Abstract
The inverse cerebral ocelli of the pelagosphera larva of Golfingia misakiana and of another unidentified larva are composed of two or three sensory cells and one supportive pigmented cell. The sensory cells bear an array of microvilli as well as a single cilium with poor undulation of its membrane; the photoreceptive organelles are regarded as the rhabdomeric type. A striking feature of these cells is the cores, which extend within the microvilli from the tip into the midregion of the cell. It is suggested that these structures are identical with the submicrovillar cisternae found in the cerebral inverse eyes of larvae of Polychaeta. The findings allow the conclusion that in the pelagosphera of the Sipuncula, contrary to the teleplanic veliger larvae of Gastropoda, a lengthy pelagic cycle is not correlated with the development of a ciliary photoreceptor. Additionally, it is assumed that the pigment cup ocelli in larvae of Sipuncula are homologous with the cerebral inverted pigment cup ocelli of larvae of Polychaeta.
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Accepted: 19 March 1997
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Blumer, M. The larval ocelli of Golfingia misakiana (Sipuncula, Golfingiidae) and of a pelagosphera of another unidentified species. Zoomorphology 117, 115–120 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004350050036
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004350050036