1
artículo
Publicado 2024
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In this study, the histology of the talon and the annex glandular sac (AGS) of the reproductive system from five species of Megalobulimus (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora, Strophocheilidae) is described. Hematoxylin-Eosin staining technique was used. It was found that the talon is a compact muscular structure housing the fertilization pouch, a tubular structure lined by folded ciliated cylindrical epithelium, to whose proximal end the hermaphroditic duct connects. This duct terminates in the fertilization chamber, from which the spermathecal tubules originate. These tubules branch out to their blind ends and store exogenous sperm. In the tubules, spermatozoa were observed, mostly with their heads attached to the ciliated epithelial cells and their tails free in the lumen. The wall of the AGS has an outer layer of smooth muscle and, lining the lumen, a non-ciliated glandular columnar epitheli...
2
artículo
Publicado 2020
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In the Peruvian Amazon, freshwater snails of the Ampullariidae family are known as churos, and around 20 species have originally been described for Peru. Although they are widely used for food, traditional medicine and the object of many studies for their cultivation and industrialization, only the species Pomacea maculata is mentioned in the literature. Molecular identification was carried out based on the mitochondrial marker COI of individuals of "churo negro" apple snails (Pomacea) commercialized in the markets of Iquitos, as well as those used in restaurant dishes in the city of Lima, and contrasted with specimens from their natural habitat. It was found that these specimens, correspond to the species Pomacea nobilis (Reeve, 1856). The molecular phylogenetic analysis showed P. nobilis as the sister species of P. guyanensis, in the P. glauca group, distantly related to P. maculata. T...
3
artículo
Publicado 2020
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In the Peruvian Amazon, freshwater snails of the Ampullariidae family are known as churos, and around 20 species have originally been described for Peru. Although they are widely used for food, traditional medicine and the object of many studies for their cultivation and industrialization, only the species Pomacea maculata is mentioned in the literature. Molecular identification was carried out based on the mitochondrial marker COI of individuals of "churo negro" apple snails (Pomacea) commercialized in the markets of Iquitos, as well as those used in restaurant dishes in the city of Lima, and contrasted with specimens from their natural habitat. It was found that these specimens, correspond to the species Pomacea nobilis (Reeve, 1856). The molecular phylogenetic analysis showed P. nobilis as the sister species of P. guyanensis, in the P. glauca group, distantly related to P. maculata. T...