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Cement glands

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Cement glands are also mucus-secreting organs that can attach embryos or larvae to a solid substrate. These can be found in frogs such as those in the genus
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showing the anterior and posterior testes, and eight cement glands in a clustered arrangement.
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Bush, Albert O.; Fernández, Jacqueline C.; Esch, Gerald W.; Seed, J. Richard (2001).
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that are used to temporarily close the posterior end of the female after copulation.
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10.1002/(SICI)1097-0177(199603)205:3<265::AID-AJA7>3.0.CO;2-G
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Pottin, Karen; Hyacinthe, Carole; RĂ©taux, Sylvie (October 5, 2010).
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Parasitism : the diversity and ecology of animal parasites
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Index

Cement gland
Diagram of a male Pachysentis_lauroi showing the eight cements glands in a clustered arrangement below the anterior and posterior testes.
Acanthocephala
Xenopus
Mexican tetra
ISBN
0-521-66278-8
OCLC
44131774
"A sticky problem: The Xenopus cement gland as a paradigm for anteroposterior patterning"
doi
10.1002/(SICI)1097-0177(199603)205:3<265::AID-AJA7>3.0.CO;2-G
PMID
8850563
S2CID
22326745
"Conservation, development, and function of a cement gland-like structure in the fish Astyanax mexicanus"
Bibcode
2010PNAS..10717256P
doi
10.1073/pnas.1005035107
PMC
2951400
PMID
20855623
Stub icon
animal anatomy
stub
expanding it
v

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