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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
118: 254: 77: 285: 247: 280: 157:"Conservation, development, and function of a cement gland-like structure in the fish Astyanax mexicanus" 168: 130: 196: 122: 83: 73: 27:
showing the anterior and posterior testes, and eight cement glands in a clustered arrangement.
186: 176: 114: 103:"A sticky problem: The Xenopus cement gland as a paradigm for anteroposterior patterning" 172: 231: 227: 191: 156: 35: 274: 68:
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
235: 161:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 255: 8: 262: 248: 190: 180: 60: 7: 216: 214: 101:Sive, Hazel; Bradley, Leila (1996). 16:Small organs in thorny-headed worms 14: 218: 1: 234:. You can help Knowledge by 302: 213: 34:are small organs found in 182:10.1073/pnas.1005035107 230:–related article is a 107:Developmental Dynamics 28: 22: 286:Animal anatomy stubs 173:2010PNAS..10717256P 167:(40): 17256–17261. 51:, and crustaceans. 47:, fish such as the 29: 23:Diagram of a male 243: 242: 293: 264: 257: 250: 222: 215: 205: 204: 194: 184: 152: 146: 145: 143: 141: 98: 92: 91: 65: 301: 300: 296: 295: 294: 292: 291: 290: 271: 270: 269: 268: 211: 209: 208: 154: 153: 149: 139: 137: 100: 99: 95: 80: 67: 66: 62: 57: 17: 12: 11: 5: 299: 297: 289: 288: 283: 281:Animal anatomy 273: 272: 267: 266: 259: 252: 244: 241: 240: 228:animal anatomy 223: 207: 206: 147: 113:(3): 265–280. 93: 78: 59: 58: 56: 53: 36:Acanthocephala 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 298: 287: 284: 282: 279: 278: 276: 265: 260: 258: 253: 251: 246: 245: 239: 237: 233: 229: 224: 221: 217: 212: 202: 198: 193: 188: 183: 178: 174: 170: 166: 162: 158: 151: 148: 136: 132: 128: 124: 120: 116: 112: 108: 104: 97: 94: 89: 85: 81: 79:0-521-66278-8 75: 71: 64: 61: 54: 52: 50: 49:Mexican tetra 46: 45: 39: 37: 33: 32:Cement glands 26: 21: 236:expanding it 225: 210: 164: 160: 150: 140:29 September 138:. Retrieved 110: 106: 96: 69: 63: 42: 40: 31: 30: 24: 275:Categories 55:References 25:P. lauroi 201:20855623 135:22326745 88:44131774 192:2951400 169:Bibcode 127:8850563 44:Xenopus 199:  189:  133:  125:  86:  76:  226:This 131:S2CID 232:stub 197:PMID 142:2021 123:PMID 84:OCLC 74:ISBN 187:PMC 177:doi 165:107 115:doi 111:205 277:: 195:. 185:. 175:. 163:. 159:. 129:. 121:. 109:. 105:. 82:. 263:e 256:t 249:v 238:. 203:. 179:: 171:: 144:. 117:: 90:.

Index

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
t

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