Abstract
The reproductive tracts of males from eight species of Australian marsupial
were examined (Macropus eugenii, Potovous tridactyhs, Sminthopsis crassicaudata,
Antechinus stuartii, Pseudocheirus peregrinus, Trichosurus vulpecula, Isoodon macrourus,
and Perameles nasuta). The prostate glands of these species were found to be of two
shapes, carrot-like or heart-like. From one to three pairs of Cowper's glands
were observed; these were mostly bulbous in shape but some were kidney-shaped.
Both prostate and Cowper's glands were tubular in structure with the glandular tubules
lined by a simple columnar epithelium. The glandular tubules of Cowper's glands were
of much larger diameter than those of the prostate. The prostate glands were segmented,
and this segmentation was usually shown by variations in the height and staining
reactions of the tubular epithelium and in the volume of connective tissue between
glandular tubules. Differences in microanatomy between pairs of Cowper's glands
were far less than those between prostate segments.
Mucosubstance appeared to be the major contribution of the prostate to the
seminal plasma. This mucosubstance was mainly neutral, with glycogen largely absent.
The present results indicate that the Cowper's glands secrete mucus but that various
glands also contributed lipid and glycogen.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
46 articles.
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