Morphology of male and female reproductive systems in the ground beetle Apotomus and the peculiar sperm ultrastructure of A. rufus (P. Rossi, 1790) (Coleoptera, Carabidae)
R. Antonio Gomez , David Mercati , Pietro Lupetti , Paolo P. Fanciulli , Romano Dallai
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Relatively few studies have focused on evolutionary losses of sexually selected male traits. We use light and electron microscopy to study the male and female reproductive anatomy of Apotomus ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae), a lineage that we reconstruct as likely having lost sperm conjugation, a putative sexually selected trait. We pay particular attention to the structure of the testes and spermatheca. Both of these organs share a strikingly similar shape–consisting of long blind canals arranged into several concentric overlapping rings measuring approximately 18 mm and 19.5 mm in total length, respectively. The similarity of these structures suggests a positive evolutionary correlation between female and male genital organs. Males are characterized by unifollicular testes with numerous germ cysts, which contain 64 sperm cells each, and we record a novel occurrence of sperm cyst “looping”, a spermatogenic innovation previously only known from some fruit fly and Tenebrionid beetle sperm. The sperm are very long (about 2.7 mm) and include an extraordinarily long helicoidal acrosome, a short nucleus, and a long flagellum. These findings confirm the structural peculiarity of sperm, testis, and female reproductive tract (FRT) of Apotomus species relative to other ground beetles, which could possibly be the result of shifts in sexual selection.
期刊介绍:
Arthropod Structure & Development is a Journal of Arthropod Structural Biology, Development, and Functional Morphology; it considers manuscripts that deal with micro- and neuroanatomy, development, biomechanics, organogenesis in particular under comparative and evolutionary aspects but not merely taxonomic papers. The aim of the journal is to publish papers in the areas of functional and comparative anatomy and development, with an emphasis on the role of cellular organization in organ function. The journal will also publish papers on organogenisis, embryonic and postembryonic development, and organ or tissue regeneration and repair. Manuscripts dealing with comparative and evolutionary aspects of microanatomy and development are encouraged.