Comparative Numbers of Fungiform and Foliate Papillae on Tongues of Domestic and Wild Norway Rats.
- 1 November 1946
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Frontiers Media SA in Experimental Biology and Medicine
- Vol. 63 (2) , 352-355
- https://doi.org/10.3181/00379727-63-15599
Abstract
The number of fungiform and foliate papillae were counted on the tongues of 100 recently trapped wild Norway rats and of 20 wild Alexandrine rats, and compared with the number on the tongues of 103 domestic Norway rats. The number of fungiform papillae on the tongues of the domestic Norway rats ranged from 114-221, with a mean of 178.3, while for the recently trapped wild Norway ancestors it ranged from 167-271, with a mean of 217.9, and for the Alexandrine rats it ranged from 147-231, with a mean of 191.5. The mean of the domestic Norway rat thus showed a 17% reduction from that of its wild ancestor. The number of foliate papillae ranged from 8-16 for the domestic rats, with a mean of 11.98, and ranged from 7[long dash]20 for the wild Norways, with a mean of 11.46. The 2 strains thus showed essentially the same number of foliate papillae, but both showed fewer than are found in Alexandrine rats, in which the number of papillae ranged from 9-18, and had a mean of 13.5. lu general, both types of papillae were more uniform in size, structure, and distribution in the wild than in the domestic-strains.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: