Water regulation in aestivating snails - Ultrastructural and analytical evidence for an unusual cellular phenomenon

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Abstract

Aestivating snails form abundant lamellate vesicles in the cells of the mantle collar, an epithelium known to regulate the rate at which water is lost from its surface. Since lamellate vesicles are much reduced in hydrated mantle tissue of recently stimulated animals it is tentatively concluded that the vesicles, and their contents, form a barrier to water movement within these cells. X-ray microanalysis of unfixed thin sections shows that there is a concentration gradient of ions within these cells in aestivating animals which is not present in stimulated snails. © 1976 Springer-Verlag.

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Newell, P. F., & Machin, J. (1976). Water regulation in aestivating snails - Ultrastructural and analytical evidence for an unusual cellular phenomenon. Cell and Tissue Research, 173(3), 417–421. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00220329

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