A new species of the genus Eleutherodactylus (Leptodactylidae) is described from a cloud forest in western Departamento del Cauca, in Munchique National Park, sector La Romelia, between 2550 and 2750 m., and E. hectus is verified for the region.
The histology of the ovotestis was studied by light and electron microscopy in two nudibranch gastropod species. While in Hypselodoris tricolor the ovotestis is intimately associated with the digestive gland tissue, the large gonadal mass of Godiva banyulensis is placed freely in the haemocoele. This fact results in great histological differences between both species. As is common among Mollusca, the immature yolk granule in Hypselodoris and Godiva presumably originates from membrane-rich cytoplasmic inclusions, which we have termed dense multivesicular bodies. Such inclusions consist of an outer membrane enclosing membrane remnants and a granular, electron-dense material. These elements are accumulated and mixed in the center of the dense multivesicular body and could be actually transformed into the paracrystalline core of the immature yolk granule, the cortex of which is made up of part of the central accumulation materials that have not spread into the crystal. During vitellogenesis, some mitochondria are subjected to a process of transformation affecting mainly their inner membrane (including mitochondrial cristae) and matrix. However, the conversion of modified mitochondria into yolk precursors, as reported for other gastropod species, could not be determined with absolute certainty on the basis of our observations on static material. The mature yolk granule consists of a central paracrystalline core, similar in structure to that of the immature yolk granule, and a peripheral membranous cortex, which seems to spread centripetally, thus permitting the crystal to grow. The cortical material consumed in synthesizing the central core appears to be restored by addition of degenerative mitochondria to the yolk granule surface.
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