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- Title
Morphological and physiological development of anterior thoracic stretch receptors in two isopods, Armadillidium vulgare and Ligia exotica.
- Authors
Iwasaki, Masazumi; Ohata, Ayako; Niida, Akiyoshi
- Abstract
Abdominal muscle receptor organs (MROs) monitor the position and movement of abdomen in crustaceans. Thoracic segments of decapods are fused and immovable. It is speculated that MROs had retrograded simple shape, N-cells that lost receptor muscles, a receptor cell and accessory nerves. We focused on the effect of segmental movement in respect to thoracic N-cells and MROs in isopods that have movable thoracic segments. Armadillidium vulgare rolled up its body segments. Ligia exotica swam by quick movement of the posterior thoracic segments. Both isopods possessed N-cells and MROs in the thorax. N-cells were a simple structure, but N-cells from the second and third thoracic segments of A. vulgare had a muscle strand. MROsT3–T4 (from the third and fourth thoracic segments) of A. vulgare had two receptor muscles. MROsT3–T4 of L. exotica had one long receptor muscle. N-cells of both species and MROs of A. vulgare showed slowly adapting stretch-activated discharges. MROs of L. exotica showed both slowly and rapidly adapting discharges. The stretch-activated responses of N-cells and MROs inhibited each other. N-cells or MROs in the thorax of isopods are not related to the segmental structure. The morphology and physiology of N-cells and MROs are specialized to species–specific behaviors.
- Subjects
ARMADILLIDIUM vulgare; LIGIA; CRUSTACEA; MUSCLE receptors; ACCESSORY nerve; ANIMAL morphology
- Publication
Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural & Behavioral Physiology, 2007, Vol 193, Issue 7, p741
- ISSN
0340-7594
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00359-007-0229-7