protostoma
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From proto- + Ancient Greek στόμα (stóma, “mouth”).
Noun
[edit]protostoma (plural protostomata)
- (embryology, obsolete) Synonym of blastopore
- 1919, Ernest William MacBride, Text-book of Embryology:
- It is frequently stated by critics of the protostoma hypothesis that it involves a reversal of dorsal and ventral sides during the evolution of Vertebrates from their invertebrate ancestors but it will be gathered from what has been said that this criticism rests on a misunderstanding.
- 1921, John Graham Kerr, Zoology for Medical Students, page 150:
- The opening of this, the protostoma, becomes elongated, taking on an elliptical shape, and then it narrows in the middle, its outline becoming that of a dumb-bell.
- (zoology) In nematodes, a particular division of the stoma (mouthlike opening).
- 1968, Konstantin Ivanovich Skirabin, Key to Parasitic Nematodes, volume 1:
- The protostoma with its wall—the protorhabdion—is the major part of the stoma.
- 1977, Ivan Antonovich Rubtsov, Aquatic Mermithidae of the Fauna of the USSR:
- Conventionally, the stoma is divided into three parts: the anterior chamber or cheilostoma, the middle or protostoma, and the posterior or telostoma.
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Italian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]protostoma m (plural protostomi)
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- it:Zoology