Abstract

Features shared between the sperm of Ranina ranina and of the so-called "higher Brachyura" (the Oxyrhyncha - Cancridea - Brachygnatha assemblage, OCB) include: (1) the large subspheroidal acrosome (a synapomorphy of the Raninoidea + the OCB contrasting with the disc-shaped Dromioidea acrosome); (2) enclosure of the acrosome by a thin layer of cytoplasm which is in turn cupped by the nucleus; (3) extension of the nucleus as lateral arms and as a posterior median process (this process is absent in the more advanced families, including portunids); (4) extension of the cytoplasm into the basal region of each nuclear arm; and (5) topographical equivalence and presumed homology of components of the acrosome, viz. the electron dense capsule; inner and outer dense zones surrounding the longitudinal axis; peripheral vesicular contents; a perforate or, in Portunus, an imperforate, apical operculum; subopercular- or subcap-zone; and a basally open subacrosomal chamber enclosing perforatorial material. Significant differences of the Ranina sperm from those of the OCB, including Portunus, are: (1) anterior termination of the subacrosomal space at the equator of the acrosome and its conical form (plesiomorphy?), in the latter assemblage reaching the operculum; (2) differentiation within the subacrosomal material of a coiled, filiform putative perforatorium (plesiomorphy or apomorphic homoplasy with Anaspidacea?) whereas the entire subacrosomal contents in the OCB form a stout perforatorial rod; (3) subdivision from the acrosome vesicle in Ranina of a posterior acrosomal chamber with differentiation of the walls of this, lining the subacrosomal chamber, as longitudinal corrugations (Raninoidea autapomorphies); and (4) plesiomorphic persistence of numerous well developed, simple mitochondria in contrast to their degeneration, with greater development of a myelin-like lamellar complex, in the OCB. Spermatologically, the Raninoidea thus appear to be the plesiomorphic adelphotaxon of the Oxyrhyncha - Cancridea - Brachygnatha assemblage.

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