scholarly journals Histological observations of the reproductive organs of the male dog from birth to sexual maturity.

1991 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eiichi KAWAKAMI ◽  
Toshihiko TSUTSUI ◽  
Akira OGASA
2008 ◽  
Vol 1 (11) ◽  
pp. 722-728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy Kirk ◽  
Meenakshi Bandhakavi ◽  
Chantal Simon

Puberty is defined as the time when the onset of sexual maturity occurs and the reproductive organs become functional, and it is therefore the time when a child becomes an adult capable of reproduction. Although the terms puberty and adolescence are commonly used interchangeably, the term puberty tends to be used for the physical, and adolescence for the psychological and social changes.


Parasitology ◽  
1922 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sadamu Yokogawa

1. Heligtnosomum muris proved to be very favourable material for the study of nematode development, since it will develop perfectly normally in culture rats, infection is easily carried out and since sexual maturity is reached in 7–10 days after infection.2. The post-embryonal development of H. muris is divided into five stages, two free and three parasitic, with three moults. There is only one moult during free life, the second and third stages being separated by change of habitat brought about by entrance into the host. Sexual maturity is attained soon after the completion of the third moult. The mature worm has two cuticular layers, the outer of which is separated by a space from the inner. This outer cuticula is probably the beginning of a fourth moult which is never completed.3. Under favourable conditions the eggs hatch in about 20 to 24 hours after being passed with the faeces.4. The first two stages of post-embryonal development, which are passed in free life, are separated by a relatively long moult during which the larva changes from the rhabditiform type to the filariform type. During this period there is a rapid division of the cells lining the intestine, which frees masses of these cells into the lumen and leaves the intestine of the filariform larva lined with flattened cells.5. The infective stage is not enclosed in a sheath and tends to work its way out of the culture onto the glass or along the edges of the filter paper. At this stage it is impossible to distinguish the sexes.6. Infection of the rat can be accomplished both by way of the mouth or through the skin although the latter method is by far the most effective. The larvae reach the lungs about 14 to 20 hours after penetration through the skin. They remain in the lungs until about 35 to 65 hours after infection. The majority of them reach the intestine 50 to 65 hours after infection, although in a few they were found as early as 45 hours.7. In the lungs the larvae increase rapidly in size and moult just before they migrate to the intestine. Early in the development in the lungs the sexes can be distinguished by: (1) the migration toward the posterior end of the genital primordium of the female, (2) structural differences in the caudal region, and (3) differences in shape of the genital primordium.8. After reaching the intestine the larvae grow rapidly and enter into the third moult from 96 to 108 hours after infection. In the fourth larval stage between the second and third moults growth and differentiation are most marked. It is during this stage that the differentiation of the organs of the reproductive system occurs.9. Shortly after the completion of the third moult sexual maturity is reached and later the cuticula separates into two layers.10. During the course of development the changes in size and shape and in the character of the cuticula were traced step by step and the differentiation of the digestive and excretory systems were followed as completely as the material would permit. However it was in following the details of the development of the reproductive organs that the investigation was most fully carried out.11. In the male reproductive system the testes, vas deferens, seminal vesicle, cement gland and ejaculatory duct arise by differentiations of the genital primordium and are therefore called internal sex-organs, while the bursa and the spicules which are not developed from the genital primordium are known as the external sex-organs.12. Toward the end of the third larval stage (first parasitic stage) the genital primordium of the male becomes separated into two parts by an extremely delicate strand of tissue. The anterior half of this genital primordium grows forward up to the oesophageal region and forms the testes, the narrow strand connecting the two parts develops into the vas deferens, and the posterior part grows backward to the posterior end, becomes tubular and forms the seminal vesicle, cement gland and ejaculatory duct.13. The bursa is formed from the walls of the posterior end of the male which become very much inflated, and the spicules develop from secretions of a group of spindle-shaped cells which are early differentiated in the posterior region.14. In the development of the female reproductive system the ovary, oviduct, seminal receptacle, uterus and the anterior part of the ovijector arise from the differentiation of the genital primordium and are therefore called internal sex-organs, while the vulva, vagina and posterior part of the ovijector arise from invagination and differentiation of subcuticular cells of the posterior end and are therefore called external reproductive organs.15. After the genital primordium has migrated backward to a position on the ventral side just in front of the anus, it elongates very greatly and grows forward. The anterior part remains as a solid mass of cells and differentiates into the ovary. The rest of the primordium becomes tubular and differentiates into the oviduct, seminal receptacle, uterus and ovijector.16. A group of cells just in front of the rectum and just over the posterior part of the genital primordium increases in number, invaginates, becomes differentiated into a tube which joins with the posterior part of the genital primordium. This tube differentiates into the vulva and vagina. Where it joins the posterior end of the internal reproductive organs there is an overlapping so that the posterior end of the ovijector has a double origin.


1969 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 625 ◽  
Author(s):  
RFC Smith

Field data were obtained during the period September 1962-January 1965 from 710 greater gliders, S. volans, in a natural population. Histological changes were observed in the reproductive tracts of another 129 animals shot during this period. S. volans has a short breeding season in March, April, and May, after which involution of the reproductive organs occurs in both sexes. The species is monovular and polyoestrous. Sexual maturity is attained by both sexes in the second year, following which breeding probably occurs annually. The female reproductive system shows several primitive and anomalous features, among which is the retention of the Wolffian ducts in the adult. The histology of ovaries, uteri, and vaginae at various stages of the reproductive cycle is briefly described.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 551-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihisa Kangawa ◽  
Masayoshi Otake ◽  
Satoko Enya ◽  
Toshinori Yoshida ◽  
Masatoshi Shibata

The microminipig has become an increasingly attractive animal model for various experimental practices because of its manageable size; however, studies of the histological features of the female reproductive organs in microminipigs are limited. The present study investigates the sexual development of the reproductive organs and the cyclical changes during the estrous cycle in female microminipigs. The ovaries, oviducts, uteri, and vaginal tissues from 33 animals aged 0 to 26 months were utilized in this study. By evaluating the large tertiary follicles, corpora lutea, and the regressing corpora lutea, we estimated that female microminipigs reached puberty at approximately 5 months of age and sexual maturity at 8 months of age. The appearance of the follicles and corpora lutea in the ovaries, as well as the epithelium in other reproductive organs, was synchronized with each phase of the estrous cycle and was identical to that in common domestic pigs. In addition, several spontaneous findings were observed, including mesonephric duct remnants adjacent to oviducts and mineralization in ovaries. Understanding the normal histology of the reproductive organs in microminipigs is crucial for advancing pathological evaluations for future toxicological studies.


1990 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 207 ◽  
Author(s):  
PA Woolley

The breeding season of S. macroura extends from June to February, and individual males (both wild- caught and laboratory-reared) are capable of breeding over extended periods during the breeding season, and for up to three seasons, in the laboratory. Gross and histological changes in the reproductive organs and endocrine changes in relation to reproductive activity have been investigated. Males do not appear to reach sexual maturity until the season following that in which they were born, although spermatorrhoea may commence in the season of birth. Testis and epididymis weight of these males, which commence spermatorrhoea late in the season, approximates that of sexually mature males early in the season but androgen levels and the weight of the accessory glands are low in all males except during the early months of the season. The age at which spermatorrhoea commences ranges from 141 to 350 days. The minimum scrota1 width at which it commences is 7.9 mm and the minimum body weight, 14.0 g. The onset of spermatorrhoea is not a function of age or season and in S. macroura should be used with caution as an indicator of impending sexual maturity. Maximum corticosteroid- binding capacity (MCBC) generally exceeded corticosteroid concentration and no androgen-related fall in MCBC was evident.


2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (8) ◽  
pp. 1105-1122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihisa Kangawa ◽  
Masayoshi Otake ◽  
Satoko Enya ◽  
Toshinori Yoshida ◽  
Masatoshi Shibata

Microminipigs are becoming increasingly attractive alternatives for various experimental applications, such as general toxicology studies, owing to their manageable size. However, there are limited studies on the male reproductive organs of microminipigs, particularly on the histological aspects of sexual maturity. To clarify the development of male reproductive organs, 35 male microminipigs, aged 0 to 12 months, were used in this study. Histological and histomorphological evaluation was performed based on spermatogenic development, measurement of tubular structure in testes and epididymides, and histological progress of accessory glands. In addition, spontaneous testicular changes were quantitatively assessed. Histologically, male microminipigs sexually matured around 4.5 months of age, when spermatogenesis in testes and structural development in genital organs were completed. Spontaneous testicular changes occurred in all the animals investigated. Multinucleated giant cell was most commonly observed, followed by hypospermatogenesis and tubular atrophy/hypoplasia. However, the number of affected tubules was less than 1% in testes after 4.5 months of age, suggesting that the influence of these changes on evaluation of toxicity studies may be minimal. It is preferable to use sexually mature animals in toxicology studies; therefore, the information obtained by the present study will be helpful for future toxicity evaluations in microminipigs.


2012 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 771-776
Author(s):  
Mirjana Ocokoljic ◽  
Mirjana Sijacic-Nikolic ◽  
Dragica Vilotic ◽  
D. Vujicic

The neoteny of 64-day-old European plane tree autovegetative progeny is described, starting from the fact that sexual maturity in the juvenile stage of tree development is a rare and significant process by which the period of synthesis of new lower taxonomic units is shortened. The observed formation of European plane tree reproductive organs has been classified as induced neoteny. Compared to the inflorescences of mature European plane trees, the number of precocious inflorescences was lower, flower structure was simpler, and the diameters of inflorescences were the same. As neoteny is a genetic and physiological marker for the tree genotype and the species, and as it is classified as an example of parallelinherited variability explained by changed interactions of trophic, hormonal and genetic systems, this analysis of neoteny can be a contribution to its further scientific study and its practical utilization at a larger scale.


AKADEMIKA ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-61
Author(s):  
Imas Jihan Syah

Biologically, menstruation is a reproductive cycle showing that a woman is healthy related to her reproductive organs. Menstruation indicates a woman's sexual maturity in the sense that she has an ovum ready to be fertilized, be pregnant, and give birth to a child. In religious language we call this cycle as menstruation. In the Shafi'i school of thought (madzhab), women start menstruation period, at least age 9 (nine) years. The duration of menstruation is at least one day and night or 24 hours and at most is 15 days and nights. The menstrual discharge are commonly 6 or 7 days and nights. But in general, menstruation occurs 1x in a month. As for the most period there is no limit (according to ijma'). It could be 1x a year and even there is a woman who has never experienced menstruation throughout life, namely: Sayyidah Fatimah Az-Zahra Al-Battul


Parasitology ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 423-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. D. WHITTINGTON ◽  
I. ERNST

Life-history attributes of the capsalid monogenean Benedenia lutjani, a parasite of Lutjanus carponotatus from the Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Australia, were investigated from experimental infections. Oncomiracidia of B. lutjani invaded and attached at any site on the fish, but more commonly invaded body surfaces. Immature specimens then migrated to the pelvic fins. Development of the reproductive organs of B. lutjani corresponded with migratory movements on the host. Parasite aggregation on the pelvic fins coincided with the development of functional male reproductive organs and some protandrous worms that possessed a vagina appeared to be inseminated. Migration to, and aggregation on, the branchiostegal membranes (membranous folds posterior to the opercula) coincided with the onset of sexual maturity and commencement of egg production by parasites. The rate of parasite development and the timing of migratory events on the host were influenced by water temperature. All specimens of B. lutjani reached sexual maturity between 12 and 14 days p.i. at 24 °C and between 8 and 10 days p.i. at 27 °C. Anterior hamuli grew continually during a 16-day experiment at 27 °C and 25-day experiment at 23 °C and their length appeared to provide a suitable index to estimate parasite age. The possible adaptive significance of the migratory behaviour, site-specificity and its link with changes in parasite development are discussed.


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