Cartilage in the cloaca: Phallodeal spicules in Caecilians (Amphibia: Gymnophiona)

J Morphol. 1998 Aug;237(2):177-186. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4687(199808)237:2<177::AID-JMOR8>3.0.CO;2-Z.

Abstract

The presence of spicules (also termed spines, teeth, or denticles) on the intromittent organ, a character unique to male members of some species in the African caecilian family Scolecomorphidae, has long been known (Noble, '31; Taylor, '68; Wake,'72; Nussbaum,'85). However, their organization and structure has not been examined. Series of males of three species of Scolecomorphus were examined in order to determine the gross and histological organization of the spicules. Spicule morphology changes with ontogeny within species and differs grossly among species. The cellular organization of the spicules is remarkably similar among species, however. The spicules are composed of chondroid cartilage. The large discoid cells are arranged in "stacks" to form the projections, which emerge from an extensive base plate of the same cartilage. The spicules have a connective tissue sheath, which is not continuous with the cloacal epithelium. The sheath of the spicules may or may not be mineralized; the cartilage itself does not appear to be calcified. Mineralization apparently is not correlated with age, reproductive status, or season. Cartilage in the cloaca of these few species poses a series of questions about the interactions of developmental, structural, functional, and phylogenetic properties in the evolution of the reproductive biology of caecilians. J. Morphol. 237:177-186, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Keywords: Amphibia: Gymnophiona; Caecilians; cloacal structures.