Abstract
Gap junctions, related to projections of sensory cells into supporting cells, occur from supranuclear to basal levels on hair cells, in both saccular and utricular maculae of the lizard, Anolis carolinensis. The larger numbers of junctional projections observed at some levels may indicate a zonular distribution within the neuroepithelia, but only on supracalyceal parts of hair cells in the utricular striola was a series of gap junctions found to be closely associated with the reticular lamina. The dimensions of the junctions, as characterized by the distance between opposite extremities of the arciform membrane appositions, averaged 0.14, 0.19, and 0.28 μm, respectively, on non‐calyceal utricular and saccular hair cells, and calyceal cells of the utricular striola. A notable number of the junctional profiles were adjacent or contiguous to open, coated, putatively endocytotic vesicles. These findings are discussed in respect to phylogenetic, developmental, and functional considerations.