Abstract

Species of Acochlidea are common members of the marine interstitial environment and defined in part by their minuscule size and highly divergent morphology relative to other benthic opisthobranchs. Despite these differences, acochlideans such as species of Asperspina display many plesiomorphic characteristics, including an unfused condition of their neural ganglia. To gain insight into the distribution of specific neural subsets within acochlidean ganglia, a species of Asperspina was studied by using anti-serotonin immunohistochemistry and epifluorescence and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Results reveal similarities between Asperspina and larger opisthobranchs in the general distribution of serotonergic perikarya in the central nervous system. Specifically, the arrangement of perikarya into regional clusters within the cerebral and pedal ganglia and the absence of immunoreactive perikarya in the pleural ganglia are similar to the model species of Aplysia californica, Pleurobranchaea californica, and Tritonia diomedea. Moreover, serotonergic innervation of the rhinophores in all opisthobranchs, including Asperspina sp., originates from the cerebral ganglion instead of directly from the rhinophoral ganglion. Serotonergic innervation of the body wall, including the epithelium, muscles, and pedal sole, appears to arise exclusively from pedal and accessory ganglia. These observations indicate a general conservation of serotonin-like immunoreactivity in the central and peripheral nervous systems of acochlidean and other benthic opisthobranchs.

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