Paradysderina yanayacu Platnick

Lipke, Elisabeth & Michalik, Peter, 2015, Evolutionary Morphology Of The Primary Male Reproductive System And Spermatozoa Of Goblin Spiders (Oonopidae; Araneae), Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2015 (396), pp. 1-72 : 49

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/906.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4628197

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E487E0-3029-2151-2EF6-A73266547DD5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Paradysderina yanayacu Platnick
status

 

Paradysderina yanayacu Platnick View in CoL and Dupérre´, 2011

SPERM TRANSFER FORM ( figs. 32 View Fig , 33 View Fig ): Large (,12 Mm), oval-shaped synspermia ( fig. 33A, B View Fig ) comprising four sperm ( fig. 32 View Fig ). Numerous membrane stacks are visible ( fig. 33 C, D View Fig ). Sperm are coiled and curled around each other ( figs. 32 View Fig , 33E, F View Fig ). A homogeneous secretion sheath (, 250 nm) surrounds the sperm transfer forms ( fig. 33 View Fig A–C).

Spermatozoa ( figs. 32 View Fig , 33 View Fig ): Acrosomal complex: AV small (,1.5 Mm), cylindrical ( fig. 32 View Fig ), with narrow subacrosomal space. AF originates from the narrow subacrosomal space and extends into the nuclear canal but clearly ends before the axonemal base. Nucleus: prcN elongated (,22.9 Mm) and helically contorted ( fig. 33E, F View Fig ). Surface reconstructions reveal a tubelike shape ( fig. 32 View Fig ). peN long (,61.9 Mm) and mainly oval in cross sections ( fig. 33B, C View Fig ). NC located in the periphery ( fig. 33C View Fig ) but empty for the most part ( fig. 33C View Fig ). Axoneme: long (,160.3 Mm). 9+3 microtubular pattern ( fig. 33 View Fig C–F). Little centriolar adjunct surrounds both centrioles, as well as the base of the Ax ( fig. 33F View Fig ). Moreover, the peripheral microtubules of the central portion of Ax are surrounded by electron-dense material ( fig. 33D View Fig ).

NOTES ON SPERMIOGENESIS ( fig. 34 View Fig ): Within the testis all stages of spermiogenesis are visible. Developing spermatids are arranged in cysts. Early spermatids are characterized by, e.g., a large, mainly spherical nucleus and a developing acrosomal complex. While the chromatin starts to condense it appears fibrillar ( fig. 34 View Fig A–C). The proximal portion of the small, cylindrical AV is enclosed by a little electron-dense material ( fig. 34A, B View Fig ). The nucleus is surrounded by a manchette of microtubules ( fig. 34C, F View Fig ). The deep and wide implantation fossa is filled with numerous mitochondria ( fig. 34C, D View Fig ). While the nucleus elongates the chromatin further condenses ( fig. 34D View Fig ). Dense chromatin of the precentriolar part of nucleus appears helically contorted around the implantation fossa ( fig. 34D View Fig ). Little electron-dense material is attached to the peripheral microtubules of the central Ax ( fig. 34E View Fig ). At the end of spermiogenesis four spermatids group closely attached and initiate curling around each other ( fig. 34F, G View Fig ). This process is certainly supported by microtubules that originate from the disintegrating manchette of microtubules and show a distinct arrangement ( fig. 34F View Fig ). The cytoplasm condenses and enlarged, widened cell membranes fold between the sperm, resulting in numerous membrane stacks and one prominent membrane whorl in the center of the sperm conjugate ( fig. 34G View Fig ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Oonopidae

Genus

Paradysderina

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