1. Developmental heart morphology in the Amazon turtle Podocnemis expansa (Testudines: Podocnemidae).
- Author
-
Rocha, Emanuel Lucas Bezerra, dos Santos Magalhães, Marcela, Rocha, Layla Ianca Queiroz, de Araújo Gomes, Vilessa Lílian, de Souza Junior, Zacarias Jacinto, de Macêdo, Luã Barbalho, da Silva Braz, Janine Karla França, de Oliveira, Moacir Franco, and de Moura, Carlos Eduardo Bezerra
- Subjects
- *
TURTLES , *HEART , *NERVE tissue , *MORPHOLOGY , *THORACIC aorta , *HEART development - Abstract
The study aims to describe the development of the heart in Podocnemis expansa during the incubation period and immediately after hatching. A total of 108 embryonic hearts and five hearts from freshly hatched individuals (1st day post-hatching) were fixed and processed for light and ultrastructural microscopy analysis, respectively. The primitive heart was observed on the 5th day of incubation, featuring only a sinus venosus, an atrial chamber, and a ventricle containing small trabeculae, while atria were observed only from the 10th day onwards. On the 13th day, the ventricular cavity was visualized, differentiating into the venosum, arteriosum, and pulmonale cavums. The atrioventricular valve, pulmonary trunk, and aortic arches were formed on the 18th day. Additionally, the atria were transversely separated by the first atrial septum. On the 39th day, the separation of the cavum venosum from the cavum pulmonale by the horizontal septum and the separation of the cavum venosum from the cavum arteriosum by the vertical septum were observed. In the post-hatched specimens, the myocardium remained spongy, with close proximity to erythrocytes, also forming evident partial septa and exhibiting the presence of nervous tissue, indicative of subepicardial plexus formation. It is concluded that by the 25th day, the fundamental events in the formation of the heart of P. expansa, such as the bending of the cardiac tube, the formation of the first atrial septum, atrioventricular valve formation, and partial ventricular septa, had already been completed. After hatching, the internal cardiac structures already resembled those observed in adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF