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It is attached at one end to the saccule.
Humans have two on each side, one called utricle, the other saccule.
The macula of saccule lies in a nearly vertical position.
For this reason, the saccule is sometimes called an "otolithic organ."
Subsequent work led to the suggestion that the saccule was the end organ excited.
The saccule gives rise to the cochlear duct, which is involved in the special sense hearing.
The saccule is a bed of sensory cells situated in the inner ear.
The saccule gathers sensory information to orientate the body in space.
In some, complex spores form within a terminal saccule.
The otoliths have two components: the utricle and the saccule.
The saccule and utricle, in turn, together make the otolith organs.
Part of the saccule will eventually give rise and connect to the cochlear duct.
An endolymphatic duct runs from the saccule up through the head, and ending close to the brain.
The structures that enable the saccule to gather this vestibular information are the hair cells.
(The structure is similar to the saccule and its outgrowths.)
The saccule, or sacculus, is the smaller of the two vestibular sacs.
From the posterior wall of the saccule is given off a canal, the ductus endolymphaticus.
The saccule is sensitive to linear translations of the head, specifically movements up and down (for example, moving on an elevator).
Two other organs that are part of the vestibular system are the utricle and saccule.
The vestibular system includes the saccule, utricle, and the three semicircular canals.
The utricle and saccule are specialized organs present in the inner ears of all vertebrate animals.
The difference between the utricle and the saccule is that both provide information about changes in velocity when travelling either horizontally or vertically.
The saccular nerve is a nerve which supplies the macula of the saccule.
It connects the lower part of the saccule to the ductus cochlearis near its vestibular extremity.
This duct appears approximately during the sixth week and connects to the saccule through the ductus reuniens.
This is reflected by the thickness of the peptidoglycan sacculus.
The sacculus is a broad curved plate with another prominent and strong bristle near the tip.
The saccule, or sacculus, is the smaller of the two vestibular sacs.
A similar feature is found at the tip of the sacculus, which by itself is only slightly sclerotized.
The male species sacculus is tapped distally, but is slighthly bent.
The specific name is from the Latin clavatus, referring to the clavate sacculus in the male genitalia.
Cytospora sacculus is a plant pathogen.
Inside the chromatophore cell, pigment granules are enclosed in an elastic sac, called the cytoelastic sacculus.
The specific name is the feminine form of the Latin adjective triangulus (meaning triangular) and refers to the triangular sacculus.
The specific name is derived from Latin convexus (meaning convex) and refers to the sacculus which is strongly convex dorso-basally.
Acanthodians share with Actinopterygii the characteristic of three otoliths, the sagitta in the sacculus, the asteriscus in the lagena, and the lapillus in the utriculus.
Around 1130, Hugh of St. Victor's Chronicas preface refers to a money bag (sacculus or sacculum in Latin), with its compartments, as a memory training analogy.
Unusually, they have both an elongated uncus and well-developed socii;, the sacculus is rarely hairy and the saccus' vinculum is generally neither extened nor recurved.
The species name is derived from the Latin latus (broad, wide) and sacculus (little sac) in reference to the diagnostic, greatly enlarged saccular lobe of the male valva.
The specific epithet refers to the termination of the sacculus and is derived from Latin brevis (meaning short) and cera, from Greek keras (meaning a horn).
The species name is derived from the Latin crena (meaning serration, notch) and the suffix -ata (meaning provided with) and refers to the serrated sacculus of valva.
The male genitalia is similar to the one of Mompha divisella, but is different in a way that it have much more abruptly tapped sacculus and corni of different lengh.
This differs from the mechanism used in fish, amphibians and reptiles, in that the shape of the sacculus is being changed rather than a translocation of pigment vesicles within the cell.
The specific name is derived from the Latin hi (two, double) and lobus (a rounded projection), in reference to the diagnostic bilobed apex of the sacculus in the male genitalia.
Within prokaryotes, archaeal cell structure is most similar to that of Gram-positive bacteria, largely because both have a single lipid bilayer and usually contain a thick sacculus of varying chemical composition.
In the male, the clasper's harpe is twice as long as it is wide, with costa and sacculus running almost in parallel and being strongly sclerotized, and a rounded cucullus.
The specific name is derived from Latin bifurcus (meaning bifurcate) and processus (meaning process) and refers to the bifurcate distal process of the left sacculus in the male genitalia.
The clasper's harpe is barely sclerotized, forming a ridge on the costa, a narrow stripe on the sacculus, and a curved process emerging from the harpe's center; the cucullus is broadly rounded.
There is evidence that the vestibular system of mammals has retained some of its ancestral acoustic sensitivity and that this sensitivity is mediated by the otolithic organs (most likely the sacculus, due to its anatomical location).
According to Online Etymology Dictionary the etymology of "satchel" is mid 14th century from Old French sachel from Latin of saccellum (money bag, purse) and sacculus or saccus (bag or sack).
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