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Examples

  • Peritrophic membrane: a funnel-like extension of the fore-gut, extending back tube-like, through the chylific ventricle in some insects.

    Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology John. B. Smith

  • —In the lateral walls of the anterior part of the fore-gut five pharyngeal pouches appear (Fig. 42); each of the upper four pouches is prolonged into a dorsal and a ventral diverticulum.

    I. Embryology. 12. The Branchial Region 1918

  • —The primitive digestive tube consists of two parts, viz.: (1) the fore-gut, within the cephalic flexure, and dorsal to the heart; and (2) the hind-gut, within the caudal flexure (Fig. 977).

    XI. Splanchnology. 2. The Digestive Apparatus 1918

  • —The upper part of the fore-gut becomes dilated to form the pharynx (Fig. 977), in relation to which the branchial arches are developed (see page 65); the succeeding part remains tubular, and with the descent of the stomach is elongated to form the esophagus.

    XI. Splanchnology. 2. The Digestive Apparatus 1918

  • Between the fore-gut and the hind-gut there exists for a time a wide opening into the yolk-sac, but the latter is gradually reduced to a small pear-shaped sac (sometimes termed the umbilical vesicle), and the channel of communication is at the same time narrowed and elongated to form a tube called the vitelline duct.

    I. Embryology. 9. Separation of the Embryo 1918

  • The intervening mesoderm is pressed aside and the ectoderm comes for a time into contact with the entodermal lining of the fore-gut, and the two layers unite along the floors of the grooves to form thin closing membranes between the fore-gut and the exterior.

    I. Embryology. 12. The Branchial Region 1918

  • As the liver undergoes enlargement, both it and the ventral mesogastrium of the fore-gut are gradually differentiated from the septum transversum; and from the under surface of the latter the liver projects downward into the abdominal cavity.

    XI. Splanchnology. 2i. The Liver 1918

  • The rudiment of the heart is situated immediately below the fore-gut and consists of a short stem.

    V. Angiology. 3. Development of the Vascular System 1918

  • The lung buds meantime have grown out from the fore-gut, and project laterally into the forepart of the pleuro-peritoneal cavity; the developing stomach and liver are imbedded in the septum transversum; caudal to this the intestines project into the back part of the pleuro-peritoneal cavity (Fig. 55).

    I. Embryology. 13. Development of the Body Cavities 1918

  • By the forward growth and flexure of the head the pericardial area and the anterior portions of the primitive aortæ are folded backward on the ventral aspect of the fore-gut, and the original relation of the somatopleure and splanchnopleure layers of the pericardial area is reversed.

    V. Angiology. 3. Development of the Vascular System 1918

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