermore, the histology of the salivary glands is identical in all examined butterflies, even in the species which exhibit specialized pollen-feeding behavior.

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