Comparative Anatomy Muscles & Digestive Sytem
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Transcript Comparative Anatomy Muscles & Digestive Sytem
Comparative Anatomy
Urogenital System
Note Set 11
Chapter 15
Urogenital System
Ducts of excretory and
reproductive systems are
intimately associated
Figure 14.1: Embryonic and evolutionary
development of kidneys in vertebrates (handout).
Primitive Kidney
Archinephros- primitive excretory
kidney organ
Holonephros
Filtration system
Archinephric duct- drains to cloaca or
bladder
Figure 14.2: Hypothetical
archinephros (book figure 15.7).
Primitive Kidney (con’t)
Pronephros
1st tubules to appear
Anteriorly located; head kidney
Involutes to form lymphoidal mass
Only functions temporarily
All tubules associated with pronephros
Pronephric (archinephric) duct drains
pronephros
Figure 14.3: Pronephros region
of primitive kidney.
Primitive Kidney (con’t)
Figure 14.4: Fate of nephrogenic mesoderm (red)
(book figure 15.8).
Figure 14.5: Pronephric,
mesonephric, and metanephric
system relationships.
Primitive Kidney (con’t)
Mesonephros
(opisthonephros)- kidney mass
caudal to pronephric region
Figure 14.6: Mesonephros of Urodele
(book figure 15.8)
Functional adult kidney of fish
and amphibians
Opisthonephros in sharks
Drained by mesonephric
(archinephric) duct
Figure 14.7: Mesonephric duct of opossum
embryo (book figure 15.19).
Primitive Kidney (con’t)
Ductus efferens:
Pronephric duct
Mesonephric duct
Archinephric duct
Anterior portion of
mesonephric tubules used
in male reproductive
system
Figure 14.8: Urogenital system and adrenal glands of
male frog.
Primitive Kidney (con’t)
Figure 14.9: Mesonephric kidneys with
mesonephric duct (black) carrying sperm and/or
urine (book figure 15.25).
Primitive Kidney (con’t)
Accessory urinary ducts
Tubules also in reproductive sys.
Path for sperm to enter mesonephric duct (sperm duct)
Figure 14.10: Mesonephric kidneys with
separate sperm duct (red) (book figure 15.25).
Amniote Kidney
Pronephros
Mesonephros
Lost
Mainly an embryonic kidney
Involutes at birth
Figure 14.11: Metanephric kidney assuming
superior position to remainder of urogenital
system.
Metanephric kidney
Takes over functions of mesonephros
Ureter- new duct drains met. kidney
Amniote Kidney (con’t)
Mesonephric duct
Sperm duct in males
Ductus deferens in amphibians
Vas deferens in mammals
Terminate at cloaca
Most amniotes
Not higher vertebrates
Figure 14.12: Male teleost, caudal end of
urogenital system (book figure 15.18).
Embryonic Amniotes
Pronephros involutes
Mesonephros involutes
Metanephric kidney develops
Vas deferens
Urinary Bladder
Most vertebrates
Formation varies
Fish- terminal segment of mesonephric duct
Large bladders- turtles and lizards
Turtles- accessory bladder
Gonads
Elevated ridges medial to
kidneys
Gonads enlarge, suspended
by mesenteries
Mesorchium- males
Mesovarium- females
Figure 14.13: Urogenital ridge in
developing embryo.
Figure 14.14: Ovary of hagfish.
Gonads (con’t)
Bidder’s organ
Rudimentary ovary of toads
(Bufo)
If testes removed, become
functional ovary
Ovotestes in fish
Both ovary and testis in lizards
Multi-lobed testis in some
species
Figure 14.15: Left bidder’s organ of
male Bufo (book figure 15.23).
Copulatory Organs
Claspers in cartilagenous fish
Gonopodium in teleost
Intromittent organ
Hemipenes
Single penis
Figure 14.16: Gonopodium on male guppy.
Copulatory Organs (con’t)
No copulatory organs
Rudimentary copulatory
organ
Sperm pocket- some
salamanders
Some amniotes (tuatara)
Cloacal apposition
Male and female cloacas
come together
Figure 14.17: Urogenital system of
female sphenodon.
Copulatory Organs (con’t)
Muellarian ducts
In males, ducts are
nonfunctional
In females, ducts give rise to
female reproductive tract
Only left reproductive tract
Birds and crocodiles
Raptors have vestigial right
reprod. tract
Figure 14.18: Mullerian ducts and
gonads of male amphibians.
Figure 14.19:
Rudimentary
oviduct of pigeon.
Copulatory Organs (con’t)
Duplex uterus
Bipartite uterus
Monotremes and marsupials
Separated female reprod.
tracts
Rabbit
Body of uterus seems
unpaired yet has two lumens
Bicornuate uterus
Cat
Two uterine horns and single
lumen
Abnormal human bicornuate uterus
Copulatory Organs (con’t)
Bicornuate uterus
Cat
Two uterine horns and
single lumen
Simplex uterus
Primates
Large body and horns
Figure 14.21: Mammalian uteri; muellerian ducts
(blackened regions) and cloaca (red) (book figure 15.47).
Cloaca
Receives digestive, reproductive,
and urinary products and tracts
No cloaca
Fish- three separate openings
Mammals above monotremes
Cloaca subdivisions:
Coprodaeum
Urodaeum
Proctodaeum
Figure 14.22: Cloacal cavities and urogenital
structures in salamanders.
Cloaca Subdivisions
Coprodeum
Urodeum
Receives alimentary canal
Simple columnar
Receives urinary and
reproductive products
Transitional epithelium
Proctodeum
Associated with excretory
Stratified squamous
Figure 14.23: Subdivisions of
cloaca shown in bird.
Cloaca (con’t)
Bursa of Fabricius
Lymphoid evagination off cloaca
Figure 14.24: Bursa of Fabricius
on young bird.
Figure 14.25: Histology of
Bursa of Fabricius and cloaca.
Reproduction
Some vertebrates require both sexes
Some verts. are asexual
Reproduce parthenogenetically
Some fish and lizards
Embryonic humans are asexual
Until differentiation of sexual structures
Differentiation of Sexual Structures
Figure 14.26: Mesonephros contributions
to male and female reproductive tracts.
Differentiation of
Sexual Structures (con’t)
Genital Tubercle
Male- penis
Female- clitoris
Genital Folds
Male- penis contribution
Female- labia minora
Genital Swellings
Male- scrotum
Female- labia majora
Figure 14.27: external genitalia of
bisexual stage of human embryo
(book figure 15.48).
Differentiation of
Sexual Structures (con’t)
Mesonephric Duct
Male- vas defferens
Female- gartner’s duct
Muellerian Duct
Male- portions are retained
Female- reproductive tract
Figure 14.28: Changes in female,
mammalian urogenital system
(book figure 15.13).
Differentiation of
Sexual Structures (con’t)
Mesonephric Tubule
Male- vasa efferentia
Female- epoophoran and paraophoran
Genital Ridge
Male- testes
Female- ovaries
Homologous Urogenital Structures
Figure 14.29: Homologous urogenital structures in male and female mammals
(book tbl 15.3).
Literature Cited
Figure 14.1- Trauth, Stan. Handout.
Figure 14.2, 14.4, 14.6, 14.7, 14.9, 14.10, 14.12, 14.15, 14.21, 14.27, 14.28, 14.29- Kent, George C. and
Robert K. Carr. Comparative Anatomy of the Vertebrates. 9th ed. McGraw-Hill, 2001.
Figure 14.3- http://people.eku.edu/ritchisong/342notes10.html
Figure 14.5- http://connection.lww.com/Products/sadler/imagebank.asp
Figure 14.8- http://www2.vscc.cc.tn.us/MSD/BIO/1020/Lab7ChordateII.htm
Figure 14.11- http://www.med.unc.edu/embryo_images/unit-genital/genital_htms/genital018.htm
Figure 14.13, 14.14, 14.17, 14.18, 14.19- Kardong, Kenneth V. Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy,
Function, Evolution. 4th ed. McGraw-Hill, 2006.
Figure 14.16- http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~brandste/aqua/fauna/zucht.html
Figure 14.20- http://137.222.110.150/calnet/vetrep7/page2.htm
Figure 14.22- Sever, David. Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny of Urodela. Vol 1. Science
Publishers, Inc, 2003. pg 334
Figure 14.23- http://member.rivernet.com.au/balehirs/Bishyp6nroBirdNests.htm
Figure 14.24- http://www.uic.edu/classes/dh/dh110/Immunology_files/
Figure 14.25- http://www.upei.ca/histology/html/bursa_fabricus.html
Figure 14.26- http://www.mun.ca/biology/desmid/brian/BIOL3530/DB_Ch12/DBNGerm.html