Search results for "Tergum"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Morphology and ultrastructure of paired prototergal glands in the adult rove beetle Philonthus varians (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae)

2002

Abstract Philonthus and other genera of Philonthina possess a pair of prototergal glands located in the first abdominal tergum and hidden at rest by hind wings and elytra. In Philonthus varians they occupy the whole length of the tergum and form a pouch-like invaginated reservoir with a scaly glandular zone and a smooth outlet. A grille of long setae covers the opening of each gland. The fine structure of these glands is given for the first time. Three types of cells are found in the glandular epithelium. Epidermal cells underlie the cuticular scales, numerous class 1 secretory cells open in the centre of calyces made of finger-like processes of the cuticle, and class 3 cells are connected …

Exocrine glandMorphology (linguistics)biologyTergumSetaGeneral MedicineAnatomyPhilonthus variansbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.anatomical_structureInsect SciencemedicineRove beetleUltrastructureEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDevelopmental BiologyCuticle (hair)Arthropod Structure & Development
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The exocrine glands of Dysdercus cingulatus (Heteroptera, Pyrrhocoridae): Morphology and function of nymphal glands.

2018

The exocrine glandular system of the nymphs and the adults of Dysdercus cingulatus were studied. The D. cingulatus nymphs present 3 dorso-abdominal glands (lying under the 3rd, 4th, and 5th abdominal terga) and a pair of dorso-lateral pygidial glands on the pygidium (tergum 8). Histological and ultrastructural studies show that the upper and lower walls of the dorso-abdominal glands differ in structure; 3 types of cells were described: epidermal cells, unicellular secretory cells, and multicellular secretory units. Each of these exocrine glands plays an important part in the behavior of the nymphs (gregariousness, alarm, defense). The morphology of the various glands is discussed, and the c…

Exocrine glandbiologyPyrrhocoridaeHeteropteraTergumZoologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationDysdercus cingulatusPygidiummedicine.anatomical_structurestomatognathic systemUltrastructuremedicineAnimal Science and ZoologyNymphDevelopmental BiologyJournal of morphology
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Description of a new genus of Euliina with unique coupling adaptations of the male and female (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Tortricinae: Cochylini)

2017

Ancoruncus langeri, new genus and new species, is described and illustrated from the Neotropics (Bolivia). It is assigned to the tribe Cochylini (subtribe Euliina) in the family Tortricidae. Ancoruncus langeri is characterized by an unusual, strongly developed uncus, distally expanded into an anchor-like, bilobed apical process and a complex gnathos in male genitalia, as well as an unusual configuration of the anterior lobes of the papillae anales, and tergum 8 with the anterior area bearing a double pocket in the female genitalia. The hypothetical dorsal coupling mechanism of the male and female genitalia is discussed. 

Male0106 biological sciencesTortricidaeSystematicsBolivia010607 zoologyGenitalia MaleMothsCochylini010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesLepidoptera genitaliaSpecies SpecificityAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyTergumGenitalia FemaleAnatomybiology.organism_classificationUncusLepidopteraFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)TortricinaeZootaxa
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