Arquivo Brasileiro de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia (Oct 2014)

Tongue papillae morphology of brown-throated sloth Bradypus variegatus (SCHINZ, 1825)

  • D.M. Martins,
  • L.L. Pinheiro,
  • V.C. Ferreira,
  • A.M. Costa,
  • A.R. Lima,
  • R.E.G. Ricci,
  • M.A. Miglino,
  • E. Branco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-6343
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 66, no. 5
pp. 1479 – 1486

Abstract

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The Bradypus variegatus inhabits the forests of South America and feeds from leaves, branches and sprouts from different plants. Due to its diet and the lack of literature on the morphological aspect of Xenarthras, five Bradypus variegatus tongues from animals which died from natural causes were evaluated, and they came from Pará State Museum Emílio Goeldi and were donated to the Laboratory of Animal Morphological Research (LaPMA) from UFRA, for revealing the different types of papillae and epithelial-connective tissue. Macroscopically, the tongues presented elongated shape, rounded apex, body, root, median sulcus in the root's apex, and two vallate papillae. The mucous membrane of the tongue revealed a keratinized stratified pavement epithelium, while the ventral surface of the tongue was thin and smooth, not provided with any type of papillae. However, the dorsal surface of the tongue was irregular with the presence of three types of papillae: filiform, fungiform and vallate papillae. The filiform papillae found were of a simple type, presenting a rounded base, irregularly distributed with a larger concentration and development on the tongue's apex and body. The fungiform papilla showed a practically smooth surface with irregular format, with the presence of gustatory pores; these were found all over the dorsal surface, with larger concentration at the rostral part of the apex. Only two vallate papillae were observed disposed in the root of the tongue, surrounded by a deep groove, and revealing several taste buds. The tongues from Bradypus variegatus presented gustatory papillae similar to the ones described for other Xenarthras species and wild mammals.

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