The ovarian cycle was studied in Ameca splendens, a viviparous fish native to western Mexico. Two wild populations living in environments with differential conditions (a small pond adjacent to a reservoir and a spring) were examined to determine whether the conditions these populations are exposed to can elicit differences in the reproductive cycle. The two sites differ from each other with respect to several environmental factors: the spring has clear, oxygen-rich water while the pond has higher levels of conductivity, hardness and inorganic nitrogen. Six stages of gonadal maturation were identified in A. splendens, based on histological and macroscopic characteristics of the gonad. The relative frequency of gonadic stages at both sites showed two reproductive peaks during the year: from March to May and from September to November. Histologically, ovaries exhibit an asynchronous development in both populations, revealing the existence of a multiple reproductive cycle. Relative mean condition shows organisms are in peak condition (K > 1) at age class 1+ as they recruit to reproduction; K was <1 following the onset of multiple reproduction. The Fulton condition factor shows that the mean condition is slightly higher in the spring population. The relative frequency of gonadal maturation differed between the study sites and is indicative of the plasticity of A. splendens in facing different conditions within the environments it inhabits.
The ultrastructural features of the spermatogenic development and mature spermatozoa morphology of Atrina maura were investigated through transmission electron microscopy. The testis displays a diffuse tubular structure in which gametes develop within a concentric arrangement according to the degree of development. Within the tubules also appear Sertoli cells, which contain a large amount of lipid droplets and glycogen granules in the cytoplasm, suggesting a nutritive role in the first spermatogenesis stage (spermatogonia). Four gamete maturation stages co-occurred in the same individual: spermatogonia (4-8 um), spermatocytes (3-4 um) (including primary and secondary), spermatids (2.5 um) and spermatozoa (-2 um head length). The proacrosomal vesicle and flagellum occur only until the first stages of spermiogenesis, contrasting with the early formation of both structures in spermatogonia and spermatocytes in other bivalves. In A. maura, the material in the acrosomal vesicle of mature spermatozoa shows a characteristic electron density pattern, which seems to be an exclusive taxonomic feature of the family Pinnidae. However, A. maura displayed only four mitochondria in the midpiece, contrasting with five in all other species in this family.
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