Abstract

We investigate the evolution of sperm ultrastructure of three species of Boidae (Epicrates cenchria, Boa constrictor amarali, and Corallus hortulanus). Spermatozoa of these species are filiform consisting of a head region, containing the nucleus and acrosome complex, a midpiece, and a tail region subdivided into principal piece and endpiece. Multilaminar membranes and extracellular microtubules were observed next to the plasma membrane of the spermatozoa. The following differences were observed among the species: ridge on acrosome surface in Boa constrictor amarali (absent in Epicrates cenchria and Corallus hortulanus), stopper-like perforatorium base plate in Boa constrictor amarali and Epicrates cenchria (absent in Corallus hortulanus), rounded mitochondria in transverse section in Epicrates cenchria and Corallus hortulanus (irregular in Boa constrictor amarali). We mapped sperm characters onto two phylogenies based on morphological (Kluge in Misc Publ Mus Zool Univ Michigan 178:1–58, 1991) and molecular (Austin in Copeia 2:341–352, 2000) data, using a number of squamate species as outgroups. We identified 31 unambiguous character transformations in the morphological phylogeny and 30 in the molecular phylogeny, but only 13 and 12 transformations, respectively, are possible synapomorphies. We identified novel sperm synapomorphies, which were common between the morphological and molecular phylogenies: absence of perforatorium base plate and mitochondria arranged as sinuous tubes in oblique section (Serpentes), acrosome vesicle not subdivided and fibers 3 and 8 at the anteriormost region of principal piece (Boidae), and absence of an electron dense structure inside the proximal centriole (Elapidae + Colubridae). Our results suggest greater agreement between sperm ultrastructure and gross anatomical characters. In addition, we found no tendency for more homoplasies in the sperm head than in the flagellum, as recorded in previous studies.

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