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1 References  





2 Bibliography  














Slit sensilla






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The slit sensilla, also known as the slit sense organ,[1] is a small mechanoreceptory organ or group of organs in the exoskeletonofarachnids which detects physical deformation or strain due to forces experienced by the animal.[2] The organ appears in the vast majority of discovered arachnids, and is "remarkably consistent" in location and direction within each order. The arachnid slit sensilla corresponds to the campaniform sensilla found in insects.[1]

Slit sensilla tend to be widely distributed over the arachnid's exoskeleton,[3] but have also been found to be grouped at specific locations and in a bundle of parallel lines; the latter distribution is referred to as a "lyriform organ".[4] The term "lyriform organ" comes from the shape of such grouped slit sensilla, which resembles a lyre.[1] Arachnids with lyriform slit sensilla are commonly used as experimental subjects for investigations into mechanosensation because the almost 2D structure of their slit sensilla allows for relatively simple understanding of the system; thus, the results of electrostimulation on such arachnids can be easily recorded.[3] Etymologically, "slit sensilla" are so named because they resemble a channel penetrating through the exoskeleton into the animal; despite this appearance, however, investigation has shown that slit sensilla do not actually penetrate the chitin of the exoskeleton, but merely represent a thinning of the material.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Pringle 1955, p. 270.
  • ^ Pringle 1955, p. 275.
  • ^ a b French, Torkkeli & Seyfarth 2002, p. 739.
  • ^ French, Torkkeli & Seyfarth 2002, p. 740.
  • Bibliography

    [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Slit_sensilla&oldid=1139631200"

    Categories: 
    Spider anatomy
    Sensory receptors
     



    This page was last edited on 16 February 2023, at 02:49 (UTC).

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