Abstract

The lophophoral tentacles of two phoronids, Phoronis psammophila and Phoronis hippocrepia, are described from an ultrastructural point of view. The tentacles are hollow structures, with an epidermis exhibiting supporting cells, sensory cells, and four types of gland cells, A, B1, B2, B3. The epidermis rests on a connective tissue layer, tubular in shape, enclosing a coelomic space lined by myoepithelial mesothelium (peritoneum). There is a single blood capillary in the tentacular coelomic cavity, attached to the frontal face of the tentacle, with contractile walls derived from the peritoneum. Both erythrocytes and amoebocyte-like cells occur inside the capillary. Differences between the tentacles of these two species and those of Phoronis australis, whose structure is already known, mainly concern the abundance and distribution of the epidermal gland cell types and are related to the burrowing and tube-building activities of these animals in different substrata.

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