Abstract

The cytoarchitecture of the female gonad of the scutariellid Troglocaridicola sp. has been investigated by means of electron microscopy and cytochemical techniques. It consists of a single germarium and two rows of vitelline follicles, both enveloped by an outer extracellular lamina (EL) and an inner cellular tunica constituted by accessory cells. Some ultrastructural features which differ from the basic pattern of all the other Rhabdocoela studied so far have been found. In the germarium the following are observed: (a) The presence in the oocytes of peripheral translucent vesicles containing glycoproteins, which differ in diameter and substructure from the peripheral egg granules observed in all the other neoophoran Platyhelminthes. These vesicles can be considered an autapomorphic feature of the taxon Troglocaridicola; (b) The presence of proteinaceous acorn-shaped granules which remain scattered in the ooplasm throughout oogenesis and can be interpreted as residual yolk. This situation is shared with some Proseriata and Tricladida; (c) The precence of accessory cell processes between growing and mature oocytes, as is typical of some Proseriata and Tricladida. In the vitellarium, the presence of polyphenolic shell globules whose substructure does not correspond either to the multigranular pattern prevailing in representatives of Eulecithophora (Prolecithophora+Rhabdocoela) or to the homogeneous pattern found in Lecithoepitheliata. They have a meandering/concentric pattern of the content similar to that described in some Proseriata and Tricladida. On the basis of the ultrastructural characteristics of the female gonad described above, the position of Troglocaridicola in the taxon Rhabdocoela is discussed.

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