Abstract

A male accessory sex organ, termed the juxtatesticular body (JTB), is located in the posterior part of the trunk, outside the coelomic cavity, lying ventral to the urinary ducts and dorsal to the urinary bladder and testes in jawfishes. Its microscopic structure is unusual for an accessory sex organ because it is highly vascularized, organized in small follicles, and ductless. The embryological origin of the JTB and the development of the urogenital apparatus was studied in juveniles of Opistognathus whitehurstii and O. maxillosus. Both sexes possess a structure located outside the coelomic cavity in the posterior part of the trunk. In females this structure showed the same histological organization as the kidney, however in males it was different and recognized as the JTB. The degree of development of the JTB followed that of the testes, being represented in youngest recognizable males only by a small mass of mesenchymal cells while it was fully developed in males with spermatogenic testes. In most immature males renal structures, such as tubules and glomeruli, were found in the dorsal part of this structure. On the basis of anatomical and cytological features a nephrogenic origin for the JTB is proposed.

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