Abstract

The ultrastructure of the blood vessels in the caudal region of Branchiostoma is described in specimens injected with indian ink. None of the vessels have endothelial cells delimiting the luminal surface. The vessels are delimited either by dense connective tissue or by the characteristic basement lamella underneath the basal lamina of the myocoelic epithelium. It is proposed that the main blood flow in the caudal region follows different pathways depending on the activity of the animal. During swimming the muscle activity of the caudal muscles may have the effect that more blood flows from the aorta to the myoseptal plexi and is drained to the caudal vessel. In the resting animal it is possible that the blood flow through the myosepta is insignificant, and that the caudal blood flow is more or less restricted to the direct connections between the aorta and the caudal vessel: the dorsoventral anastomosis and the segmental connecting vessels.

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