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XI.—Upon the Thyroid Glands in the Cetacea, with Observations on the Relations of the Thymus to the Thyroid in these and certain other Mammals
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
Extract
In the writings of comparative anatomists, considerable difference of opinion is expressed respecting the position and relations of the thyroid gland in the Cetacea, and some authorities even have asserted that it does not exist in these Mammalia.
John Hunter states that he has examined several porpoises, balænæ, and other cetacea, yet “could not observe anything like a thyroid gland.”
Meckel believed that he found, in a fœtal porpoise (D. phocœna), eight inches long, a thyroid gland. He describes it as half an inch broad, two lines thick and high, and of equal depth and thickness both on the middle and sides of the air-tube, in the same position as that in which the gland is found in other mammals. From this examination, however, of so young a fœtus, he does not feel disposed to affirm that, contrary to the opinion of Hunter, it exists in full grown cetacea. In a subsequent paper he mentions incidentally, that in the dolphins the gland is formed of two quite separate lobes. Cuvier states that he has found the gland very distinct in many dolphins and porpoises. In these animals it was divided into two parts, and suspended from the trachea opposite the upper border of the sternum, and some distance from the larynx. Carus describes the gland in the dolphin and porpoise as consisting of two parts, entirely separate from each other. It is difficult to say, however, from the text, whether he is giving the result of his own observations, or simply adopting those of Cuvier. Dr Martyn repeats the statement that the cetacea do not possess a thyroid, and he ascribes the supposed absence of the voice in these animals to the want of this glandular structure.
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- Research Article
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- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 22 , Issue 2 , 1861 , pp. 319 - 325
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1861
References
page 319 note * On the Structure and Economy of Whales. Philosophical Transactions, 1787.
page 319 note † Abhandlungen aus der Menschlichen und Vergleichenden Anatomie und Physiologie. Halle, 1806.Google Scholar
page 319 note ‡ Beyträge zur Vergleichenden Anatomie, 1811.
page 319 note § Anatomie Comparée, vol. viii.
page 319 note ∥ Traité Elementaire d'Anatomie Comparée, vol. ii.
page 319 note ¶ Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, 1857.
page 321 note * Physiological Essay on the Thymus Gland, 1845.
page 322 note * Since this paper was read to the Society, I have dissected the neck of a fœtal Dolphin, probably the young of a bottle-nose (D. Tursio). This dissection confirms the opinion I had arrived at and stated in the text, viz., that the glandular structure in front of the upper part of the trachea in the genus Delphinus is the thyroid, and not merely a part of the thymus.
page 323 note * On the Supra-renal, Thymus, and Thyroid bodies, 1846.
page 324 note * Philosophical Transactions, 1771.
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