Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/5415
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Type: Journal article
Title: Spermatozoa of murid rodents from Africa: Morphological diversity and evolutionary trends
Author: Breed, W.
Citation: Journal of Zoology, 1995; 237(Part 4):625-651
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Issue Date: 1995
ISSN: 0952-8369
1469-7998
Abstract: <jats:p>The diversity of the structural organization of the spermatozoa of African murid rodents is described at the light and transmission electron microscopical level of resolution. In most species the sperm head is falciform in shape but it varies somewhat in overall breadth, width, and length. A typical perforatorium is present and the acrosome splits into a large head cap over the convex surface and a smaller ventral segment similar to the sperm head of most Asian and Australasian murids. In a few species, however, the morphology is very different. In <jats:italic>Acomys</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>Uranomys</jats:italic> spermatozoa, the apical hook is more bilaterally flattened, has a large apical acrosomal region, and no separate ventral segment. Two species of <jats:italic>Aethomys</jats:italic> have, in addition to an apical hook, a 4μ long extension of the cytoskeletal material that projects from the concave surface of the sperm head, whereas in <jats:italic>Dasymys</jats:italic> two large ventral processes extend from the upper concave region which contain nuclear material basally and a huge extension of cytoskeleton apically. In <jats:italic>Aethomys chrysophilus</jats:italic> type B, the sperm nucleus is unique in form and often has a central region in which threads of chromatin can be seen; it is capped by a massive acrosome whose apical segment is complex and convoluted in structure. <jats:italic>Stochomys longicaudatus</jats:italic> appears to have a conical sperm head, and in all three <jats:italic>Lophuromys</jats:italic> species the sperm head is spatulate in shape with the flat, plate‐like nucleus capped by a thin acrosome. The evolutionary trends in changes of sperm head shape and design of these rodents are discussed. It is suggested that some of the differences in morphology may relate to the variation in structural organization of the coats around the egg through which the spermatozoon has to pass in order for fertilization to occur.</jats:p>
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1995.tb05019.x
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7998.1995.tb05019.x
Appears in Collections:Anatomical Sciences publications
Aurora harvest 5
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