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pmid: 11603740
Scanning and transmission electron microscopical investigations revealed that Genés organ in unfed and ovipositing females of Dermacentor reticulatus is formed as a double-sac-structure consisting of an outer epithelial and an inner cuticular sac. In ovipositing ticks the latter emerges through the camerostomal aperture to the exterior. Genés organ in unfed ticks consists of a corpus, two posterior horns and a pair of undeveloped glands at each side, which differentiate in ovipositing ticks to compound, branched tubular glands with a main efferent duct for each gland opening into the lumen between the epithelial and the cuticular sac. Genés organ of egg-laying females corresponds basically in morphology and structural organization to that of unfed ticks. Compared with unfed ticks, however, in ovipositing ticks the corpus and horns are longer and broader, the glands are fully developed and the cuticular sac is evertable. The epithelial sac as the outermost part of Genés organ is continuous with the hypodermis of the basis capituli and the scutum, arises at the camerostomal aperture, forms the corpus and the two blind-ending horns, passes into the epithelium of the main excretory ducts of the glands and envelops the cuticular sac. The cuticular sac passes into the cuticle of the basis capituli and the scutum, arises at the camerostomal aperture, is folded, expands into the horn tips and consists inwards of a smooth epicuticula and outwards of a fibrous endocuticula. Muscles originating from the scutum pass caudomedially through the epithelial sac and are inserted into the cuticular sac. The entire surface of the maximally everted cuticular sac is covered with an amorphous mass. In cleaned samples, ledge-like structures appear on the lateral surface. These ledges turn into balloon-like structures which extend over the medial and dorsal surface. The entire surface including the balloon-like structures and the ledges are provided with numerous cribrate pits.
Oviposition, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Animals, Female, Dermacentor
Oviposition, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Animals, Female, Dermacentor
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