Nature Publishing Group, publisher of Nature, and other science journals and reference works
Nature
my account e-alerts subscribe register
   
Monday 23 November 2009
Journal Home
Current Issue
AOP
Archive
Download PDF
References
Export citation
Export references
Send to a friend
More articles like this

Letters to Nature
Nature 194, 397 - 398 (28 April 1962); doi:10.1038/194397a0

Spermatogenesis of a Cestode

R. A. R. GRESSON

Department of Zoology, The Queen's University, Belfast.

THE interpretation of the structure of the spermatozoa of cestodes and of the process of spermatogenesis is subject to wide divergence of opinion. In 1935 Young1 directed attention to the lack of knowledge regarding cestode structure and development, and among the main problems awaiting solution discussed the method of cell division and the structure of the sperm. Regarding the latter he wrote that "we have even less information than we have about most cestode tissues and until the spermatogenesis is known this ignorance will continue". His observations2,3 and those of Child4 "suggest a very simplified structure correlated with rapidity of development and the production of enormous numbers of spermatozoa"1. Watson5 believed that the spermatozoon of Gyrocotyle is provided with a head. He did not, however, make a detailed study of spermatogenesis and described the sperm as "a slender thread tapering at the posterior end, with a well marked head, several times the diameter of the body". In a description of a figure of two spermatozoa he mentioned head, tail and acrosome. Presumably the acrosome is a short threadlike structure figured at the anterior end of the head. Since the publication of Young's paper1 no further information on the spermatogenesis of cestodes has become available.

  1. Young, R. T. , Trans. Amer. Microscop. Soc., 54, 229 (1935).
  2. Young, R. T. , Zool. Jahrb. Anat., 35, 355 (1913).
  3. Young, R. T. , Arch. Zellforsch., 17, 419 (1923).
  4. Child, C. M. , Biol. Bull., 12, 175 (1907).
  5. Watson, E. W. , Univ. Calif. Pub. Zool., 6, 353 (1911).
  6. Sommer, F. , and Landois, L. , Z. wiss. Zool., 22, 44 (1872).
  7. Leuckert, R. , Die Parasiten des Menschen (1879–86).
  8. Salensky, W. , Z. wiss. Zool., 24, 291 (1874).
  9. Sommer, F. , Z. wiss. Zool., 24, 499 (1874).
  10. Moniez, R. , C.R. Acad. Sci., Paris, 87, 112 (1878).
  11. Roboz, Z. , Z. wiss. Zool., 37, 263 (1882).
  12. Gresson, R. A. R. , Irish Nat. J., 10, 308 (1952).
  13. Gresson, R. A. R. , Quart. J. Micro. Sci., 98, 493 (1957). | ISI |
  14. Gresson, R. A. R. , Parasitol., 48, 293 (1958). | ISI | ChemPort |
  15. Gresson, R. A. R. , and Perry, M. M. , Exp. Cell Res., 22, 1 (1961). | Article | PubMed | ISI | ChemPort |
  16. Afzelius, B. , J. Biophys. Biochem. Cytol., 5, 269 (1959). | Article | PubMed | ISI | ChemPort |



© 1962 Nature Publishing Group
Privacy Policy