Cerebrum, Schroder, Medioli & Scott, 1989
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s13127-010-0024-0 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BE32F652-FFFD-5000-458A-96FE1FF7FF7D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cerebrum |
status |
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Cerebrum View in CoL , suboesophageal complex and stomatogastric nervous system ( Figs. 3a–d View Fig ; 8b, c View Fig ; 9a View Fig )
About one third of the lumen of the head capsule is occupied by the brain and suboesophageal ganglion. The proto-, deuto- and tritocerebrum form a compact structural unit. The protocerebral part appears dumbbell-shaped due to the presence of large optical lobes ( Figs. 3c, d View Fig ; 8c View Fig : pcer). The nerves of the three ocelli originate dorsally; a thin nervus connectivus originates medially on the frontal side ( Figs. 3a–d View Fig , 8c View Fig : noc, ncon). The parallel antennal nerves ( Fig. 3a–d View Fig : nan) originate from the distinctly protruding deutocerebral part ( Figs. 3c View Fig ; 8b View Fig : dcer). The circumoesophageal connectives are continuous with the cone-shaped tritocerebrum. A separate tritocerebral commissure is present. The ovoid suboesophageal complex lies anterior to and below the tentorial bridge ( Figs. 3d View Fig ; 8c View Fig ; 9a View Fig : soeg). The frontal ganglion above the anatomical mouth has a triangular shape ( Figs. 3c View Fig ; 8a View Fig : fg). It is connected with the protocerebrum by the unpaired nervus connectivus, and with the tritocerebrum by the frontal connectives ( Fig. 3c View Fig : ncon, fcon). All three connecting nerves are distinctly curved. The nervus frontalis and the nervus recurrens ( Fig. 3c View Fig : nrec) orginate on the anterior and posterior apex of the frontal ganglion, respectively.
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