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Epidermis and sensory receptors of Temnocephala minor (Plathelminthes, Rhabdocoela, Temnocephalida): an electron microscopic study

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Abstract

 The epidermis, rhabditic glands and receptors of the commensal flatworm Temnocephala minor are described using electron microscopic techniques. The epidermis is syncytial and non-ciliated at the anterior body end; it bears folds, microvilli and other structures which differ according to the body side. The nuclei are located intraepithelially and distally from the basal membrane. Long cilia occur at the posterior end anteriorly from the sucker. All receptor structures described belong to a single morphological type and stand in groups arising from epidermal pits. On the tentacles these groups are regularly distributed. Each receptor has a single cilium and a long rootlet. More than 15 000 receptors of this type have been estimated to occur on the surface of a single medium-sized specimen of T. minor. Although the total number of receptor structures appears very high, the number of different receptor types is extremely low in comparison to other taxa of flatworms.

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Accepted: 8 July 1997

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Xylander, W. Epidermis and sensory receptors of Temnocephala minor (Plathelminthes, Rhabdocoela, Temnocephalida): an electron microscopic study. Zoomorphology 117, 147–154 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004350050039

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004350050039

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