Surgery of Exotic Animals. Группа авторов

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Название Surgery of Exotic Animals
Автор произведения Группа авторов
Жанр Биология
Серия
Издательство Биология
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119139607



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sponges were actually classified as plants. Sponges occur in fossil records back to the Precambrian Era (over 600 million years ago) and were the most important contributors to reefs during the Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Eras (Hooper and Van Soest 2002). All members lack defined organs; however, differentiated cells within connective tissue perform necessary biologic functions. Unique systems of water canals facilitate transport of food, waste products, and gametes. Most of the 5000‐plus species are marine with just 3% of sponges occurring in freshwater environments. Sponges are normally found on firm substrates in shallow water, although some occur on soft bottoms.

      Sponges maintain a close association with a variety of bacterial genera. While some can be pathogenic, most form a symbiotic relationship with the sponge and provide nutrients. These symbionts are what impart the vast array of bright colors seen in some sponges.

Schematic illustration of the cellular structure of a sponge (Halisarca dujardini). The dotted line represents an area of surgical excision.

      Source: Borisenko et al. (2015).

Schematic illustration of three stages of regeneration in the sponge, Halisarca dujardini. (a) Normal sponge. (b) Formation of a regenerative plug (Stage I). (c) Formation of a blastema.

      Source: Borisenko et al. (2015).

      Another process that is occasionally utilized with corals is transplantation. Much work has gone into the process with many species belonging to both invertebrate and vertebrate taxa. With coelenterates, autogenous grafts generally take well, but allografts and xenografts do not (Bigger and Hildemann 1982). In the case of corals, polyps from the same colony can be surgically removed and then attached to another area of the colony with good success as long as freshly cut polyps are placed adjacent to one another (Hildemann et al. 1974).

      Coelenterates have an amazing ability to heal and regenerate. This has been know and studied for well over a century (Metchnikoff 1892; Bigger and Hildemann 1982). Amebocytes play an important role in the healing process and it appears that specialized “wound cells” are involved in the initial reaction and healing process, at least in anemones (Young 1974).

Phot depicts aquarium is filled with coral “frags” representing a number of species and morphological types.

      The gastropods belong in the phylum Mollusca and include over 60,000 marine, fresh water, and terrestrial species. The group includes abalone, conchs, nudibranchs, sea hares, slipper shells, slugs, snails, and whelks, among many others. They account for approximately 80% of all mollusk species. Gastropods have a ventrally flattened foot that provides locomotion along the various surfaces of their habitats. They are important display, food, and research animals. Some species are successfully cultured although wild capture is the most common method of procurement. They can be quite large and many are long‐lived. Investigators working on the sea hare, Aplysia, were awarded a Nobel Prize for medicine or physiology in 2000 for their work on neurophysiology, behavior, and learning. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2000. NobelPrize.org. Nobel Prize Outreach AB 2021 (https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/2000/summary/ accessed Mon. 2 Aug 2021). These factors and others make them important animals for veterinary consideration.

      There is very little in the literature on gastropod surgery. Much of what is published deals with the amputation of structures like eyes and tentacles, and the surgical compromise of neural tissue to study regeneration (Moffett 2000; Tartakovskaya et al. 2003; Matsuo et al. 2010a,b). These procedures generally do not require wound closure or postoperative therapy. Anderson et al. (2010) determined that silk, among the five suture materials (braided silk, monofilament nylon, monofilament polylecaprone, polydioxanone, and polyglactin 910) tested in the skin of Aplysia californica, resulted in the least amount of granuloma formation. The amount of tissue reaction did not differ among the various sutures.

Photo depicts major external anatomical features of a terrestrial shelled gastropod.