Abstract

The distribution of lymphoid cells in the carp head kidney was investigated in relation to the vascular system. Blood vessels in the head kidney were histologically identified into arteries, sinusoids and two types of veins: renal veins and portal, which were distinguished by India ink injection into the caudal vein. By histological and histoplanimetrical observations it was found that the head kidney contained a number of lymphoid cells, which mainly aggregate around the connections between the portal veins and sinusoids, and that the cellular density of the aggregations was higher than in the thymus.Pigment‐containing cell clusters were also observed around these connections. This arrangement of the blood vessels suggests that it is one of the structures able to trap foreign materials, and the occurrence of the lymphoid clusters around the portal veins is a phylogenetic sign of the morphological division between granulopoietic and lymphatic tissues in the carp head kidney.

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