ABSTRACT
The male Laneella perisi (Mariluis) n. comb. is described based on specimens collected in the Cordillera Oriental (1,370-1,450 m asl), Florencia-Suaza, Caquetá, Colombia. A key to separate the two species of the genus Laneella and illustrations of the male genitalia and female abdomen, terminalia, and spermatheca are also presented.
Subject(s)
Diptera/anatomy & histology , Animals , Colombia , Female , MaleABSTRACT
The objective of this study was to characterize, structurally and ultrastructurally, the spermatozoa of the screwworm flies Cochliomyia hominivorax and Cochliomyia macellaria. To visualize the ultrastructure of microtubules and identify basic proteins, techniques such as the tannic acid fixation and the cytochemical method of ethanolic phosphotungstic acid (EPTA) were used. These methods of fixation are important because they reinforce the evidence of the protofilaments present in the microtubular wall and identify basic proteins, respectively. With the tannic acid fixative it was possible to observe a significant number of microtubules in the cell cytoplasm during spermiogenesis. Microtubules were observed in all regions of spermatids (head, 'overlap' zone and tail). The EPTA technique highlighted the presence of basic proteins on the border of the nucleus and nuclear envelope in the two species analyzed, and in the centriolar adjunct and on the border of mitochondrial derivatives in C. macellaria. The axoneme is of a conventional insect type with a 9 + 9 + 2 microtubular arrangement and the spermatozoa of C. hominivorax and C. macellaria are similar to those described for other Brachycera. The spermatozoa are long and thin in these two species, â¼190 µm in length, of which the head region measures â¼26 µm in C. hominivorax and 29 µm in C. macellaria. A polymorphism was observed in C. hominivorax and C. macellaria. These features are consistent with the structural diversity of the dipteran spermatozoa, constituting an essential tool for understanding the complex variations found in the Diptera order.
Subject(s)
Diptera/ultrastructure , Spermatozoa/ultrastructure , Tissue Fixation/methods , Animals , Male , Microscopy, Electron, TransmissionABSTRACT
In April 2009, a wild maned wolf, Chrysocyon brachyurus, was captured in an area of cerrado in Brasília, DF, Brazil, with screw worm maggots in external wounds. Fifty larvae were bred in the laboratory and eight adults of Cochliomyia hominivorax (Coquerel) emerged 10 days after pupation. This is the first report of a myiasis by C. hominivorax in a free-living maned wolf in Brazil.
Subject(s)
Screw Worm Infection/veterinary , Wolves/parasitology , Animals , BrazilABSTRACT
The spermatozoa of Chrysomya megacephala are similar to those described for other Brachycera. In this species, the spermatozoa are long and thin, measuring about 590microm in length, of which the head region measures approximately 60microm. The head includes a monolayered acrosome with electron-lucid material, and the shape of the nucleus, in cross-sections, varies from circular to oval with completely condensed chromatin. The centriole was observed in the zone of flagellar implantation, below the "peg" region. In the region of overlap, the followings structures are observed: nucleus, centriolar adjunct, mitochondrial derivatives and axoneme. The two mitochondrial derivatives are of different lengths but similar diameter. The axoneme is of a conventional insectan type with a 9+9+2 microtubular arrangement, with accessory tubules flanked by the electron-dense intertubular material. The male internal reproductive tract consists of testis, vas deferens, seminal vesicle, accessory glands and ejaculatory duct.