Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2009
The piddock, Pholas dactylus L., gives off a luminous secretion when irritated. The luminous glands which produce the secretion are two longitudinal stripes in the exhalant siphon, a pair of triangular organs in the mantle cavity near the base of the siphon, and a stripe around the ventral rim of the mantle (Panceri, 1872).
The histology of the light-organs has been described several times. A light-organ is covered by a simple columnar ciliated epithelium, below which are many glandular cells, which discharge through the surface epithelium. The outer part of the glandular layer consists of a mass of large mucus cells. Deeper lies a second glandular region containing large cells with long necks that extend to the external epithelial surface. Dubois (1892, 1914, 1928) believed that the photogenic tissue was made up of two kinds of secretory cells; these were the superficial ciliated cells, which possessed glandular bases (fixed secretory cells); and deeper lying glandular cells derived from clasmatocytes (migratory secretory cells). Rawitz (1891) clearly distinguished a mucous from an underlying photogenic layer. The latter, according to Förster (1914), contains pyriform cells with long necks. He believed that he could distinguish a secretory cycle in the photogenic cells. Exhausted cells at the beginning of the cycle possessed an alveolar cytoplasm; granules began to appear in the cytoplasm; the granules increased in number and stained intensely with iron haematoxylin. Those photogenic cells which were filled with granules were in the active secretory state. Transitional stages between the inactive (or depleted) cells and the active (granular) cells were rare.