Abstract

The sensory receptor responsive to pressure applied internally to the ventral abdominal body wall of the blood-feeding insects, Rhodnius prolixus, is a single sense cell containing, at its distal end, a cilium enclosed within a scolopale, a densely staining structure characteristic of insect scolopidial sensilla. A small spherical structure lies within a dilation near the midregion of the cilium, and contains nine heavily staining bodies, the position of each corresponding to a pair of microtubules in the cilium. Proximal to the dilation, the microtubules are organized in a ring of nine pairs with one microtubule of each pair associated with dyneinlike arms. Dastal to the dilation a central pair of microtubules is present, but dyneinlike arms are absent. The scolopale cell, which gives risc to the scolopale, has cytoplasmic invaginations that form an elaborate array of extracellular compartments surrounding the body wall of the sense cell. These compartments may serve to dampen high frequency vibrations permitting the receptor to respond to pressure exerted by touch, an attribute in keeping with the receptor's proposed function of detecting abdominal distension related to the size and movement of the stomach.

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