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Anatomy Histology and Histochemistry
of the Salt Glands of the Greater
Flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber roseus (Aves, Phoenicopteridae)
Mansour I. Almansour
Department of Zoology, College of Science, P. O. Box 2455, Riyadh 11451, King
Saud University, Saudi Arabia
Abstract
The present investigation aimed to
study the morphological, histological and histochemical
characterizations of the salt glands of the greater flamingo
Phoenicopterus ruber roseus. The results of the present investigation
shows that the greater flamingo has a well developed bilateral salt
glands which consist of an array of secretory lobules surrounded by
richly vascularised connective tissue. Each lobe is made of a mass of
branched secretory tubules radiate from central canal and enmeshed in
one cell layer blood capillaries. The secretory tubule consists of
simple columnar epithelium surrounding a narrow lumen showing round
basal cells at their terminal segments. The secretory tubules and
central canals drain in a main duct leads to the anterior of the nasal
cavity. The results reveal that the secretory tubules of the gland
elaborate proteins, sialomucins and sulfomucins but are devoid of
glycogen and neutral mucosubstances. The structure and functions of the
salt glands are reviewed within the context of the results of the
present study.
Key words: Salt glands, nasal
glands, histochemisty, greater flamingo, Phoenicopterus ruber
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