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A light and electron microscope investigation of gametogenesis in Nicolea zostericola (Polychaeta: Terebellidae)
Authors:K. J. Eckelbarger
Affiliation:1. Harbor Branch Foundation, Fort Pierce, Florida, USA
Abstract:A light and electron microscope study was conducted on Nicolea zostericola (Oersted: Grube, 1860) to describe the processes of gametogenesis. N. zostericola is a monotelic species which spawns from 2 to 5 times over a period of 2 weeks at the end of its 1-year life span. The gonads consist of plates of cells bulging from beneath the peritoneum in the thoracic region of the body. Oogenesis has been divided into 3 phases: an ovarian phase in which gametogonia and primary oocytes are retained within the ovary, a follicular phase, in which oocytes are ovulated into the coelom surrounded by several layers of follicle cells and the vitellogenic phase, where individual oocytes rupture through the follicle cells and enter the coelomic fluid where cell growth and yolk synthesis occur. The combined ovarian and follicular phases have a duration of about 3 to 5 weeks and the vitellogenic phase about 5 to 6 months. Vitellogenesis is described on the ultrastructural level. Yolk synthesis involves the participation of the Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum of the oocyte in possible combination with nutrient absorption from the coelomic fluid. Spermatogenesis involves the rupturing of masses of spermatogonia into the coelom from the testis, surrounded by peritoneal cells. Smaller clusters of spermatocytes are later released into the coelomic fluid where mitotic and meiotic divisions eventually produce flattened plates of sperm. The mature spermatozoan possesses an elongate head, atypical for most polychaetes.
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