0000000000585442
AUTHOR
Bernhard Kluge
The pronephros of the early ammocoete larva of lampreys (Cyclostomata, Petromyzontes): Fine structure of the renal tubules
The renal tubules of the paired pronephros in early larvae (ammocoetes) of two lamprey species, Lampetra fluviatilis and Petromyzon marinus, were studied by use of light-, scanning- and transmission electron microscopy. They consist of (1) a variable number of pronephric tubules (3 to 6), and (2) an excretory duct. By fine-structural criteria, the renal tubules can be divided into 6 segments. Each pronephric tubule is divided into (1) the nephrostome and (2) the proximal tubule, the excretory duct consisting of (3) a common proximal tubule followed by (4) a short intermediate segment, and then by a pronephric duct composed of (5) a cranial and (6) a caudal section. The epithelium of the nep…
On the Establishment of Polarity in Polychaete Eggs
The study of Spiralian development began about a hundred years ago when Whitman (1878) published a description of the development of the leech, Clepsine marginata. Subsequently, Spiralian development became popular because the developmental fate of each individual blastomere can be determined precisely from the cell lineage. About the turn of the century several extensive papers describing the cell lineages of various molluscs (e.g. Blochmann, 1881, 1883; Kofoid, 1895; Conklin, 1897; Wierzejski 1905) and annelids (e.g. Wilson, 1892; Mead, 1897; Woltereck, 1904) appeared. From these studies it became clear that the general principles of mollusc and annelid development (and to a much lesser d…